Lyon's Pride
by
Anne McCaffrey
The
survival technique of the Hivers was terrifying-and brilliant.
Their
huge Sphere ships,controlled by the Many Mind of ten to
sixteen
queens,surged out into space.When an appropriate planet
was
found,the Hivers destroyed any and every variety of
indigenous
life,the queens propagated,and when the new world
was
full,more ships were sent out,the colonization repeated
until no
planet,no species,least of all Man and Mrdini was safe.
The
furry and courageous Mrdini had fought the Hivers for
centuries,many
dying bravely in an attempt to save their own
worlds.Now
Mrdini and Man combined to form the Alliance-
and
Humankind had their own weapons to offer-the power and
might
of the Talents who could not only communicate silently
with
each other,but could project cargoes,ships and themselves
across
the deeps of space.
The
four children of Damia-Laria,Thian,Rojer and Zara-were
Primes
amongst the Talents,and all their skills were desperately
needed,for
the Hivers' terrible Sphere ships were still thrusting
through
space,unfathomable,impenetrable,and carrying death in
their
labyrinthine depths.
One of
the world's leading science fiction
writers,
Anne McCaffrey has won the Hugo
and
Nebula awards for science fiction. Brought
up in
the U.S. and now living in Ireland, she is
the
creator and bestselling author of the unique
Dragon
senes.
The Dragon Books of Anne
McCaffrey can be read
individually or as a series. However,
for greatest enjoyment
the following sequence is
recommended:
DRAGONFLIGHT
DRAGONQUEST
DRAGONSONG
DRAGONSINGER: HARPER
OF PERN
THE WHITE
DRAGON
DRAGONDRUMS
MORETA: DRAGONLADY
OF PERN
NERILKA'S STORY
DRAGONSDAWN
THE RENEGADES OF
PERN
ALL THE WEYRS OF
PERN
Anne
McCaffrey
Other
books by Anne McCaffrey:
RESTOREE
THE SHIP WHO
SANG
DECISION AT
DOONA
GET OFF THE
UNICORN
THE CRYSTAL
SINGER
KILLASHANDRA
PEGASUS IN
FLIGHT
THE ROWAN
CORGI
BOOKS
and
published by Corgi Books
A CORGI BOOK : 0 552
13764 2
Originally published in Great
Britain by Bantam Press,
a division of Transworld
Publishers Ltd
Copyright C Anne
McCaffrey 1994
The right of Anne McCaffrey to be
identified as the author of this
work has been asserted in accordance
with sections 77 and 78 of the
Copyright Designs and
Patents Act 1988.
All of the characters in this
book are fictitious
and any resemblance to actual
persons, living or dead,
is purely coincidental.
This
book is dedicated to
Matthew Haveates
for all the hard work, effort and
time that he expended
in nailing down in an
excellent bibliography
all the works by this
grateful author
(except
this one which wasn't written yet!)
Prologue
The first incursion of the Nine Star
League by the Hive
entities
occurred at Deneb where Jeff Raven, and the undeveloped
Talents
of his planet, staved off a vicious attack by three alien scout
ships
orbiting Deneb IV Calling for assistance from the Earth
Teleportation
and Telepathy Prime, Peter Reidinger, Jeff Raven
encounters
the Rowan, Callisto's Prime. In a mind
merge, two of the
three
invaders are destroyed and the third sent back, as a warning,
whence
it had come.
Three years later the Mother Hive ship, a
spherical leviathan,
appears
at Deneb heliopause. The Talents once
again merge to defend
the
planet: the Rowan, pregnant with her second child, Cera, is the
focus
for the feminine minds which then imobilize the Many Female Mind
that
governs the Hive ship. The male merge,
with Jeff Raven as focus,
then
teleport the Hive ship into Deneb's primary.
Nineteen years later, while recuperating on Deneb, Damia
Gwyn-Raven,
another T-1 Talent and the daughter of the Rowan and Jeff
Raven,
and Afra Lyon, a Capellan T-2, have `dreams' which they realize
are
being implanted by the alien figures which appear in these dreams.
Contact is made with these visitors who
call themselves the
Mrdini.
Through dreams, the Mrdini explain that
they have been defending
themselves
and their colony worlds against the incursions of the Hive
for
centuries. They had followed the Hive
ship to Deneb and been
fascinated
by its destruction without loss of life on the part of the
defenders. They offer an alliance.
In order to establish meaningful
relationships, young `Dinis are
placed
with human children, in the sound belief that early exposure to
another
species facilitates understanding.
Among those selected for
this
experiment are the children of Afra and Damia, now Tower Prime for
Iota
Aurigae, a mining world. Their eight
children all have `Dini
pairs.
At sixteen, the eldest daughter, Laria,
is sent to the `Dini home
world
of Clarf to teach `Dini human language and to expand her own
understanding
of the adult vocabulary. At about this
time, Mrdini
scouts
observe three Hive ships which separate before the `Dini can
catch
up. But the ion trails left by the
three are strong and can be
followed
on their disparate ways.
The Alliance of Mrdini and Nine Star
Leaguers decide on a
four-pronged
expedition: the first element of six ships is to backtrack
to see
if they can locate the elusive home world of the Hivers. The
other
three elements are to follow the Hive ships to their
destinations,
preferably to destroy them if at all possible before they
can
colonize another world by first sterilizing all existing
life-forms.
thian Lyon, Laria's next brother, is
seconded by Federation
Teleportation
and Telepath (FT&T) to the AS Vadim to act as Prime with
the
tracking mission of four ships, two human, two Mrdini. It is his
job to
improve communications and relations between the Allies, and to
receive
supplies to keep the ships moving towards their objective.
Thian has always been interested in naval
matters so he is well
suited
to the assignment. Thian is accompanied
by his `Dini pair, Mrg
and Dpl
(Mur and Dip).
When the Vadim encounters a lifeless
stationary derelict, it is
identified
as a Hive ship, though larger by another third than any
previously
encountered. It appears to have been destroyed
by the heat
of an
expanding nova. Three escape pods seem
to have been used, though
others
were destroyed in situ. An exploration
detail of both `Dini and
human
is to examine the wreck. Encountering
hostility from a crewman,
Thian
is nearly killed on the Hive ship where he discovers undamaged
Hiver
eggs. These are sent to be studied by
the Alliance
xenobiologists. Recovering from his injury, Thian elects to
continue
with
the Mrdini ship, the KLTL, as the Mrdinis insist on being certain
that a
nova has destroyed the Hive homeworld.
Two of the ships in Thian's element are
required to start the
derelict
on its way to a point at which both Mrdini and human
specialists
can examine it thoroughly. The
remaining three ships
decided
to track down the three escape pods. It
is essential to
capture
the pods for just one queen is sufficient to establish a new
colony.
While Thian continues with the KLTL on
towards the site of the
nova,
the search for the three large ships, as well as the escape pods,
continues. Attempts are also being made to reassemble
from its
shattered
parts as much of the Big Hive Sphere as is possible to
reconstruct,
in an effort to learn more about the enemy.
One of the escaped pods, bearing a live
queen, is discovered by
the
Bequing and captured, safely on tow behind the ship. Afra and his
son
Rojer are sent out to `port the pod to the Heinlein Moon Station
where
it can be safely examined in great detail.
There is considerable
deba
and many fictions: some wishing summarily to execute the queen,
others
wishing to aproach it in an effort to establish communications
and
knowledge of a species never before captured.
The Mrdini are
particularly
against its maintenance. Rojer, with
his father acting as
focus,
easily transfers queen and pod.
Back on Earth, the captured queen pod is
secured with twenty four
hour
surveillance. When she finally emerges,
she is seen as a
mantis-type
creature, eight limbed, and egg-heavy.
Since no-one has
had
much luck in incubating the eggs discovered on the derelict ship,
it is
decided to deposit these with her.
There has been considerable objection to
keeping the creature
alive
but those who insist that knowing more about the enemy may be a
deciding
factor in a final victory over its incursions manage to win
the
argument.
She is kept alive. Food of all varieties is supplied and she is
seen to
prefer vegetables or fruit. Her
actions, when there are any,
are
monitored and shown to all interested.
Zara, the fourteen year-old sister of
Laria, Thian and Rojer,
becomes
emotionally involved with what she sees as the queen's dreadful
plight
and imprisonment.
In a remarkable adventure, Zara arrives at
the Observation Station
and,
distraught by the queen's condition, `ports herself into the
facility
and realizes that the queen is freezing, being accustomed to a
much
hotter temperature in her parturitional stage.
Zara's
intercession
saves the queen's life although, despite a hope that there
has
been some empathy between human and Hiver, this bizarre incident is
not
repeated nor can Zara explain why she acted as she did. As her
parents
realize with some regret that Zara is not Tower material, even
though
a Prime, Elizara, the T-1 medic for whom she was named, and her
great-grandmother
Isthia decide she may have healing Talents.
Meanwhile, one of the escaping Hive ships
has been tracked to a
star
system where it is obviously slowing down.
Rojer is sent to the
Genessee
to expedite messages for Squadron B - two human ships and one
Mrdini
which is hovering, undetectable, within an asteroid belt of the
system.
The crew watch as the arriving Hiver ship
is attacked from moon
bases
and planetary surfaces. When its
ammunition is exhausted, the
queens
flee in escape pods which are disintegrated.
This shocks those
on the
Genessee. As much as the `Dini have
observed of their enemy
over
the centuries, they are as surprised and stunned as their human
allies.
Instead of being allowed to go in
blasting, Squadron B and the
Genessee
are ordered to hold a watching brief, utilizing as many probes
as
possible, with Rojer's help, to gather information. It is thought
that
Thian on his way back to `civilization' on the KLTL, which has now
definitely
established that the Hiver home world was destroyed in the
nova,
will join or replace his brother on the Genessee.
Two squadrons are still in pursuit of the
remaining two Hive
spheres
while Squadron A, Thian's original group, are searching for the
other
two pods which evacuated from the Great Sphere before it was hit
by the
nova shock wave. A waiting game is
played on several levels and
ethical
problems of great magnitude must be addressed by both human and
Mrdini
civilizations.
During the course of the next few weeks,
while Rojer waited for
his
older brother, Thian, to replace him on board the Genessee, he
spent a
great deal more time on the bridge than he had originally
thought
he would.
Not only was Rojer Lyon the T-1 FT&T
which linked Squadron B with
its
home worlds and the means by which the three ships were kept
supplied
by twice weekly importations of supplies, he was also able to
provide
other services to the squadron not in his original brief. If
he was
referred to as `the boy' or `the civilian he couldn't deny `boy'
as he
was not quite sixteen although tall and well-muscled from an
active
life on his home planet. He also had
inherited the family
silver
lock of hair which made it difficult for some to believe he
hadn't
yet reached his majority. Most times
these references to his
age or
status were jocular. Sometimes envy or
disparagement tinged
these
epithets - until he `ported in the next supply drones when he was
again
in favour with all. Sometimes it
appeared to him that his
`Dinis,
Grl and Ktg, were more acceptable to the Genessee officers and
crew
than he was, but he encouraged them to continue teaching their
language
to any on board who wished it. At
night, in his cabin, he
could
enjoy the consolation of his friends and they were very good at
diverting
him with amusing shipboard incidents and their own special
companionship. When he was particularly upset, they would
`dream' the
tension
away.
Since the squadron was on orders to hold
a watching brief and to
take no
direct action against the ancient enemy which occupied the
system,
tedium became a problem. Even escape
pod drills became a
welcome
variation of daily routine. So, when
Captain Osullivan asked
Rojer
if he could `port the newly developed and undetectable probes to
discover
what they could about the moons' defences and the three
spherical
ships in docking orbit around the planet, he was quite
willing
to oblige.
The activity was one he was well able
for: in fact, it gave him no
lite
satisfaction to know that `the boy/ civilian' had an ability
no-one
else in the B Squadron had. He was also
just as curious as
anyone
else in the squadron to learn as much as possible about the
Hivers
world. He had discreet knowledge from
Gil and Kat that Captain
Prtglm
of the KTTS would have preferred direct action to surveillance
and had
been extremely upset by the `surveillance' order from the High
Council
which had originated from Human Supreme Commander, Admiral Tohl
Mekturian,
and Mrdini Co-ordinator, Gktmglnt.
The squadron had been given a stunning
display of the planet's
defences
when they had observed the attack on the refugee Hive ship
which
they had followed to this system. Their
three ships would have
been
totally out-gunned and unable to inflict telling damage on
planetary
installations.
It was a different matter entirely to
survey as much as possible
of this
enemy planet. Rojer enthusiastically
entered into dispersing
disguised
monitors to the material clustering about the three sphere
ships
which were in a construction level orbit about the planet.
Certainly any ground-based sensors
wouldn't notice him tucking a
few
more pieces' amid the clutter that spun in disarray round the
world. Frankly Rojer thought such garbage was an
appalling way to
discard
rubbish.
Neither Captain Quacho of the sister
ship, the Arapahoe, or
Captain
Osullivan of the Genessee had expected that the refugee Hiver
ship
would be attacked by its own species, its queens driven to escape
in the
pods which had then been summarily disintegrated by the
planetary
batteries. Captain Prtglm had announced
that it was no more
than
could be expected of Hivers.
Since Rojer's first assignment was to
inspect the three sphere
ships
in their docking orbit, tensions were diffused further when the
monitors
proved that only one looked to be space-worthy. Quite
possibly
it had been the ship which had transported the original
colonizing
group. One of the other two was near
completion, though it
had
significant gaps, probably left open to receive equipment, while
the
other was only partly hulled. That gave
rise to further
speculation
as to why the planet's defenders had `holed' the refugee
ship,
rendering it unusable.
Somewhat reassured by that investigation
which he had Rojer relay
in his
daily message to Earth Prime, Captain Osullivan requested Rojer
to make
a geographical survey of the eight land masses, the biggest one
spreading
from pole to pole. An opportunity like
this, to gain
first-hand
knowledge of a Hiver world, should be utilized to the
fullest
extent possible. It also provided
occupation during the tedium
of a
watching brieœ The Hive culture appeared to be totally land-based
and
every centimetre of land was cultivated.
Rojer's guided sensors
showed
that mountainsides were terraced up to the snowline with what
Commander
Metrios, the engineering officer, considered amazing
techniques,
and although some fields were fallow, the majority sprouted
with
vigorous, if unrecognizable, flora.
Narrow tracks bordering the
fields
provided access for the scurrying life-forms involved in
agricultural
occupations. Their constant presence
made it dangerous to
attempt
to port in a sample-collecting probe.
Another variety of
beetlelike
creatures specialized in irrigation, trundling water, held
in body
sacs, which was carefully dribbled along neat rows. What
surprised
Lieutenant Istvan Mrkovic, the science officer, who had made
due
note of the teeming marine life, was that the Hivers had not made
any
attempt to harvest nutritious seaweed and plankton so abundant and
easily
obtained.
`So they're vegetarians? Seaweed's vegetable, he exclaimed.
`They seem to be single-minded in many
respects, said Anis Langio,
the
astrogation officer whom Rojer admired at a distance. She was the
prettiest
of the female bridge officers and he was old enough to
appreciate
her presence. `A stagnant culture
determined to replicate
itself
ad infinitum.' `That may alter,' was the captain's crisp remark.
`I'd give anything to see a weed among
all that perfection,'
remarked
Anis Langio in a tone bordering on disgust.
`Talk about
purpose
bio-engineering. A purpose for every
critter and a critter for
every
purpose.
Appalling. Specialization ad absurdum!' `Look at these,' Rojer
said,
focusing his sensor at its finest magnification where gatherers
were
stripping rows of a globular, green vegetable form. Finishing the
collection,
the gatherers turned from the rows into neat triple ranks
and
trundled towards a central installation into which they
disappeared.
Thousands of these installations had been
scanned.
They varied in size, evidently depending
on the volume of crops,
but not
in shape; all being square buildings covering three to four
acres,
four or five storeys in height with interior access at ground
level
along each side. Rojer had whizzed a
sensor close enough to see
that
the entrance sloped downwards. Activity
continued night and day,
for the
creatures apparently did not require illumination for their
tasks.
`And we thought this duty was boring,'
one yeoman was heard to
mumble,
eliciting widespread grins and a mild reproof.
`Those buildings have to be the access to
tremendous subterranean
networks,'
Istvan Mrkovic said thoughtfully.
`There isn't enough space
inside
any of them to store the amounts brought in on a daily basis.
Do they pick for daily use, since I
noticed they do leave immature
vegetables
on the vines and bushes, or just to process for storage?
Yet I can't pick up any trace of smoke or heat to account for
cooking.
`Vegetarians eat a lot of raw foods,'
Anis remarked.
`Or maybe they have a critter with
heat-resistant paddles to stir
the
stew.
Istvan shot her a reproving look for such
levity, though even the
captain
smiled. `Certainly we haven't seen
anything coming back out
for
distribution so that has to be taken care of underground. Wow!
What an organization! You gotta give `em that.' `The workers have
to be
fed something at some point to continue at the pace they go,'
Anis
Langio said, no longer bantering. She
had her head propped on one
hand
and, as she watched the screen, was idly twirling - a dart,
springy
curl around one finger. It seemed oddly
out of character for
someone
of her rank and experience.
`You don't see any of them lying down on
the job or expiring from
lack of
care.
`All mining must be done subterraneously,
too, Mrkovic decided.
`I haven't seen anything remotely resembling
an adit but those
ships
required a variety of metals. I've
noted the presence of all the
ores
that we use but only that one finished ship in the construction
orbit
has been covered with their special coating.
And if they have
every
centimetre producing food, the planet must be full up.
`The last harvest before blast-off;' Anis
quipped.
`Not if they've only one space-worthy
ship.' `Maybe the
agricultural
workers are multi-tasked and once the harvest's in they
turn on
their construction mode,' was Anis' rejoinder.
Istvan gave her
another
of his disgusted looks.
`She could be right,' Metrios said. `The palp that pulls the
pepper
could also manipulate delicate equipment.
`And the trundlers shift struts and panels
. . .` Anis went on.
`While the irrigators fill the fuel
tanks,' Doplas, the
communications
officer, said, joining in the fun.
`That is when we must be most cautious,'
the captain said, and
turned
to Rojer. `You can withdraw the monitors
quickly?' Rojer
nodded.
`Commander Yngocelen and I are still
trying to include a small
self-destruct
unit, sir, just in case, Metrios said.
`Small enough not
to
create much flare but enough to fiz the innards to an unrecognizable
slag.'
The captain nodded approval. `Our
relief ships are not that far
away.
Rojer held his breath in surprise. Would he actually be in on the
first
invasion of a Hive world? He had heard
the gunnery officer,
Lieutenant-Commander
Yngocelen, and some of his staff discussing what
would
be needed to `take out' the moon batteries, but no-one had
sounded
very enthusiastic about success in that direction. Despite all
they
had seen of this Hive world, there were many unknowns.
From their Mrdini allies, and once at
first hand on Deneb, humans
did
know something about Hive colonization practices. The creatures
preferred
G-type stars, M-5 type planets, worlds similar to Earth, or
Cia the
Mrdini home world, which meant that the three species were in
competition
with each other. The Hive method was to
send one of their
Sphere
ships, managed by the Many Mind of ten to sixteen queens with
specialized
workers doing whatever crewing was needed.
Each Mother
ship
was equipped with scout vessels which it sent on ahead to
investigate
appropriate systems. The Hiver then
`cleared' the planet
of all
life-forms, using as a fumigator first one, then other viral
infections
until the world had been cleared of its indigenous
life-forms. Then the Mother ship landed its queens and
propagated its
species
until the new world, too, was overpopulated, when the process
of
exploration and colonization was repeated.
`But we've seen no activity at the ships
at all,' Anis said. `Or
has the
arrival of the refugee caused panic `Hivers wouldn't know panic
if it
bit them Metrios interjected drolly.
`Well, then a rethink? 1 don't understand why they haven't done
anything
to repair the refugees' ship for use if they're about to send
off a
colonial expedition!' `They also haven't restocked their moon
installations,'
Yngocelen remarked. `They pumped out a
bodacious
amount
of ordnance in that attack even if most of it fell short.
Surely they'd have to replenish it unless
they have almighty
storage
facilities up there.' He glanced hopefully at Rojer who
laughed.
`Sir, there's no way I can get a probe in
those moon emplacements.
Not a niche or a crack and I've no idea
of what space is available
inside. I can't `port blind.' `No, no, of course,
you couldn't,
Rojer,'
the gunnery officer replied, but his expression remained
wistful.
`Been no messages sent there. No communication on any frequency,
Doplas
said, glancing down at his control console as if it had
capriciously
malfunctioned.
`Told ya the refugees didn't have the
right password, quipped
Metrios,
a grin on his narrow sardonic face.
Then he suddenly sat up alert. `Lookee here. Activity in the
shipyard.'
All attention was instantly focused on that screen. `Can
you
hold that monitor stationary for a bit, Rojer?' `Sure thing,' and
he
complied, trying to see what had attracted Metrios' attention. A
wide
hatch had swung open at the end of the one uncultivated area on
the whole
planet - its space facility.
`Doplas, magni,' Captain Osullivan said
and paused a beat before
he
added, `Pods! The units they're
carrying look the right size and
shape
to be made into escape pods.' `To replace the ones they blew up!
Anis added unnecessarily and glanced
anxiously at the captain.
His strong-featured face showed only keen
interest in the surface
activity
as hundreds of low-slung manylegged creatures, loaded with
sections,
trundled slowly across the flat surface and deposited their
burdens
at sixteen separate places before they scuttled back to the
aperture
which sank back into the ground.
`Are the Arapahoe and the KTTS receiving
these transmissions,
Doplas?'
`Aye, sir, on automatic relay.
Before the captain could ask Doplas to
open a channel, both
Captains
Quacho of the Arapahoe and Prtglm of the KTTS called in.
`They begin to refit,' Prtglm said. `Time takes. Talent informs
Alliance.
`They don't seem to be doing any work to
complete the other two
ships,'
Quacho remarked dubiously, his heavy brows nearly bridging over
his
Roman nose.
`Those are already fitted with escape
pods,' Osullivan reminded
him.
`Always queens are first,' Prtglm
said. `Time takes.' Rojer
dutifully
made contact with Jeff Raven to report the activity and was
told to
relay further developments as they occurred.
Once the ground
entrance
closed, no further activity was seen.
Excitement waned and
Rojer
was allowed to retire from the bridge at the end of his watch.
Rather than have to evade questions on
this new development, he
spent
the evening quietly in his cabin with Gil and Kat, watching more
of the
Genessee's huge library of old tri-ds until the red alert had
him
`porting himself and his friends to the escape pod assigned him.
He and the others who occupied his pod
were nearly asleep again
when
the `all-clear' hooted.
The next morning he overslept and had to
`port himself to the
bridge
to be on time. Looking as grumpy as
Rojer felt, Commander
Metrios
duly noted his hurried arrival but issued no reprimand.
Casually, Metrios told Rojer that no
firther activity on the space
field
had been noted.
`Maybe they have to hatch out the
assemblers?' Anis Langio
suggested
and then yawned, wiggling her fingers in welcome as Rojer
stepped
up to his couch. He grinned back at
her.
`Any corrections needed, Commander?'
Rojer asked Metrios,
gesturing
to the screens and the roving sensors.
`No, Roj,' Metrios said, with a wry
grin. `They're where we need
`em
right now. We're just lucky there's so
much space flotsam that our
sensors
seem just like one of the boys out there.
`You know, for a planet that's spotless,
- said Eri Gander, the
morale
officer, who often dropped b,y Rojer's station, `they've made a
right
mess of space.
`Haven't developed a form to gobble up
their garbage, that's all,'
Metrios
replied.
`Vegetarians get their iron and minerals
from their food,' Anis
remarked
with an overly innocent expression on her face. `Which
reminds
me, Eri, we could use some new tri-ds.
There's nothing I
haven't
seen a zillion times.
Eri and Anis both looked queryingly at
Rojer who held his arms
wide,
mimicking Anis' expression. `Look, I'm
just transport. I have
nothing
to do with loading.' `Which reminds me why I'm here,' Eri said,
turning
to Rojer. `I've four to ship back this
week.' He raised his
eyebrows
queryingly.
`No problem. My `Dinis told me that there're two `Dini pairs to
go as
well.' Anis heaved an exaggerated sigh.
`I'm always glad to know
they
are not as pa-faced and stiff-upperlipped as Prtglm pretends they
are.
`The `Dinis are going to hibernate,'
Rqj'er said, and grinned to
defuse
any criticism as he added, `that's not considered a weakness in
`Dims.
`At least you save them from going on the
line,' Metrios said,
nodding
his head approvingly.
Anis gave a convulsive shudder. `I don't care what euphemism they
apply
to the process, it's still cannibalism.' `Term it exigency during
long
space hauls and accept that interpretation,' Mrkovic said, but his
expression
indicated he was in complete agreement with the astrogator.
`At least we have Rojer here. Man and Mrdini's best friend is the
local
FT&T Talent.' Rojer grinned back, relieved that the subject of
`Dini
traditions was not pursued. On the
bridge, at least, he wasn't
quizzed
to the point of aggravation by pruriently curious crewmen and
women. He had had to make the point that he might
have lived closely
with
`immature `Dini, but he didn't know much about the adults.
`So what's to be done today. Commander?' he asked Metrios.
`Close watch on the shipyard and those
pod elements.
We've got a little self-destruct package
in the new ones I ordered
up in
case we need to put more in action.' `Don't I just wish we did
have
some action,' said Yngocelen as he stared glumly at the static
scene
on the screen. `Aren't they putting the
cart before the horse?
I mean, assembling escape pods when they
haven't repaired the hole
they
put in the refugee ship? Never did
understand why they plugged
it. Especially after they had already conned the
queens into leaving
in
their escape pods.' `Puzzling indeed, Metrios admitted, `since it
damaged
a perfectly space-worthy craft which would have nicely
increased
their existing fleet.' Because he now knew these officers
well
enough, Rojer decided to voice his thoughts.
`Commander, I don't think that torpedo
hit a cargo or docking
area,'
he said.
`You don't?' Metrios' expression
encouraged him.
`No, sir, I think they holed the
life-support systems.
Because it was a hole, not a shattering
blast.' `Show me.' Metrios
was not
the only one who perked up with interest.
Rojer `ported one of the monitors into
the appropriate position.
Unfortunately, the entrance point was in
deep shadow. What was
visible
were the clean edges of the torpedo's entrance. The damage
would
be easily repaired. At least it would
on any of the Alliance
ships.
`Maybe there was something in that
torpedo they sent up,' Rojer
added
quietly, steeling himself for dispute.
`Yeah, but what and why?' Yngocelen asked
in a caustic tone. `We
know
from even the partial reconstruction of the Great Sphere which A
Squadron
discovered that they can seal off decks and areas just as we
can.
`Yes, but the queens were evacuating and
there'd be no-one to
issue
orders to the workers to close anything.
I think,' and Rojer paused so as not to
sound as sure as he was of
his
theory, `this lot wouldn't want the workers spawned by other
queens. They'd want to get rid of them before they
filled the ship
with
their personal workers.' `So the torpedo delivered a gas or
something
noxious to fumigate it, huh?' Yngocelen asked, mulling over
that
theory.
`Boy's got a good point,' Metrios said
over Rojer's head but his
tone
was approving.
`I
could send a probe inside the ship to find out, Rojer
volunteered
since no-one had discredited his theory.
Although Captain
Osullivan
had not taken part in the conversation, he had been
listening.
`Then do so, Mr Lyon,' Captain Osullivan said,
nodding to
Yngocelen. `And program it for a full scan, Mr
Yngocelen. It's about
time we
learned what's going on in there since Mr Lyon's Talents allow
us to
be discreet.' Although Rojer sent the tiny probe through
ventilation
ducts and up and down dark and empty corridors, `nothing'
was
going on inside the hulk. Nothing apart
from a haze which still
hung
like a miasma in the interior, and was especially heavy in the
centre
of the vessel.
`Could be a combination fg55, the science
officer said, `because
there
sure aren't any workers of any description left, and there are
signs
of corrosion on the few organic substances the monitor
identifies. The Hivers seem to specialize in lethal
doses. I wouldn't
want to
send anyone in to investigate. Despite
the hole in the hull
letting
vacuum in, the stuffs lingering. It's
going to take time to
flush
all that out.' `Sections weren't closed off either,' Yngocelen
said,
tappinRojer approvingly on the shoulder.
`Yup, and that junk
even
cleared out the tubes where larvae are stored.
Clean sweep!'
Rojer
could not entirely suppress his delight that his theory had been
verified
but everyone was smiling so he felt it wasn't inappropriate
for him
to do so, too.
`Good thinking, Rojer,' Osullivan said to
cap his moment of
triumph.
None the less Rojer heard - not from the
direction of the officers
less
grateful sentiments from one or two of the ratings on duty.
`It was only a theory, sir,' Rojer said,
altering his grin to
modest
self-deprecation. It was hard to please
everyone all the time
no
matter how carefully he conducted himself `How long will it take for
that
gas to clear, Mr Mrkovic?' Osullivan asked.
`Can't say for sure, sir, it's heavy stuff:
All systems are dead
on the
ship. If they were activated - - -, and
he shrugged. `With
respect,
sir, the Genessee doesn't have eva suits on board that would
protect
us humans against a corrosive gas atmosphere.' Nor did the
Mrdini
when the options were discussed at a captains' conference.
Although the derelict Great Sphere was
being subjected to the most
exhaustive
scrutiny by both humans and Mrdini, the emphasis had been on
establishing
what powered Hive ships, what fuel was used, and analysing
the
peculiar composition of the hull material.
Ventilation and
life-support
systems were a low priority.
`Captain Prtglin would like us to figure
out a way to get in that
ship,'
Captain Osullivan reported to his staaf officers. Rojer was
also
itting in as he had attended the captains' meeting as translator.
`It has an idea,' and Osullivan's smile
was amused, `of boarding
and
bringing a relatively undamaged Hive ship back to Clarf. I gather
Prtglin
is to be retired at the end of this mission and it would like
to do
so in glory, as it were.' There were murmurs of understanding for
such
ambition.
`I didn't think Mrdini did things like
retire,' Anis Langio
remarked.
Osullivan cleared his throat and smoothed
back his hair. `I
believe
it's a question of size.' `Yeah, it is the biggest `Dini I've
ever
seen, Yngocelen sao thoughy. `If it
gets much bigger, it won't
fit in
its own ship. It has to bend over to
walk our companionways and
this
ship's built for tall.' As the gunnery officer was just under the
two-metre
mark, he was sympathetic. `But you
know,' he went on
offhandedly,
`maybe Rojer could `port a small boarding party directly
into
the torpedo hole. They're obviously
waiting until the gas
disperses. Of course, we'd have to figure a way of
doing that first.
`What do we know about the Hiver
ventilation systems?' Osullivan
asked
rhetorically.
`No more than what the probe could see,
sir,' Metrios replied.
`Any idea of where or what the controls
would be?' Everyone turned
in
Rojer's direction.
`Me?
I know as much as you do but `But what, Mr Lyon?' the
captain
prompted in an encouraging tone.
-`Well, sir; when I first came on board,
I believe I mentioned
that
groups back on the home worlds are ùtrying to reassemble the
innards
of the Great Sphere?
We know what the main investigative team
is working on - the fuel
and
engines - but maybe somebody else might have a clue to the
life-support
area. I could make a discreet enquiry.'
`Of whom?' ù`The
T-8
engineer at the Aurigae Tower.
Metrios looked considerably more
receptive the moment Rojer
mentioned
`engineer' `Please contact him then.
Discreetly, of course,
Osullivan
asked Rojer.
`Certainly, sir,' Rojer replied.
He had determinedly not fallen
into
the habit of naval parlance of responding with the usual `aye,
sir'. That was his subtle reaction to `boy' and
`civilian' Metrios
grinned. `Would you need much power?' `Not for a
query, Rojer said,
grinning
back. Xexo would be as up to date as
possible on what was
being
assembled, either by the naval or the `civilian' piece jiggers.
And he might even have some informed
guesses. `Thing worries me,
though,
is that that explosion might also have taken out the
ventilation
control system.
`That's a distinct possibility. Sure wrecked the area,' Metrios
said
Rojer held up one hand, indicating he was initiating his query,
but he
sensed a definite eagerness in the atmosphere of the bridge.
Clearly Captain Prtglm was not the only
one who wanted to secure a
trophy
out of this encounter. Of course, the
Genessee and the Arnpahoe
would
share any honours with the KTTS.
Everyone in the Alliance would rejoice to
have purloined a nearly
operational
ship from a Hive colony.
He suppressed the chuckle that threatened
to overset his composure
and
sternly focused his mind on the gestalt to send the message.
Familiarity with Xexo's mind made the
`pathing easier. Rojer
elected
to make it an informal query because nothing might come of it
and
there was no point in getting hopes up only to dash them down.
Xexo was surprised to hear Rojer.
Come through loud and clear, lad. But shouldn't you No, this is
between
you and me, Xexo, about our piecing.
They don't have a set on board here and I
need your help on one
aspect
of the reconstruction.
Oh, well, in that case Xexo had always
been more interested in the
mechanical
aspects of Tower than protocol so he made no further
objections. whaddya need to know?
What Xexo knew about the ventilation and
lifesupport systems was
incomplete. In fact, Rojer realized that his probe had
accumulated
more
cogent information which he then shared with the T-8. Xexo could
then
confirm that the main environmental control systems had probably
been
demolished by the torpedo.
Queens seem to have had an independent
emergency supply.
Get that started and you m(ght flush a
lot of the gas out,
`specially
with a hole already in the hull. Hey,
you guys bring that
ship
back and you will be real heroes! Xexo
added, excitement
colouring
his usual imperturbable manner.
Too much of the ship Squadron A salvaged
has been damaged beyond
guess
or gosh. Then Xexo `showed' Rojer what
diagrams existed,
incomplete
as they were.
`Since the queens abandoned ship,'
Metrios said when he had a
chance
to study what Rojer transferred to the screen, `that area would
not
have been secured.
But it appears,' and his finger wandered
off the diagram, `that
one
could flush the system of the gas quite efficiently from the main
circulation
point.
`If we knew how to work such controls,'
Rojer said.
"Dinis keep telling us that the
queens developed specific workers
for
various ship operations. What would a
life-support worker look
like?'
Metrios shmgged. `That'd be a
problem. They seem to produce
all
kinds of workers.
The other officers on duty on the bridge
had been following the
conversations.
`The `Dini records have reconstructions
of some definite types,
from
corpses that were found after space battles,' Anis Langio said and
keyed
in a program. They all watched as the
sketches were accessed.
Langio gave a snort. `Take your pick.' `That queen they've got at
Heinlein
Moon Base?
Have her eggs hatched yet?' Metrios
asked.
`They're growing and she's eating,' Rojer
replied with a shrug.
He was still in two minds about his
sister Zara's interference,
even if
it had saved the queen from hypothermia.
One of the three pods to escape the Great
Sphere had contained a
live
and egg-heavy queen. Conveying the pod
to the Heinlein Moon Base
had
been Rojer Lyon's first official duty as a Prime, though his father
had
been the focus of the kinetic energy of that teleportation. An
observation
module had kept close track of her activities since she had
emerged. She was, in fact, the first living specimen
of the Hive race
that
either human or Mrdini had seen. Her
continued existence had
elicited
controversy and, sometimes, strain among the Allies.
Fortunately some of the more liberal
Mrdini leaders also felt that
the
need to know more about their enemy was of greater importance than
a very
public and summary execution, no matter how psychologically
satisfying. Others found some beauty in her mantis-like
appearance:
the
maudlin were deeply concerned about her total isolation and
incarceration.
`I'd heard that each queen lays several
different types of
workers,'
Anis Langio said. `Maybe she'd been
programmed for the type
we need
right now.' She turned an impudent gamine grin on her audience.
`If we knew what sort we needed,' Metrios
said, gloomily. He
leaned
forward across his panel. `If we could
somehow clear enough of
the gas
to put a salvage crew aboard `Ah, we're much too far away to
use
tractor beams . . .` Yngocelen said and
then turned brightly to
Rojer.
`Hey, don't look at me. That's mass, Commander,' Rojer said,
fending
off that suggestion with raised hands.
`It'd take a whole Tower crew to shift
that one.' `Then it'd've to
be a
landing party - `With Hiver ground batteries trained on it?'
Yngocelen
asked sarcastically. `They'd blast it
out of the sky once
they
saw it moving away rather than let us have it.' `But they don't
know
we're here, Langio reminded them.
`And they're not supposed to, - Metrios
said, heaving a sigh.
`Rojer, you couldn't just inch it out of their surface to-air
missile
range?' Langio asked plaintively.
`No, I couldn't. Not even to give Captain Prtglm its moment
of
glory.'
`Now wait a minute,' Metrios said, and turning to his console
accessed
another program. `To get the Great
Sphere back, two
Galaxy-class
ships acted as tows, and a shuttle was attached to control
directional
thrusters `So?' Yngocelen asked.
`If we could mount thrusters on the hull
- . -` `That would mean
we'd be
seen from the surface Yngocelen interjected.
`Oh . ` he added
and
turned, as Metrios had, to Rojer.
Rojer shook his head. `Look, sirs,' and he paused to give the
courtesy
address emphasis, `I'm glad to oblige with a lot of things but
if
anyone - - anything - .
down there is monitoring space - and they
sure knew when the
refligee
ship arrived - thrusters big enough to move it out of orbit
would
be very very visible, even if putting them there wasn't.' `What
do we
know about Hiver eyesight?' `They probably have a specialist for
that,
too,' Anis remarked in a caustic tone.
`Possibly,' Metrios agreed and then went
on, `but why would they
be
watching a ship they know is disabled and uninhabited?' Clearly, he
wanted
to defend his strategy. `They don't
know we're here. They
certainly
wouldn't expect anyone to come robbing them of a ship.
Surprise is a big plus `Our orders,
gentlemen,' and Captain
Osullivan
reminded them in droll reprimand, `are to hold a watching
brief.'
Then he gave them a wistful smile. `The
Council has not given
us any
latitude. We are especially not to
engage the enemy at this
point
in time.' He heard their murmurs of discontent and
disappointment. `If we can follow their ion trails, they can
follow
ours.'
`True enough, sir, but they don't have another operational
vehicle,'
Metrios pointed out.
`We have our orders, gentlemen, and we
will obey them,' Osullivan
said
and strode to his command chair where he remained for the rest of
that
watch.
It was the next morning that the captain
asked Rojer to report to
the
bridge before his usual watch.
`It occurred to me, Rojer,' Osullivan
said at his most relaxed and
genial,
`that we shouldn't miss a golden opportunity.' `Which one,
sir?' Rojer
asked dubiously, glancing at Metrios, Doplas and Yngocelen
who
were ranged behind the captain.
Osullivan grinned as did the others. `Only that one area of this
vessel
is destroyed? Right?' When Rojer
nodded, the captain went on,
`You
seemed to have no difficulty `porting that monitor around the
interior.'
`It was a small one, with a limited detection capacity Oh, I
see At
Rojer's sudden comprehension, Osullivan turned to the other
officers. `He catches on real quick. Good lad.
If we can present
coherent
diagrams of every level of this ship, the crews restoring the
Great
Sphere will have a template to work from.
Captain Prtglm
informed
me that the design has not altered in all the centuries
they've
been dealing with the Hivers.' `Except for the size of the
Great
Sphere - - - Metrios interposed.
`Would you oblige?' Osullivan said,
gesturing at Rojer's couch and
grinning
with invitation.
`I don't see why not, sir. I've been everywhere else I could
`port a
device. But what about the corrosive
gas `You can use as many
as you
need,' Metrios said expansively. `When
the captain made his
suggestion,
we found a coating that will somewhat retard corrosion.
I think!
I hope. First one you have to
bring back, we'll run an
analysis
on and see if we can't identi the combo used.
`I've altered the visual schematics,
Doplas said eagerly, `so that
we can
get dimensional read-out and identify any gross design
alterations.'
Rojer found the process more time-consuming than tiring
but he
was very glad when that watch was over.
Five probes had been affected by the gas
and he had deposited them
in a
gas-proof container in the ship's lab.
While it was not as large
as the
Great Sphere, his first day's investigations had delineated only
a very
small segment of the total ship. But
there was enough to cause
every
science and specialist officer on all three ships to spend the
rest of
the day analysing and rendering drawings.
The gas had done its
work
thoroughly: only such stores as had been encased in metal
survived.
As Rojer `ported the probes further
inboard, printouts became
blurred
where the gas was thick. There came a
point of no input.
Sufficient had been gathered to give the
squadron some idea of the
interior
layout of the vessel: someone called it a `spaghetti-macaroni
network
of tubes, tunnels and conduits'. There
were features in the
ceilings
and along the floors of the queens' quarters which gave rise
to
considerable speculation. Was each of
the queens responsible for
one
aspect of the ship's operations? Or
were the controls mutual?
`The Rowan said she met a "Many
Mind",' Rojer said, trying to
sound
impartial while reporting his grandmother's action, `a nexus of
the
queens which is what she immobilized when she was focus for her
merge.
`So it's likely the queens moved in
concert?' asked Osullivan.
`That's consonant with the hive
mentality: all working for the
same
objective,' the xeno officer replied.
Lieutenant Sedim Mehmet had been asked to
sit in on a primarily
engineering
conference.
`Those control panels are undamaged,'
Metrios said, switching the
screen
to that set of printout. `But I'd need
a ladder to reach `em
and
which would control what!' `Don't seem to be any touch-type
arrangement,
Yngocelen remarked. `But perhaps when
back-lit we'd
identi
controls.' `The queens' palps are odd-shaped,' Mehmet reminded
them. `Palps end in different-sized triangular
joints.' `The p,'
Osullivan
said, `is not so much the shape as the function.
On that they were all agreed. Captain Prtglm seemed to sink
deeper
onto its stool, spreading its bulk noticeably.
Rojer thought it
was
depressed by this current impasse. Gil
and Kat said their Great
Captain
had already achieved many battle honours but it wanted one more
significant
honour to add to a career that had spanned over a hundred
human-length
years. Rojer could sympathize with that
wish, knowing
that
Prtglm's colour would bask in glory for centuries more if it could
bring
back to Clarf an empty Hive ship.
Rojer and some of the lesser staff
members were politely thanked
and
dismissed from the conference.
Since it was likely he'd be called to
send back a report at the
conclusion
of the meeting, Rojer took the opportunity to grab something
to
eat. The sort of mental work he did
made him ravenous. Rather than
appear
to eat more than was considered polite on ship, Rojer often
secreted
food in his cabin for emergencies. He
always had something
for Gil
and Kat, too, and so they were indulging in an illicit feast
when
his comunit clicked on.
`Require Talent assistance return,' said
Prtglm's unmistakable
tones. `Talent to return, too.' WE COME, Too?' Gil
asked and Kat was
hanging
on Rojer's response.
RJR SEES NO REASON NOT. PkTGLM NEVER NOTICES YOU ANYHOW. While
Rojer
knew Pkgtglni was a Great One, he had been slightly peeved that
it was
too great a personage to notice his dear friends. He took Gil
and Kat
across to the KTTS whenever possible because they did enjoy
visiting
among their own kind.
`WE USE BIGGEST CARRIER ANYWAY. YOU HIDE IN DARK.
Knowing it would take the `Dini captain
time to make its ponderous
way
from the bridge area to the transfer pod in the cargo bay, Rojer
stripped
out of his rumpled shipsuit and donned a clean one, buckling
on the
formal belt and pouch he rarely bothered to wear.
He was in awe of Great Captain Prtglm and
a `uniformed' appearance
bolstered
his morale.
Gil and Kat were so excited they squirmed
in his arms as he
gathered
them up for the `port. Actually, he
landed neatly right at
the
hatch to the cargo bay, and in an empty corridor. He could,
however,
feel the vibration in the deck plates of a heavy' tread.
`QUICK, YOU TWO,' he urged, adding body
language to his words,
opening
the hatch and thrusting the two warm furry bodies ahead of him.
`THE GREAT ONE COMES. FEEL HIM?' His two friends scurried to the
large
pod that would be used. They opened it
and were disappearing
inside
as Rojer explained to the deck officer that he'd be taking the
captain
back to the KTTS.
`You sure know when that biggie's coming,
doncha,' Ensign Menburia
said as
the vibration through the deck plates was even more
discernible. `No disrespect intended, but it can barely
get through
that
hatch.
Oops!' And the ensign ducked back to her
engineering board as the
massive
figure of Prtglm appeared.
The captain required time to settle
itself in the pod while the
cargo
bay crew appeared extremely busy at their stations. Finally,
Rojer
could enter.
`Is power up, ensign?' Rojer called and
received a thumbs up from
Menburia. He closed the hatch and tried to compress
himself so as not
to
touch the captain.
A Great One did not appreciate tactile
contact.
Rojer picked up the pulse of generators
he was now as familiar
with as
Xexo's at Aurigae Tower. He knew where
he was going and
`ported
them on board the KTTS so lightly he was sure that Prtglm
wasn't
even aware the transfer had taken place until the hatch was
opened
by one of its own officers, and it was officially welcomed back
on
board. Prtglm rattled several phrases
off so quickly that Rojer
didn't
follow the sense of them.
Something about `new probes' and
`decision' COME,' Prtglm said
curtly
to Rojer as soon as it had its back legs on the deck. Rojer
scrambled
out to see Prtglm making its way to an opening that led to
the
interior of the `Dini ship, not to the bridge as Rojer had
expected.
It was as well Prtglm made its way
without a backward glace for
Gil and
Kat suddenly clung on to Rojer's hands.
WHAT'S WRONG?' he asked but each made the
sudden quick head
movement
that told him to keep quiet. He could
feel their digits
trembling
despite the strength with which they held on to him.
They were alone as they followed Prtglm
down the corridor which
was
just wide enough to accommodate the massive body of the captain.
Then a hatch slid back and Prtglm
entered, pausing to gesture to
them to
hurry.
Rojer obeyed despite the fact that both
Gil and Kat seemed to
impede
his forward progress.
WHAT'S WRONG?' he muttered, bending down
to their ear holes.
Kat managed a quavery noise and, taking a
breath as if steeling
itseW
stepped over the hatch and into the big hangar facility. Rojer
and Gil
followed. Rojer knew his dear friends
were awed by any
proximity
t& Prtglm, but there was some new quality in their manner now
that
began to infect him with doubt and anxiety.
The hangar was dark, but Rojer could make
out racks of long, slim
shapes
that had a metallic shine: many of them.
Light came up and
Rojer
blinked to adjust to the glare. Gil and
Kat audibly moaned.
These were not probes, Rojer instantly
noted: they had a precision
of line
that made their purpose unmistakable even before his horrified
stare
took in the deadly bulb of a warhead on the pointed end. And
there
were an awful lot of them.
Prtglm's digits flashed over a terminal
and the multiple screens
above
it flicked on, each with a different view.
Three depicted the orbiting sphere ships,
another the flat surface
of the
space field, and the rest were split, sometimes in three
separate
scenes, showing the largest of the square buildings his probes
had
found.
The sick feeling in Rojer's guts
developed rapidly into a
certainty
that was no precog. If he had not been
so immobilized by
fear
and shock, he would have `ported himself and his friends out of
the
hangar. But he couldn't move. He couldn't believe that Prtglm
would
make such a devastating unilateral decision.
Somehow he had to
stop it
from happening.
TALENT!' Prtgim turned and it had never
appeared so massive or
forbidding
in aspect.
`GREAT ONE,' Rojer managed to say before
he had to swallow
convulsively
to wet his dry mouth and throat.
YOU SEND MANY THINGS TO WORLD BELOW. YOU SEND THESE. TO THESE
PLACES! THEN SQUADRON TAKES SPHERE AND RETURNS WITH
TRUE HONOUR.
`Sir, these are bombs?' Rojer forgot all
`Dini.
OF COURSE, and the captain's body made
the massive surge from
bottom
to top that was an angry reaction to the question: indeed to any
questioning.
`I am not permitted to destroy, sir.'
Rojer concentrated on
speaking
clearly and firmly.
YOU `PORT MANY THINGS. BOMBS ARE BEST!
Most `Dini voices expressed little
emotion but Prtglm's
intonations
were rich with satisfaction and righteous vengeance.
I AM NOT PERMITTED TO DESTROY, SIR. MY ORDERS ARE STRICT.' Rojer
fell
back into `Dini, hoping he could make his point better in that
language.
YOUR ORDERS ARE TO WATCH, NOT DESTROY
ORDERS WHICH CAME FROM
COORDINATOR
GKTMGLNT, ADMIRAL TOHL MEK- TURIAN.
THIS LOW PERSON CANNOT
DISOBEY
ORDERS.' LOW PERSON RJR OBEYS THE ORDER OF PRTGLM NOW! OBEY.'
Prtglm
began to pulse and expand, a frightening aspect that rooted
Rojer
to the deck but did not alter his determination to disobey.
`I am not permitted, Great One, he
repeated, dropping to one knee
in an
attitude of respectful subGREAT ONE PRTGLM, RJR IS FORBIDDEN BY
HUMAN
GREAT ONES TO DESTROY anything,' Gil said, inching forward with
the
greatest respect it could display.
THE HUMAN IS TO OBEY OR HUMAN WILL BE ON
THE LINE.
Rojer could not believe what he heard.
I CANNOT OBEY CAPTAIN PRTGLM!' Fury
engorged the captain now and,
in a
movement so swift Rojer could have done nothing to intervene,
Prtglm's
top arms descended on Gil's poll eye and smashed its immature
body to
the deck.
`OBEY!' roared Prtglm and, lifting its
great gory forearms, began
the
downward swing that would have also killed Rojer.
``PORT,' Kat cried, shoving Rojer to one
side and taking the blow
meant
for him which crumbled it beside the mangled body of Gil.
`Port Rojer did, out of the KTTS, and to
the one place automatic
reflexes
could take him without conscious thought!
`Where the hell could he get to?' Captain
Osullivan said, scowling
with
annoyance. `He knows the time he's due
here for the daily
report.'
`Sir?' Doplas said from his com station, `Ensign Menburia says
that
Rojer `ported Captain Prtglm back to the KTTS at 1130. She logged
that
and saw them depart.' `Porting doesn't take Rojer more than thirty
seconds. Where'd he go then? Did the ensign see?' `Sir, the log says
that
Rojer accompanied the captain.
At its request evidently. He had his `Dinis with him.
`So?' `Com officer of the KTTS says that
neither the human Rojer
nor his
`Dinis are on board.' `Is there a record of when Rojer `ported
back
here?' `According to their records, the captain's pod is still in
place
and the human Rojer has not approached anyone on the KTTS. The
big pod
did not return here.
`Aw, now wait a bleeding minute - -`
Metrios began in total
disgust. `If the pod is over there, on the KTTS,
Rojer has to be
there. Talents don't generally `port themselves
about in a space
vacuum. Dangerous.
And what's he been doing there for over eight
hours
anyway.
`I should very much like to know,' the
captain said in a tight,
controlled
voice.
`This isn't like Rojer,' Anis Langio
said.
`Darrimit, Anis, I know that,' Osullivan
said, shifting about in
his
command chair, his face grim. `Metrios,
any power use consistent
with a
long-distance `port?' `No, sir,' the engineering officer said
with
only the briefest of glances at his station printout. `And
there's
no way Rojer could `port all the way back to Aurigae or even
Clarf
which is spatially nearer.
Osullivan stared grimly at the digital
time display as the seconds
and
hundreds turned over rapidly. His
fingers rattled an agitated
tattoo
on his hand rest.
`Sound a yellow alert. Ship's crew to locate Mr Lyon.
This ship is to be searched stem to
stern. Alert Captain Quacho.
Doplas, I want to speak to Captain
Prtglm.' `It hasn't been
available,
sir,' Doplas said in a semiapologetic tone.
`It'll be available to me, Doplas!'
Osullivan's icy tone made
Doplas'
fingers skip over the touch-plates.
`Prtglm is not available for speech,' the
`Dini com officer said.
`PRTGLM IS NOT AVAILABLE,' it repeated in
its own language to be
sure
the information was understood.
`We search for Rojer y,) Doplas said.
`RJR LN REPORT IMMEDIATELY TO THIS SHIP,
Osullivan added to be
sure
the `Dini officer also understood.
This time the `Dini officer shook its
upper body and then directed
its
poll eye fully at the screen. `NO HUMAN
ON THE KTTS.' The screen
went
blank.
`What's all this about young Lyon
disappearing?' demanded Captain
Quacho,
his image illuminating the main screen.
`We've supplies to
come in
and I've two crew needing to go back on the carrier. I've been
waiting
for Rojer's signal to bring them over.
`A full ship search is under way,
Quacho. I understand Lyon's
disappearance
no better than you do. And he's not on
the `Dini ship!'
Osullivan
grimaced and he rubbed his jaw. If the
boy had gone to the
`Dini
ship, why hadn't he come back aboard the Genessee?
`Sir?' An excited voice immediately
captured his attention. `Sir,
one of
the escape pods is gone.' `Which?' Osullivan snapped the query
out in
such a hard voice that even Doplas recoiled.
`One oh eight, starboard, sir. And the controls were altered to
make it
appear to be still in place.' No-one on the bridge needed to
remark
that the one-oh-eight pod was the one assigned to Rojer Lyon.
`Has there been any activity towards the
planet?' Osullivan
demanded. When he received a negative reply, `Or
towards that damned
empty
hull?' `No, sir. And I'm scanning for a
recent ion trail.' `The
boy
wouldn't have had to use the escape pod engine, Metrios,' Osullivan
said,
puzzled, angry and half-despairing. He
had grown quite fond of
young
Lyon. The boy had conducted himself
extremely well and been as
helpful
as he could, way beyond the scope of his original assignment.
`Something happened while he was on board
the KTTS,' Metrios said
in a
quiet, intense tone of voice.
`His `Dinis went with him?' Osullivan
knew that they had but he
grasped
at that one possibility of finding out what happened.
`Yes, sir, Ensign Menburia now reports
that they slipped on board
the probe
before Prtglm or Lyon did.' `They often went with him,' Anis
said
softly.
Osullivan waved his hand to cut off
discussion. The boy had used
an
escape pod after a trip to the KTTS in Prtglm's company. The `Dini
was
determined to return home in honour.
Suddenly, Osullivan jumped to
a
conclusion he did not like, not any aspect of it and not for any
reason.
`Let us hope he can reach his family
safely.' Everyone on the
bridge
turned to stare at their captain and then began to exchange
shocked
glances. Metrios propped his head in
his hands and stared down
at the
lights running their normal patterns on his board. Just then,
they
gave him little consolation.
Captain Osullivan, this is Jeff
Raven. why is my grandson not in
touch
with us?
captain Osullivan had been expecting some
form of contact from the
FT&T
Prime ever since the time for the usual daily call had passed, and
still
more seconds ticked by.
`Earth Prime, he is no longer on board
the Genessee.
We had hopes that he has made his way
back to you, or his home
world.'
Osullivan spoke aloud so that the bridge crew would understand
that he
was communicating with the Prime.
Surely you realize, Captain, that Rojer
is not able to make such a
long-distance
`portation without assistance. what has
happened to my
grandson?
`We do not know, sir, and we are
extremely worried.' The captain
then
detailed the known sequence of events leading up to the discovery
of the
missing escape pod.
Then he cleared his throat. `Prime Raven, it is my bdief,
unsupported
though it is, that Captain Prtglm may know either where
Rojer
is or why he left so abruptly. But the
captain is unavailable.
I request formal permission from Gktmglnt
to board the KTTS and
investigate.
That will be unnecessary, Captain, though
the ojoffer is certainly
appreciated. I am informing the Htg'h Council of Prime
Lyon's
disappearance. You may expect assistance shortly. Have the courtesy
to
await it.
`Of course, Prime Raven.' Captain
Osullivan inclined his head in
obedience
to that directive and then sighed.
Ask your medic for an analgesic,
Captain. A direct send to a
non-empath
u'ill produce an intense headache.
Raven's advice was kindly, and something
unknotted in Osullivan's
midriff
`Someone's coming,' he added, remembering no-one else on the
bridge
had heard the message.
`Soon?' asked Anis, her pretty face
flushed with concern.
`Can't be soon enough,' Metrios said in a
growl.
`Aye!' The single word of accord came
from many directions around
the
bridge.
The sound reverberated with acutely felt
echoes and Osullivan
retired
briefly to his ready room to find a pain killer before his
brain
burst through his skull.
Precisely three-quarters of a very long hour passed before a glad
message
was relayed from the cargo deck.
`Passenger pod aboard, sir.' `Escort the
passenger to the bridge
immediately,
Mr Menburia.' `No need, Captain, said a curt feminine
voice and
the Rowan, a large dark-grey `Dini beside her, and Afra Lyon,
with a
smaller `Dini pair flanking him, appeared on the bridge upper
level.
Osullivan shot to his feet and was
halfivay to the Rowan when she
held up
her hand to restrain his impulse. Once
again he felt a mental
touch
and almost recoiled from a second experience.
`Sorry, Captain,' the Rowan said with a
fleeting smile. The pain
went as
quickly as it had begun. `It was the
quickest way for me.
`We apologize for taking so long getting
here,' Afra went on. `We
stopped
at appropriate intervals to listen.
`Ohhhh,' and Osullivan breathed one
single despairing note of
denial.
`My grandson is alive,' the Rowan added,
her expression severe.
Afra nodded a brief reinforcement of her
statement. `We would
know if
he was not, if that affords you any consolation.' `It does.'
`We
must go aboard the KTTS. Do you have
any pictures of its bridge
configuration?'
Afra asked.
`Here,' Doplas said, pointing to his
screen.
`That's enough,' the Rowan said and
turned towards the engineering
position. `You are Commander Metrios? I thought so. We will need a
touch
of power.' `All you want,' Metrios said, throwing his hands up in
exaggerated
relief at being able to do something.
Their air of competenceee and
determination revived him from the
despair
which had engulfed him since Rojer's disappearance became
known.
The generators surged briefly and the
group were gone. Someone
breathed
a `wow!' of awe.
`The Rowan?' Yngocelen asked in a low
voice.
Osullivan nodded.
`I thought she `never left Callisto.'
`Not often, but she's the
clout
needed,' Osullivan said, encouraged in spite of his pessimistic
fears.
`Sir?' Ensign Menburia's voice sounded
almost apologetic. `They
brought
the supplies, too `That boy must be found, safe and unharmed!'
Osullivan
said, bringing both fists down hard on the arm rests. He had
personal
as well as professional reasons, and a few which would have
repercussions
that he didn't want to think about, even clear-headed.
`Aye, aye, sir!' The Rowan had been angry
before with the
stupidity
of people, or things, or avoidable accidents, but she had
never
been so frighteningly angry before. Even
as Jeff had been
receiving
information from the Genessee, he had Gollee Gren contacting
the
Mrdini High Council representative stationed on Earth. Mrtgrts was
not
only a grey, Captain Prtglm's colour, but it was the High
Councillor's
chief liaison official and had served two decades as
manager
of the `Dini colony world, Sef.
It immediately volunteered to accompany
whomever the Earth Prime
sent to
investigate.
The Rowan had informed Earth Prime that
none other than herself
would
be the FT&T representative, having forcibly overruled her
daughter
who felt she had the right to discover what had happened to
her own
son. Aungac may not be without its
Prime, Damia, and that's
that. But the Rowan had then relented sufficiently
to ask Afra to
accompany
her. You can manage without Afra and
lie is the boy's
father. But Aungac can't manage without you.
Then how is it that Callisto can do
without its Prime?
Damia had demanded caustically. He's my son!
And my grandson and I carry more
clout. Ca llis to 5 in occlusion
or
we'd've had to sendjeran.
I'd rather you went, Damia said,
subsiding.
We will find Rqier, dear girl. We will.
You know lie's alive.
Yes, I know he's alive and Damia's tone
dwindled off while leaving
her
mother with the full fmpact of her shock and despair.
Now `port your husband and your
`Dinis. We'll need them almost as
much as
we'll need me.
The Rowan had almost baulked at waiting
for the cluster of supply
pods
destined for Squadron B but the handlers at Callisto had the pods
attached
with such alacrity that she didn't have time enough to voice
an
objection.
I'd hazard that the supplies are needed
for the morale value if
nothing
else, Jeff said soothingly. Rojer seems
to have been very well
liked
and Captain Osullivan is genuinely and deeply upset by his
disappearance.
And so he should be. A good lad.
Not too cocky either.
The Rowan did not, however, wait until
the encircling pods were
removed
by the Genessee cargo handlers but `ported herself and her
companions
directly to the bridge. She heard
Captain Osullivan's
apologies
and a reiteration of the circumstances.
Then she and Afra
`ported
with their `Dinis to the KTTS where they were met by the next
in
command, another grey `Dini of good size but one who instantly made
deep
obeisance to Mrtgrts.
THE PRESENCE OF PRTGLM IS REQUIRED,'
Mrtgrts said, its tone coming
from
deep inside its strong large body.
The poll eye of every `Dini on the bridge
was turned respectfully
in its
direction.
I, PRIME OF CALLISTO, REQUIRE THE
PRESENCE OF PRTGLM NOW!' the
Rowan
said, drawing herself up to her full height.
Despite being
dwarfed
by almost all the `Dini bridge staff, she was so imperious in
manner
that she received equal respect and attention.
I, FR, SIRE OF RJR LN, REQUIRE THE
PRESENCE OF PRTGLM,' Afra said
and he
towered above everyone.
Though he knew the `Dini were not
empathic, he allowed himself the
luxury
of radiating the anger and indignation that consumed him despite
all his
attempts to suppress such un-methody emotions.
Trp and Flk, the `Dinis who had lived
with Damia and Afra for the
past
eighteen years, suddenly began to swell.
WE KNOW.
WE GO,' said Trp, and with no further explanation it and
Flk
ran, as nearly as their body shapes allowed them, to a bridge exit
and
disappeared. That precipitous departure
caused some of the lower
crew
members to moan and prostrate themselves.
Mrtgrts took charge, flicking one set of
digits in a warning to
the two
humans. The Rowan bridled, incensed to
be ignored.
Don't, Rowan. Let Mrtgrts handle this.
I've never seen such
behaviour
from `Dinis before and we must be patient Patient? when we
don't
know We know that Rojer lives. if we
can find out what caused
him to
run like that A Gwyn-Raven doesn't run, the Rowan began, her
mental
tone a vivid purple-red she was so incensed.
`There has been a command failure,'
Mrtgrts told them suddenly and
now it,
too, made a humble inclination of its upper body to the
Talents.
`A what?' `Prtglm has attempted
unilateral action that would not
be
approved by Admiral Mktrn or Gktmglnt.' Mrtgrts bowed again, its
colour
paling to exhibit a degree of embarrassment that Afra had seen
only in
very young `Dini miscreants.
`What sort of action?' the Rowan demanded
imperiously.
`The Talent offspring of Afra Lyon became
so deft at sending
unseen
probes that Prtglin saw the opportunity to destroy the flinction
of this
world for ever.
Damn!
The word exploded with ferocity in the Rowan's livid mind
and
included the actions which she desired to inflict on Prtglm's
person.
`How dared it!' Afra's fliry matched the
Rowan's and Mrtgrts
swayed
back from them as if it felt the impact as a personal blow.
`That was not the assignment my son
accepted and that I, as his
parent,
approved, Mrtgrts. I do not know what
punishment can be meted
out to
a personage of Prtglm's rank and colour but this is an
unacceptable
perversion of FT&T services and a gross affront to the
pacific
nature of FT&T personnel.' `All FT&T services will be withdrawn
from
the Rowan began, suddenly white and trembling with reaction.
Flk and Trp returned, their pelts almost
colourless.
THERE ARE MANY PUNITIVE MISSILES IN THE
CARGO BAY. GRL AND KTG
DIED ON
THE LINE.
The Rowan's face mirrored the horror both
she and Afra felt.
No wonder Rojer disappeared, she said in
the saddest tone Afra had
ever
heard from her in all their long association.
She swayed and he
stepped
close to support her.
`ESCORT ME, Mrtgrts told the bridge
officer who had met them. Its
whole
body shuddering, it turned to another of the exits from the
bridge
facility, Flk and Trp falling in behind him.
The Rowan made a move to follow but Afra
restrained her and eased
her on
to the nearest stool before her knees buckled.
Keeping one hand
lightly
under her arm to comfort her, Afra blanked out the flood of
emotions
she continued to broadcast. Far better
for all if she
dispersed
as much of her feelings as possible where it could not be
felt or
heard before Mrtgrts returned.
why would Rojer's `Dinis be killed,
Afra? why? They were young,
blameless.
Rojer would have refused outright to
`port weapons of any kind,
Afra
said wearily for he now had a sense of what had probably taken
place. He oughtn't really to have sent probes
either, but certainly
the
knowledge that has been amassed is more than worth that shg'ht
deviation
from his orders. But - Afra shook his
head.
We started these operations to clear the
stars of Hive incursions,
didn't
we? the Rowan began and Afra was
relieved by the healthier
indignation
of her mind.
It
was also mutually decided by the Alliance not to promulgate any
attack
against an entrenched Hiver position because we bloody well
couldn't
succeed.
The least that should be done is blow up
those ships so this group
will be
planet-bound for a long time to come, and her eyes flashed with
determination
to wrest that much of a concession from those who
preferred
non-aggression.
We'll never be able to communicate with
that species. I certainly
don't
want to have to meet any mind of theirs again, single or many!
Afra certainly understood her hostility
and resentment of the
species
but he had been raised on a methody planet which did not
approve
of violence of any kind, even in self-defence.
`There are
always
alternatives: keep talking' had been the guiding rule about
confrontations
that might lead to force and bloodshed.
Until we can find the weaknesses of this
species, we cannot arrive
at a
solution which will produce success without needless waste of
life,
he said as gently and persuasively as possible.
He didn't wish to aggravate the Rowan,
and he knew her sentiments
in
depth, but he also had the right to his opinions and the right to
express
them.
Even when Rojer has been the first
casualty of such an attitude?
The Rowan's grey eyes flashed at him and
she shifted herself away
from
his gentle support.
He sighed but he expected nothing else.
A door whooshed open and Mrtgrts stood
there a moment, its poll
eye
aimed directly at the two human Talents.
As it stepped onto the
bridge,
Flk and Trp followed.
PRTGLM EXCEEDED ORDER AND OBEDIENCE. A CARRIER IS CURRENTLY
AVAILABLE. IT MUST BE TRANSPORTED TO CLaRF IF SUCH A
TASK CAN BE
REQUESTED
OF TALENTS, KNOWING THAT A YOUNG OF YOURS HAS BEEN BASELY
ABUSED. THERE WILL BE NO GOOD GREY DREAMS.
The Rowan gave a little shiver. I'd like to consign Prtglm to
this
primary, not to Cia That would be sparing Prtglm the ultimate
humiliation,
Rowan, Afra pointed out. I can send a
carrier that far if
you
would rather not deal with the send.
Oh, and her eyes blazed at him, in that
case I myself will bump
him
back to Clarf arid half bury the capsule Afra signalled her to wait
as he
turned to Flk and Trp. `WHAT HAPPENED
TO GRL AND KTG AND WHY?'
THEY
PRESUMED TO INTERFERE WITH PRTGLM'S ORDERS TO RJR. PRTGLM
PUNISHED
SUCH PRESUMPTION' The Rowan hid her eyes for a moment and a
sob
racked her. Afra sent the gentlest
soothing thought he could,
though
his heart pounded bitterly at the sacrifice, at the terrible
shock
such a loss would have dealt his son.
Rojer was no older, in
either
`Dini or human terms, than the two who had tried to help him.
Afra could and did allow himself a brief
surge of pride in a boy
who
would not be coerced into doing something against training and
conscience.
THEY,' Flk continued, drawing itself up
straight, `DO HONOUR TO
THEIR
COLOUR AND THAT OF YOUR DWELLING.' THEY HONOURED MY SON MORE,'
Afra
said though his voice cracked uncertainly.
He bowed his head and
let his
tears flow. The `Dinis didn't
understand weeping but he
scarcely
cared at that moment what their reaction would be.
`Put your erring person in the carrier,
the Rowan said in a steely
voice. `Which station handles power generation?'
Every `Dini pointed
and she
moved to that station, its attendant stepping respectfully
back.
`Who is to be informed of the reasons for
Prtglm's cnme and
return?'
the Rowan asked Mrtgrts.
The big `Dini inclined its body to the Rowan. `This one will
inform
Gktmglnt personally of this terrible misconduct of Prtglin who
now
submits to retribution.
Details will be forwarded to you.
The Rowan responded to that with a curt
nod of her head. Gktmglnt
was one
of the high-placed `Dinis who accepted human reasoning and
logic
in the Alliance campaign to restrict Hiver incursions. A pall of
tense
silence was maintained until it was announced that the carrier
had
been loaded and was ready for transfer.
Afra followed the Rowan's thrust. She did not quite plough the
capsule
into the concrete of the Clarf landing field.
She gave the
Clarf
Tower Prime, her granddaughter Laria, quite a shock to feel a
carrier
being brought in so precipitously.
Mother, I just had the most extraordinary
orders not to touch that
personnel
pod. There's a crew swarming over it,
painting some kind of
message
I can't understand. Is there someone or
something inside?
Vie sun's boiling here today.
Anything enclosed like that will bake in
its own juices.
Then follow your orders, Laria, the Rowan
said. The creature in
the
carrier killed your brother's `Dinis As Calisto Prime I speak to
Clarf
Prime, the Rowan went on in a flat voice.
As Clair Prime, I listen, Laria said,
though her grandmother could
sense
the quickly suppressed quaver of uncertainty in the mental
message
as she expressed the formula of total discretion now required.
Briefly the Rowan related what had
happened. She caught a brief
flare
of Laria's regret that the Hivers had not been bombed.
Clair Prime, such an action would have
been totally beyond the
parameters
of your brother `s position. He has
acted properly, and
bravely. Had he complied, lie could never have been
allowed to run a
Tower.
Yes, Callisto Prime, of course I see
that. You'll let me know the
moment
you find Rojer? And it was a caring
sister who asked, not a
Tower
Prime.
He did not con tact you directly for
assistance then?
No, Grandmother. He could have reached me. He's got very strong,
you
know. I'd say stronger than me Than I,
her grandmother corrected
absently. I doubt you'll need gestalt to hear when we
do find him.
Have you any ideas where he might
go? Could lie possibly have
gone to
Deneb? You children were always keen to
visit Isthia.
Laria was astute enough to catch the
wistfulness in the Rowan's
voice. She would have informed you the moment she
was aware of his
presence
on Deneb. And she would be.
Yes, she would be.
Laria hesitated, surprised by the tinge
of despair in her
indomitable
grandmother's tone. You'll find him,
Grandmother, I know
it. Especially if Dad's with you. You two could hear to the furthest
arm of
the Milky Way.
You have a ridiculous tendency to
exaggerate, young woman.
The contact was broken but not without
Laria sensing that her
`exaggeration'
had somehow cheered the Rowan.
She's right, you know, Afra told the
Rowan, since the exchange had
been
open to his mind, too. We could make
ourselves heard a long long
way. Further than Rojer could have thrown that
escape pod. But he
hadn't
turned on the engines so he didn't use them in gestalt.
which means he's near by, concluded the
Rowan and allowed an
audible
sigh of relief to escape her lips.
WE STAY HERE A WHILE,' Flk and Trp told
Afra.
MRTGRTS, TOO. ALL COLOURS ARE FADED.
THE MISJUDGEMENT BELONGED ONLY TO THE
CAPTAIN AND ITS NEED FOR
HONOUR,
Afra replied.
NO.
THEY WERE REQUIRED TO MAKE THE BOMBS.
THEY WERE GLAD TO THINK THAT IT WOULD BE
PERMITTED TO BRING
DESTRUCTION
TO THE HIVE PLANET WHEN `DINI PLANETS HAVE SUFFERED SO
MUCH.'
They have a point, the Rowan said but before Afra could argue,
she
added, I can't stay another moment on this ship.
CONTACT ME WHEN YOU WISH TO RETURN TO THE
GENESSEE, Afra told the
`Dinis
who bowed in acknowledgement.
* * * Reporting formally to Captain
Osullivan in his quarters, the
Rowan
and Afra were immediately offered refreshment.
`I knew old Prtglm was up to something,'
he said, `but it's still
hard
for me to interpret some of the more obscure `Dini body language.
Commander Yngocelen came to me - oh two
weeks back - when the KTTS
requested
some unusual ordnance supplies from our stores. I didn't
think
much of such oddments and we are under orders to comply with any
reasonable
requests.
The KTTS had been making probes for Rojer
- - - any word on his
whereabouts,
Callisto Prime? We are most worried for
his sake.' `We
appreciate
that,' and the Rowan sighed again.
`I'd've given anything to have spared him
such a shock and the
loss of
his `Dinis. They, too, are .
were well liked by all the crew and
officers. Gave lots of their
time
teaching us pronunciation and vocabulary Osullivan shook his head.
`I do not think he has gone far, Captain,
but we,' and the Rowan
gestured
to Afra, `would like to go in deep gestalt to locate him.' `A
shock
like that to a sensitive young man Captain Osullivan said sadly,
`he may
not wish to be found and, knowing what caused him to disappear,
I can't
say that I blame him.' `Nor do we, which we shall make
paramount
in our thoughts,' Afra said. `But the
reason for his
disappearance
has now been removed.
`I needed that,' the Rowan said,
finishing the last of the small
sandwiches
and the wine in her glass. She
stood. `Let's find the
missing,
Afra.' `If I might make a suggestion,' the captain said, his
expression
startled by the thought that came to him.
`It's always the last place you
look. I mean, if you're looking
for
something or someone.' He glanced from the Rowan to Afra, hoping
they
followed his illogical rationale. `The
last place anyone would
look
for Rojer - because of the danger - would be on that refugee
ship!'
`How so?' and then, impatient with slow speech, the Rowan
plucked
the details from Osullivan's public mind.
`Ah, yes, I see your
point. The escape pod would be sufficient
protection from any residual
gases
and he'd know the interior spaces to the square centimetre.' Her
face
lit with a smile that almost made the captain reel from its sudden
brilliance. He was full of envy for Jeff Raven, and
indeed anyone who
was
close to such a vivid personality.
He caught the wry smile on Afra's face
and felt himself blush at
having
been quite so transparent. The barest
shake of Afra's head, and
an
increase in his smile, suggested to Osullivan that his reaction was
rather
common when the unsuspecting dealt with the Rowan.
Commander Metnos immediately ushered Afra
to his chair while the
Rowan
settled on Rojer's couch.
`We may not need to draw much on the
gestalt,' she said with a
quiet
confident smile that put heart in the engineer's uneasy mind.
Metrios had been excoriating himself for
not having kept closer
tabs on
Rojer, on the messages recorded, or not, on his own station.
`We suspect he has parked the escape pod
on the refugee ship,'
Afra
said by way of explanation.
`Of course! Why didn't we think of that?' And Metrios wallowed
for a
moment longer in guilt.
`Not that it would have done you much
good, except relieve your
apprehension,
Commander,' Afra said, radiating conciliation.
He
glanced
at the Rowan and the pair immediately went into a mind merge
which
focus stabbed in the direction of the deserted ship.
The pod is there! In a cargo hold on the perimeter of the ship
which
is in full vacuum, clear of the gas. I
believe we could
dissipate
the rest of it throughout the ship.
That might solve
transport
problems.
So it might. But we know that the ship is within range of the
surface-to-air
missles That can be altered. Ah!
Rojer, said his father very gently,
touching the mind of a boy so
deeply
sunk in despair and shock that only a flicker was palpable.
Daaaaad?
Unexpected joy/immeasurable relief/then shame followed.
No shame, Rojer, no shame! the Rowan quickly responded. You were
honourable.
Are Gil and Kat honourably dead then! The anguish/
shock/loss/hatred/fury
in Rojer's tone had to be fended off by parent
and
grandparent.
Laria is correct, the Rowan said on a
tight aside to Afra, Rojer
has
strengthened significantly.
More the pity that his tour should end on
such a tragic note.
We will make positive out of the
negative, old friend.
Swiftly, the Rowan told the boy what had
ensued.
I could have, should have stopped
Prtg/m. I could have, using
force,
Rojer said, still grieving and accusing himself.
NO!
both the Rowan and Afra said so fiercely that Rojer recoiled
from
them.
Sorry, son, Afra said. I know you feel the loss of Gil and Kat
very
very deeply. Trp and Fik do, too, and
with an implacable hatred I
have
never seen from any `Dini before towards one of its own kind.
Prtg/m is, I believe, roasting in its
personnel carrier on Clarf,
the
Rowan added with some relish, in the noonday sun.
Despite the appalling consequences,
Rojer, his father added, you
behaved
exactly as you should Going awol, Dad?
I should have called
you! That's what I should have done. Thian got to Granddad when he
needed
help. But I just Both could hear the
sobs that he had been able
to
choke back until now.
Now, there, love, a good cry is what's
needed most, the Rowan said
in an
uncharacteristically gentle tone, but you are not the only one I
assure
you. She paused for a long moment,
ending with a deep sigh. We
all
grieve for your friends, Rojer. We can
feel your loss as though is
our
own, Rojer, and you have only to reach out from the focus of your
grief
to realize that. She felt his hesitant
contact and let him see
how
deeply she, and beyond her all his kin, joined him in mourning.
That seemed to astonish the boy out of
his self-absorption. So
she
went on in a brisker tone. Now, will
you need assistance to bring
that
escape pod back to its proper position?
You're tired, son. Let us help you.
I got myself here, Dad. I'll get myself out.
The Rowan approved of his attitude but,
in a tight aside to Afra,
she
proposed that they surreptitiously assist him.
Grandmother, I'm not being cocky, but
this I will do myself All by
myself
Rojer surprised them both by saying.
Before he had completed the mental
sentence, Commander Metrios
jubilantly
announced that the pod had been reconnected to the Genessee.
The Rowan abandoned dignity and `ported a
very weary grandson
directly
into her embrace on the bridge.
Don't embarrass him, Rowan, Afra began
until he saw how tightly
the boy
clung to his grandmother before he turned to his father, and
Afra
knew that her instinct had been correct.
A cheer cut through their private reunion
and Metrios was the
first
to grasp Rojer's hand and pound him on the shoulder, forgetting
every
protocol regarding the Talented in his relief at seeing the boy.
Rojer was too exhausted to be offended
and much too gratified by
Metrios'
genuine response. Doplas, Anis Langio,
Yngocelen, even the
yeomen
and women on duty, all crowded around to welcome the boy back.
The captain's approach made them step
aside.
`Rojer, it is such a relief to see you
unharmed the captain began,
pumping
Rojer's hand in his turn.
`No, you're not exactly unharmed, lad,
are you, after such an
encounter,
but you have our sympathy for your losses and our
appreciation
of your courage. I should have been
hard-pressed to stand
up to
Prtglm when it was so obviously deranged.' The captain's
admission
surprised Rojer so much his mouth dropped open.
Close your mouth, boy. Learn to accept praise with proper
modesty,
the Rowan said, but her tone was kind.
Rojer immediately closed his mouth and
managed a smile.
`He's out on his feet, Captain,' Afra
said, putting a protective
arm
about his son's shoulders. `I'll take
him to his cabin.' Which
Afra
did with as much tenderness and affection as he thought would not
rob
Rojer of his new manliness.
Then the Rowan indicated to the captain
that she wished to speak
with
him privately and he led her back to his ready room.
`What Rojer had no authority to do, I
have,' she said, gracefully
seating
herself.
With no subtle prompting from her, he
offered wine which she
accepted
with relief They both sipped, organizing their thoughts. The
Rowan
had acutely experienced Rojer's trauma which went deeper than she
had
expected. But then she had not had
close `Dini relationships. The
boy's
attachment to his `Dinis went far beyond that of the unusually
deep
familial bonds of the Talents so his loss was far more profound.
They'd have to deal with that on his
return. She had another,
more
immediate, matter to attend.
`We must, of course, discuss the proposal
I have in mind with
Gktmglnt
and Admiral Mekturian,' she began and Captain Osullivan gave
her as
good a double take as she had seen in many a year. She allowed
a
slight smile to put him at his ease.
`That refugee ship must never
be used
by Hivers. Nor the other ships in
orbit.
We have enough of this species loose in
the galaxy right now. She
held up
her hand when Osullivan opened his mouth.
`I certainly cannot
condone
- much though in essence I approve of Hiver containment - what
Prtglm
had planned nor its proposed delivery.
As you may be aware,
controversy
rages over whether we, the Alliance, have the right to
inflict
the atrocity of destroying occupied Hiver worlds. That's the
sort of
barbaric retribution which we humans have outgrown.
Yet we cannot, by the same token, permit
them to continue to
exterminate
life on the planets they wish to colonize.
`It has been put forward that perhaps
they recognize only their
own
species as intelligent and sentient and are unaware that they are
slaughtering
developing sentient forms. Be that as
it may, certain
actions
have * * been discussed and this situation here allows us some
leeway. I will propose to Gktmglnt and Admiral
Mekturian, subject to
their
agreement, that Squadron B demolish the three orbiting ships to
prevent
the obviously imminent colonial expedition.
I shall myself
`port
the missiles so expediently available: an action in which T-2
Afra Lyon cannot be expected to take
part, since he is methody by
training
and choice.
Now it was Captain Osullivan's turn to drop his jaw and stare at
her in
amazement, tinged with a certain equally gratifying relief and
delight.
`First, however, it will be necessary
that the refugee ship be
surreptitiously
removed beyond the range of planetary missiles. Then
it
should be easy enough to tow it back to where the Great Sphere is
being
examined.' She grinned with wicked delight.
`How much more we
can
learn from an intact vessel than a melted hulk.' Osullivan's
expression
brightened considerably.
`Prime Rowan, it went severely against
the grain to know that
those
Hivers would have four colony ships available to them.' She
chuckled,
twisting the stem of her wine glass, her grey eyes sparkling
at him
over its rim.
`Soon there will be none. I'm delighted you find yourself in tune
with
this plan.
`Delighted isn't strong enough but it
will suffice, Osullivan
said. `I'm certain that Captain Quacho will
concur. I assume,' and he
hesitated,
`that the KTTS will release the missiles to us.
`The KTTS will insist on taking part as
well, Captain.
Their honour needs some restoration.'
`Shall we confer with
Captain
Quacho?' `Of course,' and Osullivan turned to his console to
key in
the signal.
Afra joined them some time after the
Rowan, having obtained
Quacho's
enthusiastic co-operation and Mrtgrts's agreement, had relayed
the
proposal to her husband who put the matter before the two Alliance
commanders. Captain Osullivan had ordered dinner and, when
Afra
appeared,
asked for service. First he poured Afra
a glass of wine.
`My own special favorite, Mr Lyon,' the
captain said, hoping by
his
courtesy he managed to convey what he could not express to the
Aurigaean
T-2.
Afra tasted the wine with due solemnity
and a little smile of
appreciation.
`Rojer is all right?' the captain asked.
`He's asleep,' Afra replied, `with Flk
and Trp to ease him with
good
dreams.
`May I say how heavily this despicable
incident rests on my mind?'
`You
have in many ways, Captain,' Afra said solemnly, `and we have been
aware
of each, even if we have not properly thanked you for the depth
of your
concern. Rojer will recover. He certainly bears you no
rancour. Ah,' he said, changing the subject as
stewards entered with
steaming
dishes, redolent with delectable aromas, `I hadn't realized
how
hungry I am.' `You were very considerate to bring in those supplies
or, I
can assure you, my cook would have been hard put to present you a
decent
meal.' `This is a feast,' the Rowan said, holding up her glass
for
more wine. `Where does this vintage
come from?' `You can't guess?'
Afra
asked in polite surprise.
`Then it has to be Capellan,' she said
with a mild grimace. `It
has
always amused me that such a methody planet produces such fine
vintages.
Let that be a surprise. It'll cheer you up, I know.
The next morning Afra and Rojer left for
Deneb where Rojer would
undergo
such ministrations as his grandmother, Isthia Raven, thought
advisable
to ease his mind. The large carrier
also left with the `Dini
pairs
needing hibernation and the four crew members whom the morale
officer
had ordered to take furloughs. The
Rowan remained aboard the
Gerlessee. She had not discussed the punitive proposal
with Afra
although
she supposed he had picked up references to it from the
captain
- who was full of the prospect of some action - or any of the
elated
officers and crew. He said nothing
beyond telling her that he
would
inform Rojer if he felt the knowledge would be therapeutic.
The Rowan also awaited the decision of
the High Council though she
had
some assurance from Jeff that there was little doubt the proposal
would
be accepted.
It would salve the conservatives that the
planet would be left
unharmed
and placate the militants that all space capability was
destroyed.
The decision was affirmative but she
would have to await the
arrival
of Thian Lyon as FT&T replacement and an additional T-1 to
assist
in the seizure of the refugee ship.
Even the Rowan had to admit
that
the sphere ship had too much mass for her to move even with the
assistance
of more gestalt power than Callisto Station ordinarily
provided.
If it makes you feel any better, my dear,
her husband informed
her,
the T-2s replacing your good self at Callisto are working their
balls
off desperately awaiting your return.
Do `em good, the Rowan replied smugly.
Does you good, too, my darling, to find
that you are nnnot, after
all, moving
mountains all by yourself Jeff teased her.
Ha!
who are you sending?
He gave her a phantom hug and an
enthusiastic kiss and a
figurative
pat on the head for the work she had cut out for herself but
he
didn't budge on the identity of the third T-1
I suppose it's as well that Thian wasn't
here when Prtglm had its
brainstorm,
she said, knowing she couldn't tease the information out of
him.
Prtglm would have gotten no more help
from Thian than he did from
Rojer. Less.
thyan would have seen the missiles immediately `ported
out of
danger. Possibly even despatched Prtg/m
back to Clarf with a
blistering
note about exceeding orders.
He'd've been exceeding his if he did, the
Rowan replied tartly.
love, you can't have it both ways.
I can try!
Until Thian on Squadron A's `Dini KLTZ
had reached a point where
he
could be `ported to the Genessee, the Rowan busied herself reviewing
the
fascinating tapes Rojer had gathered by probe.
Before, the Hivers
had
been featureless creatures in a death-dealing sphere, now they were
still
featureless - as humans reckoned such matters - but the work
ethos,
the discipline, the minutiae of daily life in some of the orders
of
Hiver creatures, was depicted: and at least one of the worlds the
Hivers
had chosen to populate. The Rowan spent
more time than she
intended
on such records. Then, resolutely,
planned how to destroy the
planet's
spacefaring capability. The two
half-finished ships would be
easy to
demolish, but the third ship was tightly sealed.
Commander Yngocelen pointed out that the
weapon ports would do
nicely:
there were sufficient of them to penetrate into the ship and
then it
was a simple matter to `port in sufficient explosives to
disintegrate
it.
Several conferences on the disposition of
the refugee sphere
decided
that dispersing the lethal gas was not an urgent matter. Rojer
had
suffered no harm in his escape pod and another would handily
accommodate
the Rowan, Thian and the third T-1 while they
surreptitiously
eased the refugee ship out of its holding orbit and
beyond
the range of the ground battenes.
Permission was also given to destroy any
pursuit vessels that the
Hiver
world might launch. The biggest they
would have, according to
all
information the `Dinis had amassed, would be surface-to-orbit
shuttles. The scout vessels might be stored on the
closed sphere and
blown
up along with the ship, but if they were available as deep-space
pursuit,
the squadron received permission to destroy them, too.
Assuming that there was, indeed, no
inter-colony communication,
this
Hiver world could not call for reinforcements which might follow
the
squadron's ion trail. By the time a
suitable deep-space vessel
could
be constructed on this world, any traces would have dissipated.
With plans and materiel in place, Thian's
arival was keenly
awaited. His grandmother thought he looked a trifle
gaunt but she
caught
a remarkable energy exuding from him, once he recovered from a
stunned
surprise at finding her on board the Genessee.
`Where's Rojer then?' he asked, glancing
about him, having looked
forward
to a reunion with his brother.
His `Dinis, Mur and Dip, were also
looking about, for they had
been
eager to see Gil and Kat. He was
perplexed by the minute shock he
read
from his grandmother. An indefinable
sadness darkened her eyes.
Then, with a nod of greeting to the
`Dinis, the Rowan unexpectedly
hooked
her arm in her tall grandson's and walked him from the cargo
bay,
Thian's `Dinis following discreetly. As
they moved slowly in the
direction
of the captain's ready room, she told him what had happened.
She managed to time her report so that
they were within the ready
room by
the time she had to relate the sacrifice Gil and Kat had made
to
protect Rojer from Prtglm. She soothed
Thian with what mental
easing
she could while he held his grieving `Dinis tightly against him.
When they had regained some composure,
she explained what action
was now
proposed.
Thian had no reservations about what he
obviously considered
necessary
destruction, only determination and an eagerness to assist
her in
any way possible. She was well pleased
with a mental attitude
that
did not emanate any vengefulness or malicious delight; feelings
which
she had sensed in some officers and many crew members. She
preferred
to think of their coming actions as deterrent rather than
vindictive.
Know that your father is not of a
militant disposition, the Rowan
said,
honour requiring her to mention the fact.
Dad find me a hardened millitant all my
months on board a `Dini
ship,
but that would not be why I find this course of action justified,
Grandmother. Until we can communicate with the Hive
species .
That you'll never be able to do, the
Rowan said flatly. I know!
But I understood that the captive queen
Is understood at only a
very
basic level, and on the one or two occasions when a human has been
in her
presence, the visitor has been totally' ignored as if the human
didn't
exist I'm beginning to think that they don't recognize any
species
but their own.
Thian gave a wry grin. You sure do hate `em, don't you,
Grandmother?
No, Thian, I wouldn't waste such a
powerful emotion on them. At
the
same time, I will not tolerate any depredations when I can prevent
them. That's the distinction which I don't think
your father is
willing
to appreciate. No matter. By the way, did your grandfather
mention
the identity of the third Prime?
No, and Thian grinned down at his
diminutive grandmother, looking
more
like a slender young girl in the lavender shipsuit she was
wearing. He likes his little surprises, doesn't
he? When he can pull
them on
you.
The Rowan scowled and then had to break
into a laugh because Thian
was
enough like his father to ignore what Afra had always called her
fits
and starts.
`Rowan, ma'am,' the ship's com system
began, `please return to the
cargo
bay for an incoming personnel carrier.
`Damn,' the Rowan said, spinning on her
heel to retrace her steps,
`he
could have warned me.' `I'd say he wanted to give you time to brief
me,
Grandmother,' Thian said, not at all put out.
`Do you have to stick up for him?' she
asked irritably.
`As Grandfather or Prime?' Thian asked,
but he had a sense of
eager
anticipation. His grandfather was
subtly providing a diversion
from
what had been a large dollop of bad news.
`Never mind,' she said and walked all the
faster back to the cargo
bay.
They had reached the facility just as the
generators lifted
briefly
and then a shiny new single carrier landed smoothly on the
cradle. The ensign on duty shot a glance at the
Rowan and Thian but
she
nodded for him to lift the hatch.
Oh, am I late, Cal/is to Prime? was the quick concern of a
feminine
mind, touching them both.
Thian narrowed his eyes down at his
grandmother who was genuinely
surprised. He'd mentioned her to me several times but
certainly not
for
this, the Rowan added before stepping forward to greet the girl
nimbly
leaving the capsule. She smiled
graciously at Ensign Tollert
who had
offered her assistance.
`T-1 Flavia of Altair requests permission
to board.
`Permission granted,' Tollert replied,
grinning broadly.
`A pleasure to meet you, Flavia,' the
Rowan said, stepping forward
in turn
to touch fingers briefly with the girl.
Don't gawk, Thian, she
added
tightly.
He took two long strides forward as if he
had merely given his
grandmother
precedence. In fact, he had been nearly
as stunned as
Tollert. Flavia wasn't beautiful in a classical way,
not as Laria or
some of
his cousins were, but she had large and startlingly vivid green
eyes
and long straight blonde hair which she wore simply pulled back
from
her oval face by green combs. Standing
next to the too-slender
Rowan,
she appeared well-fleshed and her pale green shipsuit emphasized
a very
womanly body.
`Thian of Aurigae,' he said, exerting
control not to touch her
fingers
longer than Talent protocol dictated.
Mint/green/rose was her touch.
`I believe Jeff said you are the
grandchild of Bastian and
Maharanjani,'
the Rowan said. `I worked with them,
Thian, in the tower
on
Altair.' Flavia nodded briefly with a becomingly reserved smile.
`The duty has been explained to you?' She
nodded again. `It is an
honour
to work with Callisto Prime for any reason.
`Humph,' the Rowan said.
Tollert cleared his throat loudly. `Ma'am, the conference is
waiting
on the Primes.' `You have a carisak, Flavia?' the Rowan asked
and
when the girl nodded, Tollert cleared his throat again.
`I'll take care of that, ma' am. Prime Flavia's quarters are next
to
yours.
`Hmm, that's as well, the Rowan remarked
obliquely. `We shouldn't
keep
this conference waiting any longer than necessary.' We'll `port
once we
reach the corridor, she added and led the way.
`How are your `Dinis called, Prime
Thian?' `I'm just Thian,' he
laughed,
disclaiming any title, `and these are Mur and Dip.
`FLV TRUSTS THAT YOUR DREAMS HAVE BEEN
GOOD,' she said in
excellent
`Dini.
Score one for the child, the Rowan said
privately to her grandson.
And Granddad, Thian said with a sparkle
in his eyes as he opened
the
hatch for the women.
`Do your `Dinis mind `portations, Thian?'
the Rowan asked.
`Not any more,' he said and closed the
hatch behind him.
He clasped Mur and Dip against his legs,
nodding to the Rowan that
he was
ready to `port. They all did, arriving
in the corridor outside
the
Genessee's conference room. The Rowan
tapped the panel for
admittance
and a yea-woman smartly opened the door.
M within stood at her entry and
throughout her introductions of
her
grandson and Flavia Bastianmajani of altair.
Thian kept his expression bland as mixed
comments reverberated
from
minds keyed up in anticipation of action.
`He's bigger than
Rojer.'
`That young slip of a girl's a Prime?' `Quite a family
resemblance
to Rojer with that same white lock of hair.' `Wouldn't mind
Priming
with her.' `Carries himself well.' `She's a bit young for this
sort of
operation, isn't she?' `So this is the fellow who spent over a
year on
a Dini ship alone!
That took guts.' `Why on earth did he
bother to save Hive larvae?
Sometimes I don't understand these
Talented people.' `Two women
and one
male barely into manhood to move that mass?' `I wonder will
Rojer
turn out as well.' And Thian identified the thinker of that
remark as
the pretty dark-haired astrogation officer, Anis Langio.
There was nothing subtle in his
grandfather's seconding of Flavia
to this
mission, and she was certainly a lovely young woman, but Thian
was not
going to settle quite so quickly into the family pattern of an
early
marriage.
Captain Osullivan formally made Flavia,
Thian and his `Dini
companions
welcome. Then, with the Rowan on his
right side and Flavia
on his
left, with Thian seated beside her, he opened the official final
planning
conference. The captain was certainly
not in on any of
grandfather's
machinations but Thian was extremely conscious of
Flavia's
proximity, aware of the delicate scent she wore, of the pulse
of her
very finely tuned and attentive mind.
After a year on the KLTZ,
he had
mastered the art of concentration.
`This is, as I'm sure you're all aware,
the first time the
Alliance
has taken action against a Hive world.
You have all seen
tapes
of the kind of ground-to-air missile attack on the refugee ship
but we
also know the extent of its range.
However, we must not be for
a
moment lax in vigilance against any unsuspected retaliatory strikes.'
Mrtgrts
nodded in verification of that caution.
`As you also know, the Rowan has already
`ported explosives into
the
assigned positions to destroy the orbiting ships. Heat-seeking
missiles
are ready in each ship of the squadron for use in destroying
any
shuttle craft lifting through the mess they leave in orbit around
their
planet. Operation Snatch,' and
Osullivan grinned, his gaze
ending
on Flavia's attentive face, `can begin as soon as our Primes are
in
position. Once the refugee sphere is
out of range of surface
missiles,
the other ships will be blown. We will
then seed additional
space
mines in case the Hive do still have scout ship capability that
has not
been detected by Rojer Lyon's intensive probing.' He nodded
briefly
at Thian for his brother's accomplishment.
`Are there any
questions?'
After a brief pause, Thian raised his hand.
`Grandmother,
Flavia,
may I escort you to our vehicle so we can get this show on the
road?'
`You may be mixing metaphors, thian, but if Commander Metrios'
engines
are ready to support gestalt. . . She
turned to Mrtgrts and
Captain
Quacho `Are you ready to return to your own ships?' `Ready
indeed,
ma'am,' the engineer said but his last word was spoken to empty
air for
all five had gone. `I wish they
wouldn't do that!' he
murmured,
giving a shake.
`Stations, everyone,' Captain Osullivan
said, rising.
`Red alert!' `This must be the captain's
pod,' Thian said as the
three
T-1s made themselves comfortable in the escape pod.
`It's a lot roomier than the last one I
was in.
`For three, yes, it's roomy enough,' the
Rowan said.
`Shall we?' and she nodded at both young
people.
`Of course,' Flavia said and Thian
murmured consent.
This would be a brief rehearsal for the
longer, harder merge they
would
have to make.
He'd never worked with his grandmother
but he was accustomed to
merging
with his parents and was very pleased when Flavia deftly
slipped
in behind him as if she had similar hours of practice.
The Rowan-Thian-Flavia merge did not need
to touch the power
available
to it from the linked generators of the three ships of
Squadron
B in this initial push.
The cargo area to which they were
`porting could have held a
hundred
escape pods. The slightest bump merely
gave them notice that
the pod
had settled on its broad base in the Hive ship exactly as
planned:
close against the hull, facing the direction in which it was
to go.
They were immediately assailed by the
most intense stingg-pzzt
that
emanated from Hive metals, a sensation peculiarly limited to the
Talented.
Flavia gave a visible shudder, looking
about her, a grimace
marring
her features. `What is that?' `I do beg
your pardon, Flavia,
we
should have thought to warn you,' the Rowan said, casting an
accusatory
glance at Thian. `Talent is susceptible
to a resonance from
Hive
metals.' Flavia worked her mouth, producing saliva and shuddered
again.
`Unpleasant taste in your mouth, too?'
Thian asked helpfully.
She swallowed. `Yes, at the back of my throat.
How can you stand
it?'
`I,' the Rowan said rather loftily, `ignore it When Flavia looked
astonished,
the Rowan relented. `It is particularly
strong since we
are
inside a Hiver, but shortly we'll be busy enough to be able to put
it out
of our minds. We'll only have to endure
it for a very short
time.'
`Thank goodness for that,' Flavia said, pursing her lips and
rubbing
her tongue against her cheeks and teeth in an attempt to
hydrate
her mouth.
The Rowan initiated the merge then, ever
so slowly pushing the
ship
out of its orbit and the gravitational pull of the planet. Since
the
manoeuvre was also being performed as night fell across this
section
of the planet, the stealthy movement was unlikely to be
immediately
discernible no matter how sensitive the Hive
instrumentation
might be.
Breathe, thian, his grandmother said
once, and he grinned at her
as she
sat in the padded seat as calmly as if she were in her Tower at
Callisto,
her silver hair shining in the pod's lights.
Gradually the merge increased its
strength, three pairs of eyes
also
watching the special instrumentation installed in the pod that
expressed
speed and relative distance from the planet.
Slowly they
reached
the mark on the dial when they had passed beyond the known
range
of surface-launched missiles.
Stop hunching your shoulders, you two,
she added at a later point.
Any missile they could launch would have
to penetrate the diameter
of the
ship to reach us. If that is, they had
any idea we are here.
That made both Thian and Flavia
smile. He rotated his shoulder
blades
because he had indeed been unconsciously hunching himself
against
an attack from the rear. He grinned at
Flavia who was rubbing
her
neck and still trying to swallow the stingg-pzzt away.
`Good.
Now we can speed up and complete this snatch,' the Rowan
said,
absently licking her lips and swallowing against the
concentration
of stingg-pzzt.
Thian felt the intensity of the merge now
and surrendered himself
to her
guidance at the same instant that Flavia did.
He hadn't ever
thought
to be capable of moving such mass but, with the merge and the
gestalt
capability, it was abruptly accomplished.
He did feel the drop
in his
energy level when his grandmother released them from the merge
and
then the slight jar as the tractor beams from the squadron latched
on to
the sphere.
`I do hope something down there was
watching,' the Rowan said with
a
mischievous smile more compatible to his sister Morag's age and habit
than
his grandmother's. `First the ship was
there. And then,' her
smile
deepened with great satisfaction, `it wasn't!
Well done, thian.
You've been well taught, Flavia, and it's
my pleasure to merge
with
such fine strong minds. Now let's get
out of this Hive sink of
contamination
and put the pod where it belongs. Then
we can find out
what
else has been happening.
`I feel like I need a good long soak to
rid me of that awful
reek,'
Flavia said, making another grimace of revulsion.
`Later, when our work is done, my dear,
the Rowan said. `We will
have
time, however, for a drink to take the taste out of our mouths.'
`Something
sharp, Grandmother, like orange juice.
`Does this ship have something like
that?' Thian `provided' the
juice
in long cold glasses to Flavia's obvious relief and his
grandmother's
only marginally less fervent thanks.
`You were far enough away not to have
felt any shock waves,
Captain
Osullivan said when they joined him on a bridge that was packed
with
officers and crew, and ringed with additional screens so that
every
view of the theatre of operations was accessed. `Ah, that's our
first
casualty,' Osullivan added, pointing to the screen which had just
ceased
broadcasting. `One of the probes Rojer
hid in the flotsam.'
`The
ships?' Thian asked, rapidly checking the secondary screens.
`Reduced to the debris you see floating
in a band around the
planet,'
the captain said with quiet satisfaction.
`What the bombs you
placed,
ma'am, didn't fragment, the mines you sowed did. Mind you,
there
is a time lag between the event and our visuals of it .
`Do any monitors need replacement?' the
Rowan asked. `Now that
we've
completed Operation Snatch, we are at your disposal. Thian?
Flavia?' The Rowan took the couch,
Commander Metrios vacated his
seat
with alacrity to Flavia and another chair was brought for Thian.
`Well timed, ma'am,' the captain said,
pointing in turn to the
three
central screens which scanned the space field.
`They may now
retaliate.
`Indeed,' said the Rowan with an almost
primitive surge of
adrenalin
as she recognized the tapered prow of a Hive scout ship
emerging
from an underground hangar.
`Mrtgrts here, Osullivan,' came the
`Dini's liaison officer's
unmistakable
voice over the squadron link. `Is the
second wave ready?'
`It
is,' the Rowan answered. thian, you
will use the missiles on the
KTTS as
you're more familiar with `Dini ships.
Flavia, have you
located
the Arapahoc's?
Good.
It's as easy for us to work from here as on the separate
ships.'
She waited until she could feel the young Talents `reaching'
the
missiles on the other ships, her eyes never leaving the screen as
first
one scout ship, then another, and a third became visible.
`Three.
The normal complement of a Hive colonial ship. They'd be
a much
more interesting challenge if they changed their tactics,' she
added
almost ruefully. thian, take the right
hand one; Flavia, the one
that's
just emerging, and I'll dispose of the one that made it to the
field. I believe it's about to launch. At my count . three, two,
ONE!'
Each Prime `ported the heavy torpedoes easily to the recommended
range. Then, before the Hiver world's warning
systems could alert
defences,
launched them at the correct velocity for devastating
strikes.
There was, as Captain Osullivan said, a
time lag before the
screens
would register the result but all three Talents had followed
the
missiles to their targets and knew their strikes had been accurate.
Until visible proof appeared, Metrios
toyed with a stylus, his
eyes
darting from one screen to the next.
Though Captain Osullivan
appeared
completely at his ease, his fingers beat a tattoo on his arm
rest.
Minutes later. the explosions were recorded.
In what appeared like a leisurely
fashion, each of the three ships
exploded,
parts arcing up and then showering down on the trundling
Hivers
that had been massed on the space field.
The debris fell almost
gracefully
to the now riddled surface and lay smoking and burning in a
circle
of destruction spread well beyond the perimeter of the space
facility.
`Someone's left the doors open, Thian
remarked.
`In that case,' the Rowan said with a
shrug, `let us take
advantage
of such carelessness.
Even as additional missiles were armed
and sent on their way by
the
three Talents, more hangar doors punched upward out of the debris
on the
field, revealing the squat forms of shuttle craft. These
emerged
at speed from the protection of the hangars but not swiftly
enough.
`Fire as ready, the Rowan ordered Thian
and Flavia and they lobbed
missiles
at the shuttles and then into any aperture that could be seen
through
the smoke and raging fires.
`Is this their only space facility?'
Thian asked when no more
targets
were visible. `There are other
substantial buildings on the
planet.
`They seem to be agricultural collection
depots,' Captain
Osullivan
said.
`Such is not a target,' the Rowan said,
glancing sternly at Thian
who
shrugged.
`Did the probes not discover where the
queens are housed?' Mrtgrts
asked.
`No,' Osullivan replied. `We were limited to observational
probes,
not reconnaissance.
`The queens are effectively
planet-bound,' the Rowan said.
`Further action has not been authorized.'
`We will remain on
orange
alert,' Osullivan said, touching the arm-plate for inter-ship
communications.
`Captains? Any queries?' `A successful attack,' Captain Quacho
said,
his brows drawn together in what seemed to be a satisfied scowl.
`Do not rule out the possibility of
reprisal,' Mrtgrts said.
Behind it on the bridge, `Dinis could be
seen waving their
forearms
about, expressing their triumph at the success of the mission.
Only Mrtgrts appeared dissatisfied and
pessimistic.
`Reprisal with what, Mrtgrts?' the Rowan
asked caustically,
surveying
the destruction on every screen.
Then, putting both hands on the arm
rests, she pushed herself to
her
feet. `If we are needed, call us,' she
said to Captain Osullivan.
Thian caught the surprised expressions of
Langio, Metrios and
Yngocelen
but he, too, rose, indicating that Flavia could join them.
He paused by the captain's chair.
`Permission to leave the bridge, sir?'
`Of course,' Osullivan
said,
eyes widening at Thian's formality even as he shrugged as the
Rowan
disappeared.
`She'd be the last to admit it, sir,'
Thian said, leaning
confidentially
towards Osullivan, `but Grandmother had to expend more
energy
as focus than we did.' `Yes, yes, of course.
There is absolutely no reason for a T- 1
to apologize or explain
any
action, thian Gwyn-Lyon!
Thian, catching Fhia's startled
expression as she also heard the
fierce
reprimand, grinned at the girl. No,
Grandmother, but it is only
courteous
to observe ship protocol.
And you are tired.
The bridge door whooshed shut behind
Thian and Flavia.
I might be but you are never to presume
Grandmother, your husband
gave me
specific orders on the care and feeding of his favorite wife
His
only wife And the only Prime who can m Ca dinis to and you are
tired.
Fighting a war at any age is tiring.
Flavia's little gasp of surprise caught
Thian unawares.
`Was that a war we just fought?' Thian
stuttered in surprise.
`Well, a battle, certainly.
What did you think you were going to do
here?' `Keep the Hivers
from
leaving this planet.
`And that's not war?' `It's analogous to
clearing out vermin.' `On
rather
a large scale,' Thian said, wondering at her curious calm.
`We have to do so often enough on altair
when there's been
prolonged
and heavy rains in the swamplands.
Otherwise the towns and
settlements
would be overrun, Flavia said quite matter-of-factly.
Your grandfather did know what he was
doing, said the Rowan in a
tight
tone to Thian and added a snort of amusement.
Dad?
There was the special note in his daughter Laria's voice
that
brought Afra sharply to attention. He
was alone in Aurigae Tower,
making
some minor in-system shipments. Damia
was out hunting with
Morag,
Ewain and all the `Dinis.
Yes, Laria?
Dad, just between us? The unusual note of exasperation and
self-doubt
was one Afra had never thought to hear from the nearly
twenty-three-year-old,
confident and poised Tower Prime of the
ClarfFT&T
installation. On completing her
training at Callisto, Laria
had
taken up her duties with a competenceee that even her perfectionist
grandmother
couldn't fault. Yoshuk and Nesrun, the
T-2s who had
originally
run the Clarf Tower, had been shifted to Sef, the most major
of the
four Mrdini colony worlds. Laria had
recently been assigned
Clarissia
Negeva as her assistant, a T-2, who had been trained by David
of
Betelgeuse. Clarissia was replacing
Stierlman who had not achieved
the
necessary rapport with Laria. She'd had
no trouble at all with the
other
members of her Tower staff Vanteer, the T-6 engineer, or
Lionasha,
the T-7 station-manager and expediter.
Although there had been `Dini-human
pairings on her home planet,
Clarissia
was unaccustomed to working with them and never gave direct
orders
to the six paired with the other three station personnel, who
happily
doubled as cargo-handlers or whatever other functions could be
done by
non-fT&T personnel.
Clarissia's not working out either? Afra asked.
I do better running the station on my
own, Dad, was the tart
reply.
She's been here nineteen weeks and she
still turns pale when more
than
our `Dinis are present and you know that `Dinis notice colour
changes. And she's been moaning about that carrier
ever since it got
here. Not, and Laria's mental tone altered, that I
enjoy the sight, or
more
recently the stench from it. Prtglm is
definitely deceased.
I'm beginning to think they don't intend
to move it, leaving it
there
as a reminder that a human was responsible for Prtglm's
ig'nominious
end. Laria's voice had a grim edge to
it, then confusion
coloured
her thought. There's ideographs all
over it now. They're
andent
ones and I can't recognize more than the slashes for dishonour.
Tip arid Huf won't translate: won't even
answer me when I ask what
they
mean.
Yoshuk's a scholar of their ancient
forms. what does he say? Or
have
you discussed this with him?
I have and he says it's too obscure for
him but he's still trying
to find
references. He does reassure me that
they're not antihuman.
This is one of those occasions, Afra said
firmly but soothingly,
when
you know that humans don't interfere with `Dini customs.
The custom I can ignore if I understood
even if the reek is
omnipresent,
but I have to be very careful about transfers.
Originally, Prtg/m's carrier came down -
hard - on the middle
cradle. I was told not to move it to one side, but I
didn't, for one
minute,
realize it was going to take up such permanent residence! I
could
have used that cradle a hundred times.
Once again her tone altered to one less
assured. Daaaad, does
anyone
there know why it's being LEFT? most
don't blame Clarissia but
I also
need to understand what's going on about it - Prtglm, I mean so
I can
deal with the reason it's been left there so long. Is it a
subtle
way of punishing me because I'm Rojer's sister - I doubt that!
Afra replied stoutly. `Dinis don't think in those terms.
I sure hope so, Laria replied, exhibiting
some of the distress she
had
been covering.
I can ask Jeff. I already did and he doesn't know but he doesn't
have `Dinis. Do yours know anything?
We never did get any more answer to
queries about Mrdini penal
codes
than that the miscreants were apt to be shipped out Afra paused
since
Laria would know what that could mean on a long trip. The
cynical
said that saved time, space and money and was an admirable use
of
expendables, but the thought made him shudder.
He forced himself to
more
positive thinking for Laria's sake.
Remember Prtglm is, or was, guilty of
several . errors of
judgement
even in the `Dini lexicon, and certainly several against
humans. They don't want a repetition and that may be
their way of
driving
home the lesson.
When one's own son had nearly been a
victim of PrtgIm's coercion,
it was
very hard indeed not to take a judgemental stand. Once Afra
knew
that Rojer was responding to the discreet therapy of his
grandmother,
Isthia, on Deneb, he felt less bitterness, a most unusual
emotion
for him, towards the misguided Prtglm.
The latest report was
that
Rojer could now mingle with both humans and `Dinis without the
intense
grief/loss/ deprivation reactions he had initially experienced.
He was becoming more and more engrossed
in his practical
engineering
studies. His uncle, Jeran, Deneb's
Prime, was going to
insist that,
when the Hiver ship that had been `appropriated' by the
Rowan
merge reached the investigation orbit at the Mars space facility,
Rojer
would have a place on that study team.
Of course Rojer needed to
meet
the qualifications, but that had given him a definite goal and he
was
studying with good purpose and diligence to satisfy the
requirements.
I know that, Dad, but to have that grisly
reminder on my Tower
field
Afra could feel the anger flaring within his daughter's mind, an
unfocused
anger and so ambivalent that it was no wonder that she was
under
great stress.
You feel that Rojer should have obeyed
Prtglm?
No, I mean, yes but Prtglm juSt ought not
to have required Rojer
who was
the only one who could have carried out Prtglm's plan Prtglm is
- was -
an old revered captain should have been obeyed. That planet
should
have been first wasted. Her tone was
riven with intense
animosity. where I know how much damage the Hivers have
done to `Dini
worlds,
and hundreds of others, that . . .
that Xh-33 really should have been When
Laria could not find an
adequate
fate, Afra couched his suggestions in an ironic tone he rarely
used
with his children. Exterminated? Fumigated?
Wiped of life
forms?
Scorched beyond use?
There was a long pause. Some thitig like that, so that that
planet
could never be able to colonize, to massacre innocent life forms
on any
other planet.
So?
We must emulate their methods?
Well, just look what they did. Forcing queens of their own
species
out of their ship then blasting them, with out ever trying to
find
out why the ship came? Indignation now
coloured Laria's anger.
That's very much a `debatable point,
Laria.
It's not that I'm ignoring other
opinions, Dad. Aren't I
transmitting
messages backwards and forwards every day?
You are, but are you listening to the
content or just the context?
what do you mean by that, Dad? And what group do you support?
Her tone was aggressive as if any other
than the position she
espoused
would be suspect.
Along with other thinking I find the data
insufficient most
theories
have at least one fundamental flaw. We
may never have answers
to half
the questions we've asked because there is no communication.
Observation is as open to interpretation
as any other method of
recording,
since invariably the observer translates from his or her own
experience. There hasn't really been that much useful
observation
either,
Laria said caustically.
Afra smiled, keeping his amusement well away from his
argumentative
daughter. I disagree, Laria. the material recorded from
Rojer's
probes is still being analysed All it shows is that the Hivers
have
knot changed their methods or the dominait drive of their species
in the
centuries the `Din have known them.
The `Dinis never got close enough to a
Hive world to make
observations,
or attempt contact, Afra said patiently.
Laria's
feelings
were quite pent up, by which he guessed she had had the tact
not to
discuss this with her Tower staff.
But we know what they do to planets. We know they've been doing
it for
centuries. Laria sounded querulous.
We know that the `Dinis have reported for
the centuries of their
sigTh
to avoid being `exterminated' and that limited to destroying Hive
ships
in space. Vie planet Xli-33
is the only one where they, and we, have
seen populated by Hivers.
There is a lot more to be known there
what we do even by
extrapolation,
Laria. what exactly upsets you, my
dear?
Jh I knew i-m-in; confided in what Afra
recognized as a -w of
conflict
in loyalties.
It is not up to us to dispute the `Dinis'
right to punish their
own, he
said gently. We must not let our own
moral integrity be
weakened
by conflict with theirs. We can expect
that `Dini reactions
will
not mirror ours. For one thing, humans
have not fought a
sustained
battle for centuries, a condition which certainly alters
perceptions
in a way we can yet evaluate. That we
have managed to
pursue
the joint purpose as far as we have and with as little friction
as
there has been - You `ve reduced Prtglm to the status of friction'?
Laria sounded appalled.
is a matter of no little
achievement. Prtglm caused its own
downfall
by exceeding orders from the High Council of Alliance: orders
in
which it and our captains had been thoroughly briefed and in
agreement. Do you not see that much?
That's the easy part. w}Lot bothers me so is that Gil and Kat are
dead,
defending Rojer when none of them should have been put in
jeopardy
in the first place. But Prtglm is still
there!
I can't escape seeing its carrier and
knowing what's inside and
Suggest
in your most off-handed manner the next time you have occasion
to
speak to either Plrgt r - who's its main assistant know Figtm and
Plrgt's
now Pl6.
Plrgtgl has been very efficient. I hear its name mentioned more
and
more. Suggest that the carrier is
impeding the full use of the
area
available to you and is there not somewhere else that it can be
placed
for even more effect?
Out of sigh4 out of mind, huh, Dad?
Well, out of your sight at least ri it is
distressing you to the
extent
that it has It's not just the corner Ah yes, the matter of
ClarisA? If she's not working out, my dear, request
her transfer.
But Granddad's going to be furious with
me, and there was a quaver
of
uncertainty in Laria's voice. I
couldn't get on any sort of terms
with
Stiedman and now Clarissia - - I never had any trouble with Yoshuk
and
Nesmn! I've excellent relations with
Vanteer and Lionasha.
Laria's tone rose to the level of guilty
confusion and doubt.
Laria, dear, and Afra couldn't resist
chuckling, the tales that
are
told of your grandmother's search for suitable Tower personnel are
not
exaggerated!
Until you came along, Laria said smartly
and then descended into
disillusionment
again, but you're you and she's the Rowan and You have
exactly
the same right to - - - ah - dismiss unsuitable personnel
though
I hope you won `t need to go through as many as she did to get a
comfortable
fit' in your Tower. Furthermore, your
situation on Cia is
Jar
more sensitive than Callisto or Altair ever were, so it's even more
important
that you are totally comfortable with and can rely on each
member
of your staff -A tone of hopefulness entered the conversation Do
you
really think so, Dad?
I know so. As Prime to Prime, informm Jeff Raven of Earth FT&T
that
T-2 Clarissia is unable to integrate or accept the special
requirements
of Cia Tower and you must I can't say `must' to
Grandfather
Possibly not to `Grandfather', dear, but certainly to Earth
Prime
Raven! Make the distinction and request
a replacement.
And keep in mind, too, that you haven't
had a vacation from your
duties
at Cia Tower in over a year. You might
benefit from a respite.
Not right now and not if I have only
Clarissia to mind the shop
while
I'm away, Laria said brusquely. And
when did you and Mother last
have a
break from Aungae?
Ours is a slightly different situation,
my dear child. We're not
dealing
with an alien culture `Dinis are not alien.
I've known them
all my
life!
Nor living on a planet where such a
brilliant primary produces
stress
you may not realize until you are away from it. A little
distance
might help you resolve some of the ambiguities that bother
you. You are not the only one - of us or in the
human-settled worlds
to have
them.
Oh, Dad, I don't consider me unique. Her tone held the quaver of
a laugh
but immediately altered. Sometimes - -
sometimes I don't know
what to
believe. Then I do, and then something
shakes me up again. I
really
ought to know my own mind by now.
Your mind you know, laria, dear, Afra
said with an affectionate
chuckle. It's your emotions and changing perceptions
that cause
problems. I'd hate to think your ideas were graven in
granite at not
quite
twenty-three. Briefly Afra remembered
instances of his Damia's
captiousness
which her eldest daughter certainly had not inherited.
And change is a constant we must all bear
with. At least, and he
let a
grin colour his mental tone, we are not locked immutably into a
cultural
pattern as the Hivers are.
Gee, thanks for that, Dad!
You're welcome, he said with equal
mockery. But he also caught
the
steadier quality of her mental tone.
She'd talked out some of what
bothered
her. If he and Damia had trouble
rationalizing the matter,
how
hard it was on Laria, a Prime who had not yet found a personal
companion
to sustain her in arduous and, so often, deeply troubling
times. Now inform Earth Prime of the fact that
Clarissia's not working
out and
why. Either inadequacy is ample cause
for replacement.
Actually, Laria was as strong a T-1 as
the Rowan had ever been: a
T-3 or
even a good T-4 would be adequate support if they were
compatible. One never knew until one tried different
combinations.
He'd always been slightly amazed that he,
Afra Lyon of Capella,
had
been acceptable to Callisto Tower Prime Rowan.
Maybe He cut off
that
thought. He had had parents interfering
with him: he and Damia
had
taken great pains not to repeat such manipulation.
When Laria signed off he made his muscles
go slack from the
unconscious
effort of such long `pathing. He told
himself it had more
to do
with the nature of the exchange than age, since the Rowan was
older
than he and still going as strong as ever.
That was when he also
felt a
bit of the framework on the left side of the couch, coming
through
the cushioning. How long had the
couches been in use now?
Nearly four decades. About time to replace the padding.
He reached out for Damia's mind but she
was joyfully retrieving
the
scurriers she'd brought down with her accuracy on her sling-shot.
He smiled as he felt Morag's envy and
Ewain's amazement at their
mother's
casual skill. They could discuss
Laria's conundrum later.
Bringing her home for a brief respite
from all those pressures and
conflicting
theories would certainly rest her mind and buffer her when
she
returned to duty.
They might be, as so often Talents said
between themselves, only a
thought
away: but that was not precisely accurate.
Contact, yes, but
similarity
or mutuality or harmony of thought was another matter: so
was a
cuddle when one was depressed.
Afra found himself at odds with his older
son on many points on
the
issue of the Hivers, and even more puzzled by the bizarre actions
and
notions of his daughter, Zara.
Fortunately, her grandmother and Elizara,
the T-l medic for whom
she was
named, were coping with her and she had passed through a
difficult
hormonal transition to young womanhood and stability. He
knew
Rojer was still fighting a private battle with grief, and a harder
one
with the guilt at having put Gil and Kat in fatal jeopardy. Laria
could
not escape being sympathetic to the Mrdini interpretations, even
if
these were considered biased by other, less involved citizens.
Afra swung his long legs off the Tower couch, feeling again the
worn
place - worn by just this action where the framework was no longer
adequately
padded.
Just like the framework of long-held
ethics and morals was - in
some
minds - prodding minds through the once comfortable habits of
generations.
Afra was also fully aware of other
pressures at the highest level
- for
the Rowan and Jeff often used him as a sounding board and, as
often
as not, followed his advice.
The intransigence of Prtglm and the
deaths of Gil and Kat were
having
more far-reaching effects on human-Mrdini relations than that
carrier
left on Claris Tower field. A strong
faction of high-ranking
Mrdini
were of the opinion that, if Rojer Lyon had been old enough for
the
duties of a Prime, then he should have complied with Prtglm's plan
to
devastate the planet Xh-33, regardless of the facts that Rojer was a
noncombatant,
a minor, following the orders he had been given by his
superiors. He had only been on the Genessee as a
substitute until his
older
brother was available. The fact that
Thian also would not have
complied
with Prtglrn's orders was irrelevant.
But Thian already had
`hero'
status in `Dini eyes which would have given him the stature to
reason
with the `Dini captain and helped him defuse the incident
tacffully. It was also quite likely that Prtglm would
never have tried
to
coerce Prime thian Lyon.
Yet, since the Mrdinis had allied
themselves with humans, Afra
mused,
they must often have had dreams, and delusions, of using the
human
kinetic abilities to produce a grand rout of the Hive species.
The fact that the Talents had defeated a
Hive colony ship without
suffering
a single casualty was a frequent theme of `Dini
dream-projections
and story-telling. When the Mrdini and
humans had
finally
made contact, the humans had enthusiastically embraced `Dini
aspirations
and followed their guidance since obviously the `Dini had
far
more information about the Hive predators than humans did.
In total, such information boiled down to
a painfully intimate
knowledge
of Hive ordnance, its range and destructive abilities: of the
number
of suicide ships needed to penetrate and destroy any Hive
intruders;
enough of the Hive mode of colonial expansion to know it was
fatal
to any planetary life-form. Deneb V was
remarkable as the only
world
where Hive tactics had been unsuccessful.
Since these tactics had been effective so
long, the Hive species
had not
altered them, or its ships and armaments, in the centuries that
the
Mrdini had been defending themselves.
The Mrdinis had, on the
other
hand, improved space ships, peripheral technologies, and more
effective
unmanned missiles. They had managed to
protect their own
colony
worlds, all the time searching for allies, the Hive home world
and new
resources to help them win the final victory.
Humans had far too long eschewed wars:
naval strength being
deployed
more in the search for colonial worlds, or as deterrent
against
the occasional renegade privateer.
Consequently, minor
incidents
of friction were bound to occur between a war-honed species
and one
which had been at peace, where the only casualties had occurred
in
space accidents which were then so ruthlessly investigated that
repetitions
were unlikely.
On the positive side, since the Alliance
had been formed and great
efforts
made by both species to improve communications and appreciation
of each
other, there had been significant developments that ought to
have
had a morale-building effect. The
fortuitous discovery of the ion
trails
of three Hive ships had given the Alliance the splendid
opportunity
to send an expedition to backtrack and locate the Hive home
world. The trail had led first to the hulk of the
biggest Hive ship
ever
seen by the Mrdini: a hulk which had been partially destroyed by a
searing
nova explosion.
To discover if the nova had indeed
destroyed the system which had
spawned
the Hive species, one resolute `Dini ship, with Prime thian
Lyon on
board, had driven to the origin of the fading ion trail.
Discovery of the damaged Hive ship
disclosed that three escape
pods
had managed to leave the mother ship shortly before the nova
shockwave
hit it. The human ships had gone in search
of the pods to
prevent
even a single queen from surviving to start a new colony on an
hospitable
world: a circumstance that the Alliance wished to thwart.
One pod had already been captured and it
contained a live queen.
She had been `decanted', as someone
termed it, at the Heinlein
Moon
Facility from which escape was unlikely.
Her apprehension made
her the
first live specimen of this enigmatic species for both human
and
Mrdini. Shortly after her arrival at
the moon facility, she had
laid a
huge mass of eggs.
The other two pods had also been
accounted for: or rather the
remnants
of the one which had collided with an asteroid and the other
whose
occupant had died when its supply of oxygen had given out.
The KTLZ, through Thian, had reported the
absolute surety that the
Hive
home system had been incinerated by its nova-sun.
Squadrons C and D were still in pursuit
of the other two Hive
ships,
going firther and firther from their home worlds. One lobby
urgently
wanted the squadrons to return on the grounds that the two
Hive
ships were light years beyond any Alliance system and therefore no
further
threat.
`No immediate threat,' another faction
rebutted and urgently
wanted
the squadrons to explore the significant number of G-type star
systems
with M-5 planets that had been identified during the pursuit:
to see
why the Hive ships had ignored them.
Were these already
infested
with the Hive species? But
investigation was certainly in
order
to discover if these primaries had generated planets suitable for
colonization
for either species of the Alliance.
The quandary of continued pursuit now
obsessing the High
Councillors
was ethical in substance. Was it right,
knowing that once
the
Hive ships found the sort of world they needed to colonize, to let
them
exterminate whatever life-form might exist?
Certainly one of the
avowed
aims of the Alliance was to seek out and identify worlds that
had
been taken over by the Hive species and prevent them developing to
the
point where their population had expanded to the point of
recolonizing.
Twenty eggs of the captive Hive queen had
suddenly hatched,
producing
creatures who were apparently limited to attendance on the
queen,
cleaning her, bringing her food, or sent scurrying down the
empty
corridors of the Heinlein Base: useless errands since there was
nothing
but unfurnished rooms, offering only more empty space.
Of more immediate, and perhaps helpful,
value was the refugee Hive
ship
which the Rowan-Thian-Fhvia merge had purloined. It would soon be
back at
the main Earth Naval Base, totally free of the gases that had
destroyed
all organisms.
Human and Mrdini naval specialists were
impatient to examine an
undamaged
queens' quarters which contained the control systems for the
ship. The most important discovery would be
navigational records or
star
charts that might identify which worlds were Hiver-occupied.
Ever since the Rowan mind-merge had
subdued the Many Mind on the
Leviathan
Hive ship attacking Deneb, it had been assumed that the
queens
managed all aspects of control on the ship, formulating tactics
and
forwarding orders to their specialized minions. Whether the duties
were
equally distributed among them or whether each of the ten to
twelve
queens on board a colony ship had different responsibilities had
yet to
be discovered: hopefully from the type of controls in each
queen's
quarters. Engineers, astronauts and
technicians, human and
Mrdini,
were eagerly awaiting clearance to board this entire ship and
begin
their investigations.
These positive activities of the Alliance
had been somewhat
eclipsed
by the Prtglm episode: as had the tapes Rojer had taken,
unique
in establishing the culture, or rather agriculture, of the Hive
species.
Destroying Xh-33 `s imminent colonization
project was the least
controversial
solution of the several that had been available. Most
`Dinis
would have preferred to see the planet devastated in retribution
for
those innocent worlds which had been fumigated by Hivers.
Human opinion was virtually solid that
destroying the Hive ability
to go
off that planet was a legitimate and the most acceptable
deterrent. There would have been a massive human outcry
had the affair
been
carried further.
To reassure both apprehensive humans and
the aggressively
vindictive
Mrdini majority, Captain Quacho of the Arapahoc had remained
behind
on sentinel duty until a discreet space facility could be
`ported
to the nearest of Xh-33's moons. Any
activity in Xh-33 space
could
be recorded. Should any occur, unlikely
though that seemed, the
Alliance
could then vote on more lasting punitive action.
Meanwhile there were other enigmas to
interpret: if there was no
communication
between Hive worlds or ship-to-surface contact, how could
the
Alliance hope to establish any interface with the Hivers? If no
communication
was possible, there was no hope of arriving at any
mutually
satisfactory, non-aggressive cohabitation of a galaxy which
had
sufficient M-type systems to accommodate all - with some control on
overexpanding
populations.
Afra sighed. Being of a methody upbringing as well as Talented,
he
eschewed violence: didn't really know if he would even defend
himself. He would, he thought, defend his children,
but probably not
himselfœ
Except that that would leave Damia unsupported. So he might
even
defend himself much as he would abhor the necessity. Humans had
grown
beyond that exigency.
Association with the `Dini had,
unfortunately in Afra's
estimation,
revived `war'. If only there were some
avenue of interface
available
Every attempt to get the captured queen to communicate - or
notice
that other intelligent beings were in her presence - had so far
failed. How his daughter Zara had known that the
queen was suffering
from
hypothermia, on the verge of extinction, was a matter no-one had
been
able to establish - especially Zara.
She had also had no further
empathetical
contact with the queen. No-one
had. The queen had
ignored
any visitor, even a Mrdini: even the very large Mrdini which
towered
above her not inconsiderable form.
That she could see and hear had been
established by adroit remote
testing. Various frequencies and combinations had
elicited no more
response
from her than a twitch of discomfort.
Those settings were
kept on
record.
It must be an amazing mind-set, Afra
thought, to consider one's
self
the only being of worth in the galaxy.
There had been humans who had had such
delusions.
They had generally died because of them
and remained as small
paragraphs
in the greater history of humankind.
In an oblique fashion, it followed that,
in the Hiver
extermination
of all life-forms on any planet they had chosen to
colonize,
they were totally unaware that they were eradicating entities
which
might feel they had the inalienable right to live.
The Hivers must also have been surprised
by Mrdini resistance,
though
only the most determined attacks by Mrdini squadrons and fleet
units
had deterred the creatures.
Did other Hivers know of Mrdini
resistance? If the Raven-Rowan
merge
had not sent the one survivor back to the Mother ship, would it
have
known that Deneb would resist?
His musings solved nothing and he could
`hear' his family
returning
from a very successful hunt. He left a
note for Keylarion,
the
Tower's T-6, to investigate recovering the couches and went back to
the
house to start dinner preparations.
Laria followed her father's advice
immediately and contacted Earth
Prime
Jeff Raven and told him that the T-2 was unable to tolerate the
Mrdini,
an essential requisite for duty at Clarf Tower. She had been
about
to add an apologetic note when her grandfather cut it short.
All we need is unhappy Mrdinis, Jeff
said, but in such a genial
tone
that Laria began to relax and wonder why she'd delayed so long in
broaching
the problem. Nearly five months was a
long enough period to
allow
Clanssia to integrate and the girl hadn't.
Laria did not mention
some of
the young woman's other less admirable characteristics which
had
enraged Vanteer from time to time and certainly annoyed Lionasha.
I'll have a word with Gollee Gren and see
if he's got any
promising
candidates. And stress `Dini adherents
Of course, it would
be best
to have a `Din i-raised kid like you.
That solves most of the problem Clarissia
posed.
How many `Dinis were paired out,
Grandfather?
Gren's got such figures. I seem to remember there were about a
thousand
in the first adoptions. Not all to
talented families, of
course,
arid spread about the old Nine Star league worlds.
And then as many as the `Dinis could
spare for placement.
There'll be someone. And mind you, miss, you keep after me until
a
proper match's been made. That's more
important than you may realize
and it
is certainly my function to make sure any Prime has the right
support
group. Hear me? You put up with Stierlman far longer than
you
had to. As my old mother used to say, if a shirt's
dirty, it's dirty.
`vkaat?
And don't tell me you've never heard how
often your grandmother
switched
Callisto staff about until she latched on to your father!
All right then, I won't. Laria giggled.
That's better. Gollee's already on it.
As soon as he finds a
likely
suspect, I'll ship it out and you can ship Clarissia back.
Oh, good heavens!
Sooner the better, pet.
Before Laria could start to temporize,
Earth Prime was gone. As
immensely
relieved as she was not to have to put up with Clarissia much
longer,
Laria hoped that she'd have time enough to warn the girl. It
wasn't
exactly Clarissia's fault that she couldn't abide `Dinis No, it
was
Clarissia's fault because she'd made absolutely no attempt to see
`good'
in the Mrdinis.
In fact, all latent sympathy Laria had
for transferring the girl
dispersed
two minutes later when Clarissia contacted her.
There is a delegation of those creatures
on its way across the
field,
Prime Clarissia's tone reeked of distaste.
Laria looked out of her Tower window,
though the Clarf `tower' was
no more
than a four-sided plasglassed cupola, raised eight feet above
the
rest of the complex, and saw that the delegation contained the
large
form of Plrgtgl, two medium-sized assistants and six lesser,
smaller
`Dinis.
Vanteer, Lionasha, full honours. Clarissia, can you at least
assemble
the proper refreshments?
Yes, came so curt an acknowledgement that
Laria could almost see
the
repugnance on the girl's long face and the twitch of her slender
hands,
indications of the revulsion the young Talent felt at having to
deal
with the `creatures' in any capacity.
Another twinge of pity
racked
Laria for the girl had been so eager to be assigned away from
her
home world. Her xenophobia had not then
been apparent to anyone,
even
Gollee Gren, but it developed speedily enough on Clari' Vanteer, a
stockily
built mid-thirties native of Procyon IV, with the heavy bones
of that
planet's human adaptation, and the dark-eyed, dark-haired,
dark-complected
Lionasha, the `lithe' (which was Lana 5
special designation for her T-7
expediter), could be counted on to
divert
`Dinis from approaching Clanssia.
It was as well, Laria thought with a
sigh, that native `Dinis did
not
read human countenances as well as the Tower `Dini contingent did.
Nor did any of them really notice that
Clarissia conveyed no body
language
at all - standing stiff and straight as if lacquered in
position.
That was a mercy since she would have
made the true depth of her
revulsion
all too easily readable in movements.
Once Plrgtgl announced its mission, Laria
had no further time to
fret
over Clarissia's possible misdemeanour.
Plrgtgl had a huge job
for the
Tower, requiring it to organize and expedite the timetable for
a
considerable amount of cargo to be shifted: to the other `Dini
planets
and to the satellite space docks.
Without it being stated,
Laria
and her staff realized that a goodly portion of the `Dini space
fleet
was being refitted and resupplied in the shortest possible time.
Such activity provided her with the
perfect reason to remove
Prtglm's
corner.
WITH SO MUCH TO BE SHIPPED TO DIFFERENT
PLACES, ALL CRADLES WILL
BE
NECESSARY, she said as she riffled through the documentation. `THE
CARRIER
WHICH HAS RESTED ON THE FIELD COULD PERHAPS NOW BE MOVED TO A
SOUTHERN
LOCATION TO DISPLAY ITS MESSAGES THERE TO GOOD EFFECT.' She
pretended
total disinterest in Plrgtgl's reaction to the request and
quickly
moved to another topic, adding body language to augment the
praise
of her words. `SO MUCH OF THIS YEAR'S
HARVEST TO GO OFF-WORLD,
TOO. A CREDIT TO THE COLOURS.
Plrgtgl rolled its. poll eye, attractively covered by a crown of
lace
which had recently become a `Dini fad.
Laria was well accustomed to such
scrutiny and continued to scan
the
cargo way-bills to the red ones that indicated live `portations.
IT WILL BE GOOD TO SEE THE KTLS,' she
added as nonchalantly as she
could
since she was over joyed to see the ship listed as an arrival.
Laria kept very good track of what went
to the KTLS since her
brother
Thian had spent so much time on board.
And saved so many
`Dinis
from the ultimate sacrifice of their kind.
Thian was now T&T on board the
Genessee and they exchanged news
whenever
she had a shipment for the squadron.
YES.
THE KTLS HAS HONOURED ALL MRDINIS AND EVERY COLOUR THAT
SERVES
ON IT,' Plrgtgl said, shifting its lower limbs, body language
she had
come to read as `pleased'. `THN LN HAS
SERVED THE KTLS TO THE
HONOUR
OF YOUR HOUSE.
As she bowed in acknowledgement of such
praise, Laria kept her
expression
neutral despite an intense desire to grin.
Plrgtgl had used
another
human idiom.
High-ranking `Dinis, like Plrgtgl, were
gradually sprinkling their
conversations
with more and more Basic terms. If only
that usage could
also
alter some of the `Dini minds and methods.
First things first, she said to herself
Hey, said Vanteer, his
expression
bland though his voice was triumphant, another score for
Basic!
Keeping count, are we, Van? asked Lionasha whose eyes twinkled.
And thank whatever gods there be that
you're getting rid of that
monstrosity. if you're downwind, the stench is appalling.
Vanteer added a flash of himself holding
his nose and gagging.
Even my `Dinis are complaining.
Laria dared not react or even shoot him a
warning glance. All her
attention
must be on Plrgtgl. She signalled for
Lionasha to take the
documentation
and begin organizing a timetable for the `portations.
THERE WILL BE A GREAT RECEPTION CEREMONY
FOR THE ARRIVAL OF THE
TRIUMPHANT
KTLS, Plrgtgl said.
AS THERE SHOULD BE FOR A SHIP THAT HAS
DONE SO MUCH,' Laria
replied
formally and made the necessary body gestures that signified
pleasure,
honour, delight and acceptance. She
could carry on
high-level
communications now with just body language, though more and
more
`Dinis had become fluent in Basic and prided themselves on using
it in
the presence of humans.
She flicked her eyes to where Tip and Huf
were standing
respecffully
to one side of the great Plrgtgl and caught their approval
of her
expertise.
IS THERE TIME TO REFRESH WITH COOL
DRINK?' Laria asked, gesturing
towards
the table and its array.
Clarissia had - unobtrusively at least -
backed herself against
the
wall. Tip, Huf, and the other `Dinis -
all too well aware of her
dislike
- took over the hospitality duties, bringing forward `Dini
seating
while Vanteer and Lionasha served the fruity juices which Laria
imported
from Terra, knowing how much `Dinis liked them.
I'm not telling you your business as
Tower Prime, Vanteer said on
a tight
private level, but we're going to have more `Dinis in and out
of here
and she's becoming more and more of a liability.
We'll back your decision in that,
Lionasha added.
Your Prime's already initiated the
appropriate steps for her
transfer,
gang, Laria replied, focusing her thought to the two, though
Clarissia
was so tight in her xenophobia she wouldn't have been aware
of a
telepathic shout in her vicinity.
Hallelujah! was Vanteer's response in an archaic term that
surprised
both women.
Despite Clarissia, the official visit
went off very well and
Plrtgl
was so excited in its own fashion with such imminent traffic
Plrtgl
was rather possessive of the Tower as its special project - that
her
reserve went unnoticed.
`We'll be busy, kids,' Lionasha said,
having had a chance to
estimate
how much Tower time and energy would be required for the
material
and animate objects scheduled to be `ported and received. She
grinned
around the room but her grin faded at Clarissia. The thin girl
stepped
forward then, swallowing convulsively.
`I do not wish to abandon Clarf Tower at
a time of maximum
activity,
Prime, but I request as immediate a transfer as possible.'
She
swallowed again and the others noticed that her pale complexion had
turned
yellowish.
`Oh, you won't leave us short,
Clarissia,' Laria said airily.
`Prime Raven has already promised us
additional assistance. As
soon as
you like, I can `port you back to Blundell.' Both Lionasha and
Vanteer
were too self-possessed to show any surprise at Laria's
abruptness
and were kind enough to make appropriate sounds of dismay.
`No, really, I must go, Clarissia said,
her fingers twitching at
her
sides, and without another word actually `ported herself out of the
room.
`Well!' said Lionasha and turned to
Laria, hoping for an
explanation. Vanteer's grin got broader and he winked at
the Tower
Prime.
`As I said, I've been working on the
problem,' she said casually.
`I just got the official permission
today.
We may have to work harder Not really
you'll meet me half way and
bring
me in, said a male voice that Laria did not recognize.
She glanced from Vanteer to Lionasha to
see if the `path had been
audible
to them. Apparently not, so she
continued her sentence.
`But not for long it seems. So where are you so easily
retrievable?
Not precisely `easily'. I'm currently with C Squadron, and his
spatial
co-ordinates tagged on to the `path.
Ting on the A.S.
Strongbow as courier and pack mule.
Laria could almost see a wry grin on the
speaker's face. She also
caught
the sense of terrible fatigue and ennui that his flippancy was
trying
to conceal. Pack mule? Well, that was better than `stevedore'.
when can we expect you?
I have my orders, I'm packed, and I'll
get into the capsule as
soon as
you tell me to.
You really aren't wasting any time, are
you?
Frankly, clarff Prime, I'll be very glad
to leave this ship.
I've I've been gone a long, long time.
There was that in his tone of voice that
touched an echo of deep
empathy
in Laria.
`Tower generators up, please,' she said,
taking the stairs to her
eerie
two at a time. what is the squadron
going to do about resupply,
she
asked, ri you're here?
I've been reliably informed that my
replacement will follow
swiftly.
And you are? Laria asked, suddenly realizing that although she
would
now recognize his mental touch anywhere in the galaxy, she didn't
know
his name.
Oh, and she heard him chuckle, I have
been on board too long. I'm
T-2
Kincaid dano, Altairian bred.
You `11 be very welcome, Kincaid.
Thanks.
And a laugh again echoed in her head.
My `Dinis are
ecstatic
at the posting, never having touched down on their homeland.
Laria let an exaggerated sigh of relief
escape her lips.
He had volunteered the answer to her most
important question.
That's probably the only reason I got
promoted, clarf Prime, he
said
with another dry chuckle which told her he had at least heard, and
understood,
her sigh. Another plus which he
couldn't possibly know
she'd
had to explain so many casual references to Stierlman, whereas
Clarissia
had always been so worried about how to respond to any
attempt
at levity, Laria had found her sense of fun was atrophying.
Why on earth hadn't she been assigned
someone of Kincaid's calibre
in the
first place? Then she recalled how long
the two squadrons had
been
travelling. But surely She took herself
sternly in hand: she had
been
able to run Clarf Tower quite capably with Yoshuk and Nesrun.
Then Vanteer had been sent to help until
the Sef Tower had been
commissioned
and her T-2s had been sent there.
Lionasha joined her and
Vanteer,
and Stierlman was sent as her T-2. A
Tower Prime did need to
find
exactly the `right' personality for a good rapport - those
complementary
qualities which her grandmother had found in Afra after
trying
to adjust to many incompatible personalities.
Kincaid's `Dini affiliations would now be
essential, to counter
any
harm Clarissia's short tenancy might have caused.
A totally wayward thought made her choke
back audible laughter:
what if
Clarissia was to be Kincaid's replacement?
A shipful of
long-voyage
officers and crew might just be what the girl needed.
Being `Dini-paired is certainly an
advantage here, she `pathed,
but
that would scarcely be the deciding factor, Kincaid.
The Tower generators were reaching the
necessary whine as she
asked
Lionasha to put the relevant space charts up on the screen for
her. She triangulated the position and, settling
into the couch,
reached
out with her mind for the unmistakable mass of metals and
humans
which had been vivid in his peripheral identifications of his
current
position. She felt for the equally
identifiable mass of a
carrier,
Kincaid and his two `Dinis within.
Ready?
You have no idea how ready! was his devout response and she
picked
him up, feeling once more the definite and deep fatigue in his
assistance
to her contact.
What under the suns had the squadron
required of this courier-pack
mule to
bring him to this level of exhaustion?
She lowered the carrier
gently
into the cradle nearest the Tower, hoping the wind blew the
stench
of Prtglm away from him. It is also
very important, he added in
an
aside that she wasn't certain she was supposed to hear.
Vanteer, do the honours, will you? She could sort out this
`important'
when they were face to face. He's Kin
ca id dano of
Altair,
our T-2 replacement, plus `Dinis.
Clarissia, she added in a direct `path to
the girl, a personnel
carrier
has just arrived and is available to take you to Blundell - ri
you'll
give me an estimate of how long it will I can go right now!
Clarissia was either hysterical with
relief or joy, or bOth at the
serendipity
of release. By the time Laria had risen
from her couch and
gone to
the window overlooking the field, she saw Vanteer shaking hands
with a
tallish man - his back was to her. Her
sense of his fatigue was
reinforced
by the sag of his shoulders. When he
and Vanteer turned
back to
the carrier to assist two well-grown `Dinis to alight, the lid
of the
carrier hid his face from her.
Clarissia, with a welter of
luggage
following her, half raced across the plascrete. The two men
then
helped her and her gear into the carrier.
Laria grinned as
Vanteer
closed the lid with a definitely firm shove.
She's ready to go, Laria. I'll bring Kincaid, Npl and Pis up to
the
Tower.
Laria nearly `ported herself back onto
the couch she was so eager
to send
the girl away! She could also feel
Clarissia's assistance in
getting
the generators back up to launch. First
time the girl hadn't
waited
for orders.
I wish you well wherever you go,
clarissia.
Don't be so magnanimous, Laria, the girl
answered in a snarl, you
know
perfectly well you've been wanting to get me out of your hair
since
the moment I got here and you discovered I'm not a weasel lover
like
you. You'll soon find that the
popularity of you collaborators is
on the
wane and your family will be replaced.
That I can promise you.
Laria stifled the dismay such animosity
caused her.
She refused to respond to silly mouthings
and threats.
And the service her family gave could
scarcely be considered
sinecures. She forced herself to respond with dignity
You are a
competent
T-2, Clarissia, and as that I can recommend you to your next
post
with no hesitation. Goodbye!
You haven't heard the last of ME!
Laria ignored the virulently delivered
rejoinder but she flipped
the
carrier as fast as she could back to the huge Earth landing field
at the
Blundell Cube.
Gollee!
Open to you, Laria.
clarissia's a good T-2 but watch her.
I had that intention ri she couldn't work
out with you, Laria.
In Gollee's tone was an anodyne for
Clarissia's parting venom.
Are you coming down, Laria? asked Vanteer in an `I think you
should'
tone.
You bet I am.
clarissia launched a choice parting
shot? asked Lionasha with a
trace
of anxiety.
Laria did not respond but came down the
stairs in a far lighter
tread
than she had ascended. She shouldn't be
so naive, but she had
hopes
for the newcomer, if only because of his humour.
Kincaid was tall, his `Dinis nearly as
big as her Tip and Huf
Despite
being of different colours, Npl and Pis were being most
affectionately
ringed by the six resident `Dinis, all wriggling and
nattering
in the most fervent of welcomes imaginable.
Kincaid was
whistling
a very old tune that Laria only recognized because her
Denebian
grandmother had sung it to put her younger siblings to sleep
on
summer holidays. `If you go down to the
woods today, you're in for
a big
surprise.' After the strains of the morning, Laria burst into
laughter
and knew that she couldn't fail to like Kincaid.
He advanced towards her, his thin, very
pale face alight with
pleasure
that she'd identified the tune. He
couldn't ever be called
`handsome',
not the way Yoshuk was, but he was attractive, despite a
ship
pallor and a dry skin that gave him more facial wrinkles than he
ought
to have. She didn't think him older
than Vanteer. Rangilly
built
but far too thin for the big bones of him, he held out to her a
big
blunt-fingered hand, palm sideways so she could merely brush it for
the
touch that Talents preferred as casual contact or shake it.
She was so glad to see him, a confirmed
`Dini person, a man who
laughed
easily and obviously had an outrageous sense of humour, that
she
grasped his hand and took full advantage - as he did after a
moment's
polite hesitation - of the complete contact.
He was
piney/green/oddly
velvet, very very tired and, though he didn't try to
hide
the fact from her, she caught the hesitancy and realized that he
was
homosexuAl. If he made a good T-2, that
wouldn't matter. It would
almost
be better if they were friends, as her grandmother and Afra had
been,
rather than lovers. Still `The first
thing you do, Kincaid dano
of
Altair, is get some extended rest,' she said briskly, twisting her
hand in
his and starting to lead him out of the main Tower room to the
living
area. `You'll have to be careful of the
sun here, Kincaid,
you've
been confined too long in a ship - - -` `Don't you just know it
. . .
he said ruefully. Look, Laria Prime, he
said on the most private
level
which their joined hands provided, there is something exceedingly
important
`I'll get some of the strongest blocker, Lionasha said, `and
goggle
glasses to reduce Clarf's dazzle. Even
peripherally it's going
to
bother you.
`Go on ahead, Laria, and darken the room
the best guest,
Clarissia's
left hers in a welter,' said Vanteer, picking up one of the
duffles
that Kincaid had brought with him, `you're to sleep!' `Look,
I'm
here to help Laria Prime, I must `You're in no state to be help in
4ny
form, Kincaid, Laria said firmly, in answer to both voiced and
`pathed
messages, `until you've had some rest.
You don `t realize . . . He was insistent and gripped her hand to
express
his urgency.
A couple of hours won't make that much
difference, will it?
she asked, as if his admission of his
sexuality would matter to
her. Or maybe he didn't realize that his fatigue
had made it very easy
for her
to reach to the more private areas of his mind. Even with my
help
you couldn't `path beyond your nose.
After hours, rio, I guess riot. But, and he added aloud, `Nil and
Plus
have to contact their `Ours can manage that courtesy while you're
grabbing
a few hours' sleep,' Laria said placatingly, dropping his hand
as she
pushed open the door out of the Tower.
Lionasha grabbed up the second dufle as
they all manoeuvred the
long
man where they wanted him to go.
Raising his arms in surrender,
he
allowed himself to be guided.
Laria marched straight to the nearest and
largest guest bedroom,
palming
the blind controls to complete darkness, and lowering the room
lighting
to a suitable dimness.
`Ah!' Kincaid exclaimed as he took in the
spacious surroundings.
`A real bed, too!' Laria laughed. `Yes, you wouldn't fit on a
bunk
too well, would you?' He did a shoulder roll onto the extra wide
and
long bed and lay there, sighing with intense relief, arms and out
at the
oddest times. This might be one of the
times legs spread out to
the
edges. For a beat, the other three
Talents waited for another
comment
from him.
Laria covered her mouth and her giggle.
`He's asleep?' whispered Lionasha.
`Out like a light!' The three left the
room, Laria palming the
lights
off and carefully sliding the door shut.
`Not that I think a torpedo would wake
him Laria said as they
returned
to the Tower complex.
Hallway down that corridor they could
hear the excited `Dini
voices. Their gang were already taking care of the
arrivals.
`They can all have the day of i, Laria
said as they entered the
main
complex. `Nothing's due in now.
`You're right,' Lionasha said, glancing
at the topmost way-bills
on her
desk. `None of Plrgtglm's shipments
will arrive until tomorrow
but
here,' she added, tearing a slip from the printer with a flourish,
`are
the coordinates you can send that misbegotten carrier to.' She
handed
Laria the slip `Prayers have been answered all round today. Rev
up the
generators, please, Vanteer,' Laria said, and settled herself in
the
nearest chair. `I have the oddest
feeling I've already done a full
day's
work with only one catch and one send.
This one is the bonus.'
Printout
in hand, she concentrated and, catching the rhythm of the
generators,
flipped Prtglm's carrier to the co-ordinates given. `And
that is
that!' Vanteer sniffed the air about him.
`Yes, a definite
improvement.
`All round,' Lionasha agreed. `Don't know how you stuck her so
long,
Laria. You've the patience of a saint.'
`What's a saint?' asked
Vanteer.
`Oh, you!' Laria said, for Vanteer's
humour broke he was trying to
catch
her out.
Lionasha had taken Vanteer's query at
face value and, being keen
on
history, explained the concept thoroughly while Laria listened. If
this
Kincaid fitted in with these two half as well as she rather
thought
he would, they were finally a real Tower Team.
Vanteer was as
hetero
as she could wish - she could also wish for a bit more from
Vanteer
but there was no way she could initiate things, not with Van's
personality
and the fact that he liked spreading himself around, which
inhibited
her. There were several others in the
growing human
community
who might find Kincaid companionable.
TLP, HGF, ALL OF YOU, PLEASE TAKE NPL AND
PLS TO SEE CLARF. DO
NOT
FORGET ANY OF THE SIGHTS THEY SHOULD SEE AM DO NOT WORRY ABOUT
REPORTING
UNTIL TOMORROW MORNING FOR WORK.
The darker pelted of Kincaid's two
sable-coloured `Dinis turned
most
politely to Laria. `KNKD HAS TIRED WITH
TOO MUCH STRAIN. YOU
WILL
LET HIM SLEEP, LR LN?' UNTIL HE WAKES, MOST EXCELLENT NPL.
There was a moment of excitement between
Nil and Plus for neither
had
been formally introduced to Laria and her being able to identify
one
from the other pleased both immensely.
LR LN KNOWS MRDINIS WELL,' said Tip with
as much pomposity as a
`Dini
of its longevity could manage. Huf
Vanteer's Dig and Nim as well
as
Lionasha's Fig and Sil were convulsed in `Dini giggles.
It took all three humans to herd eight
wriggling `Dinis out of the
main
Tower entrance. They were still reeling
with laughter until they
reached
the outer gates when suddenly all eight assumed the usual
dignified
postures of `Dinis of reasonably high rank.
Laria Prime?
The summons must have been repeated on
gradually increasing levels
of
urgency before Laria woke, unable in her sleepiness to identify the
caller.
who?
She was surprised as well as slightly annoyed to have a deep
slumber
broken into.
Kincaid.
I apologize but I am rested sufficiently now to make an
extremely
important and top secret report to Earth Prime. There was a
hesitation
that Laria interpreted as both embarrassment and necessity.
I am unable right now to make so long a
`path and ask for your
assistance.
What he did not say, and which alerted
Laria as nothing else could
have,
was the fact that the secrecy of the communication was crucial.
None of the Tower staff must know of the
`portation, the generator
must
not be used.
Kincaid might say he was sufficiently
rested but Laria knew by the
edge on
the words he spoke that he was by no means as rested as he
would
like her to believe.
I'll collect you on my way to the Tower,
she said, and slipped
into
the loose, light, long robe that most of the humans living on
Clarf
preferred.
He was standing at his closed door, still
wearing the ship suit he
had
arrived in although he was bare-footed.
She nodded approval and led the way. It was four in Clarffs
morning
and the floor under their bare feet was almost cool. She took
the
stairs two at a time and realized that he did so, too. Another
nice
change from Clarissia who had been prim to the point of the worst
excess
of methody. Laria pointed to the couch
which, she also noted,
they
would have to lengthen to fit his frame comfortably but he sank
onto it
now without a murmur.
Have you merged often enough to be
comfortable with the procedure?
she asked. There was a great deal she would need to learn about
this
man before they did many `portations.
More with other T-2s and T-3s than with a
Prime .
It's as well you're still too tired to
resist then, she said and
firmly
took control. Deep inside, she wondered
again what the navy had
been
doing to the man to reduce him to this level of nearly total
mental
and physical exhaustion. Then she
caught edges of anxieties,
deep
loss and disillusionments. So he'd had
a rough emotional time on
the
Strongbow as well as overwork. Despite
that, the merge was as easy
as
slipping a hand into a perfectly fitting glove. More to admire in
the
man.
Laria id merge to Earth Prime, urgent.
I'm here and I've been expecting
Kincaid's contact, Laria.
Just support him, will you?
That was surprise enough for Laria and
she immediately assumed the
secondary
position of the merge, deft enough with all the practice
she'd
had with her parents at Aurigae Tower, bolstering the strength of
the
merge.
I had my orders, as you know, sir, but
there were other ways in
which I
was asked to assist the squadron and since there was no
specific
limitation, I used my own judgement when the matter was
presented
to me.
Properly done, Kincaid. Proceed.
Laria tried to keep herself from tensing:
this sounded
suspiciously
like what had happened to her brother; no specific orders
against
an action which had disastrous consequences.
Judging by what
she had
empathed of personal distress, even Kincaid's maturity and a
wider
scope of experience had not prevented a trauma with which he was
trying
to cope.
I was asked to send the new designed
plastic probes to those M-5
planets which we were passing when at a
fesible distance for my
ability. Captains Steve rice and Hsiang were most
anxious to establish
some
reason for such by-passes. The first
had once - and Kincaid
paused
significantly - been occupied by hivers for the colony ship was
in
orbit and sufficient of the now identifiable Hive buildings and
agricultural
workings were visible - though the world did not show the
same
concentration of effort that was visible on the Xh-33. No
activity
was observed during the forty-el;ght-hour parabolic
surveillance. The second world examined was completely
devoid of life
or
vegetation but there was a ring of debris which both Captains Steve
rice
and Hsiang decided was similar to the one observed by Squadron B.
The third M-5 world was not yet dead but
in such ecological
imbalance
that only immediate action could reverse the process. I have
the
right-ordinates and I suggest that an expedition be mounted - joint
if that
is politically sound - to save what could be a habitable world.
Hivers were there, two small buildings
remained but in ruins. The
fourth
world is being colonized by Hivers.
Was that probe seen?
Negative.
Thank you, Kincaid. You've done more than you were required and
we very
much appreciate your efforts. Prime
Laria, you are to be
certain
this man is completely recovered before he is required to take
his
position in the Tower.
You can count on me, Earth Prime.
I know I can, dear child. Now both of you get back to your beds.
Especially you, Kincaid.
Laria, still merged with Kincaid, felt
him starting to reach out
with
another sentence and deftly, and as painlessly as possible for
even
the merge had caused his mind distress, eased away `You heard my
grandfather. Enough is enough.
Kincaid had swung himself sideways on the
couch, burying his head
in his
hands, body sagging.
`Glutton for punishment, aren't you?' she
said, a trifle annoyed
with
such dedication even as every ounce of her heritage approved it.
`You realize how important the messages
are.
`Yes, indeed. But, now, my friend and she paused just long enough
to
cause him to make eye contact at her use of the word. She smiled
down
into his tired eyes. Friend Kincaid
dano of Altair, you're going
to
sleep yourself out.' Then, without asking, she gently `ported this
long
man friend back to the bed in his quarters, amused at her maternal
attitude
but keeping that amusement well screened.
He made neither
protest
nor resistance to such manipulation.
Too exhausted to, she
thought. When she passed his room on her way back to
her own, she
`peeked'
in. He had turned on his left side,
cradling his head on one
am. She flipped the light cover over him.
Dawn brought a cool breeze no matter how
hot the night had been or
the day
would be. She didn't want him coming
down with a ridiculously
humanoid
cold.
Kincaid roused late the next evening and
was instantly served a
nourishing
meal which Laria and Lionasha had spent some time
concocting.
Thanks whoct'erse'it thk, he said when he
had finished every scrap
on the
tray. He was asleep again before anyone
working in the Tower
could
respond.
Whatever did they do to the poor guy?'
Lionasha asked.
`More than a T-2 should be required to
do, I'd say, Laria replied
with
some asperity.
`Like your brother, huh?' Vanteer asked.
Laria shook her head. `For one thing, Kincaid is a T-2 and didn't
have
the capacities either Thian or Rojer have, but he did a lot more
than he
should have. Pretty far off even for
just normal catch and
shove.'
Vanteer looked up at the tri-d galactic globe that was being
updated
almost monthly by the various squadrons, human and Mrdini,
exploring
in every direction. `Yeah, he would
have been dangerously
close
to his limit, even with the generators those Galaxy class ships
have.
Lionasha gave a sigh. `We are going to need his heist soon,
Laria,'
she said, patting one sheaf of the heavier materials to be sent
to the
moon spaceyards. `Those are big
daddies.
Laria had tested the state of Kincaid's
sleeping mind and was
reassured
by the return of a healthy resilience.
`Another twenty-four hours and he won't
know himself' `Then we can
schedule
the party for the day after tomorrow?' asked Lionasha with
just a
hint of the eagerness she had for the project.
Vanteer and Laria laughed, knowing just
why she was eager.
Since the early days of the Clarf Tower,
when Yoshuk and Nesrun
had
managed however they could in the strange environment, many more
humans
had moved to take up administrative or consultancy posts on
Clarf,
and on the two Moon bases. Close to
three thousand humans, some
with
varying degrees of Talent, though that was not a prerequisite, now
formed
a loose but agreeable social unit.
Specialists came, integrated
briefly,
or stayed on as their work required them.
The Tower
facilities
had been enlarged several times and into several levels to
accommodate
transients. A large tract of land, near
the sea, had been
allotted
the more permanent human colony. Lately
Lionasha had been
seeing
a young Denebian servo-mechanics engineer, Buzbeth Hawk. While
he was
a T-5, he was only just marginally empathic with humans.
Lionasha didn't mind: she got through to
him with no trouble.
Vanteer preferred to `mingle' as he put
it, though he was already
contributing
to the support of two children from different mothers of
minor
Talents.
He was certain the girl was already a
receiving telepath. Laria
often
wished that Vanteer would `receive' a little more from her than
he did.
But you don't force human relationships,
especially among Talents.
She knew that much from the story of her
father and mother.
Twenty-four hours later, looking
refreshed and certainly relaxed,
Kincaid
joined the Tower staff for their early morning meal. He had
obviously
found time to discover the working schedule to know that
Clarf
Tower liked to get as much of its heavy work as possible done in
the
dawn hours.
`Am I fit, Prime?' he asked as he pulled
out a chair to sit
opposite
Laria.
`Yes, or I wouldn't have allowed you out
of your quarters, she
said,
passing him the coffee pot.
Appreciatively he sniffed the steaming
aroma and grinned. `It's
real! The navy has some brew they insist is coffee
but, believe me, it
isn't!'
`We do have certain perks in this Tower that even the Fleet
can't
manage,' Vanteer said, passing him over the dew-fresh fruit which
`Dini
farmers regularly left at the Tower gates.
`Clarf is certainly an improvement. Then he gave a sudden jerk to
his
shoulders and looked about him frowning.
`Where are Nil and Plus?'
`Helping
the others,' Vanteer said, jerking his thumb over his shoulder
toward
the still shadowy Tower field. `We got
big daddies to move.
They've integrated so well you'd think
they were the same colour.'
Kincaid
looked immensely relieved and began to eat his breakfast.
`They've been well, they were incredibly
understanding on our tour
with
Squadron C.
Lionasha leaned slightly across the table
to Kincaid.
`Don't be surprised if they keep their
poll eyes elevated a while.
They've been given heroes' welcomes. Their colour kin mobbed the
complex
the first morning and they've been out every night since.'
`They
need to be with their own. Both are
close to hibernating.
`Yes, we noticed and Plrgtgl made very
prestigious arrangements
for
them,' Laria said with a grin as she rose.
`Bring your coffee up
to the
Tower, Kincaid.
We've got to get started.
He swallowed the fruit he was chewing,
splashed more coffee into
his cup
and made for the stairs.
`Refills, whenever Lionasha said as she
settled at her station.
`You've worked a Tower before?' Laria
asked.
`Hasn't my file caught up with me?' `Oh,
it's in the banks all
right,
but I'd rather work with you,' she said, with a slight emphasis
on
`work' `You had no trouble merging, even dead on your feet, and
that's
the hardest part of Tower work. Some
never get the knack.' As
she
chatted to put him at his ease, she settled herself on the couch.
`Hey, this one's new, isn't it?' he
asked, running fingers along
the
suede-like covering and noticing the length of it.
`Well, you'd hardly have fit on
Clarissia's old one.
`Well,' and he mimicked her tone exactly,
`it's much appreciated,'
he
said, sliding onto the couch and giving a sigh as his legs were
supported
beyond his long feet.
`With the stuff we'll have to shift
today, Kincaid, comfort is as
essential
as placement. Lionasha,' and she raised
her voice, `what's
first?'
`The big daddy for the moon base - Laria pointed to the
placement
tri-d in the screens above the couches.
`We've more inner
system
traffic than most Towers.
She saw Kincaid listening to the rising
whine of the generators,
then
felt his mind touch hers.
`It's all of us today for one of these,
Kincaid,' she said and
took
first Lionasha and then Vanteer into the merge with the T-2 as
back-up. The generators reached the required strength
and Laria pushed
the
merge to port the cargo carrier deftly to the cradle awaiting it on
the
moon base.
Kincaid turned his head to grin at
her. `So that's how a real
Tower
handles mass.' `The first of many. And
thank goodness we've got
eight
`Dinis for ground handlers. They really
are the best!' Kincaid
fell
into the rhythm as if he'd been a part of the Tower complement for
years. Neither Vanteer nor Lionasha would have
commented on how easily
he
fitted in but Laria could nevertheless feel their relief Most before
they
knew it, they had swung the significant volume of outgoing traffic
and
were beginning to haul in the out-of-system.
By the time Clarf's
sun
reached zenith Laria called a halt.
Despite the air conditioning,
the
Tower room was becoming uncomfortable.
Hey, came the cheery voice of Yoshuk from
Sef Tower, any time you
want to
send that guy here, he'd be welcome.
That goes for me, too, added Nesrun.
Don't either of you dare poach now I've
got someone who fits in,
Laria
said firmly.
Yes, ma `am, no, sir Yoshuk replied so
cockily she could see the
grin on
his face.
Kincaid was stretching and relieving the
tension of muscles which
had
been automatically responding to the day's `lifts'. His mind had
lost
the morning's resilience and Laria hoped she hadn't pushed him too
far.
`Lunch, and then with this sort of heat
pushing down on us, we all
take a
siesta,' she said, certain that both Vanteer and Lionasha would
fall in
with her scheme.
`That gives the `Dinis time to rest,
too. And don't look out on
the
bright of the day without glasses!' she added as Kincaid strolled
to the
windows to look down at the `Dinis scurrying about. Two were
lagging
somewhat behind the pace of the others.
`Nil and Plus'll
notice
the difference for a while but they all adjust more quickly than
we do.'
Blinking vigorously with tearing eyes, Kincaid managed a
halfœsided
grin. `Who was it told me that Clarf
was an easy Tower?'
`Oh, it
is,' Laria said, on her way down the stairs.
`We're just a little busier with all the
rearrangements.
Next week, we'll hardly have a snitch to switch.' Sensibly they
ate as
lightly at midday as the `Dinis.
Nil and Plus needed some judicious eye
care but when Kincaid would
have
performed it, the other six `Dinis pushed him out of the way and
had a
great time fussing over exactly how to effect the most result in
the
fastest time. The three long-term
residents of Clarf Tower smiled
proudly
at the concerted effort.
`I've been away longer than I realized,'
Kincaid said, slowly
peeling
one of the meltingly sweet bog pears that the others had
recommended.
`How long were you on that cruise?'
Vanteer asked.
Kincaid paused, frowning before he
answered.
`Nearly five years, I think. Basic `That long?' Laria tried to
remember
exactly how long Thian had been out but it was not five years.
`Oh,' Kincaid said with a diffident flick
of his fingers, `I'd
been
sent out with Squadron C long before those ion trails were
discovered. We picked `em up in our quadrant. Then it was even more
important
for the squadron to have a Talent.' `Were they trying to burn
your
mind out?' Vanteer demanded with heated indignation before Laria
could
speak.
`No, and they didn't,' Kincaid replied
though he began to rub his
forehead
in an unconscious gesture.
`I'd more than enough latents among the
crew personnel to draw on
when I
had to Waiting for some clue to his personal distress, Laria
caught
it. So, the long cruise had had many
complications for the
Talented
homosexual.
`How long have you been getting headaches like that?' Laria
asked,
trying
to keep both dismay and concern from becoming evident.
He dropped his hand from his forehead and
met her eyes. Then
managed
a chuckle. `Comes and goes.' `Fine
Prime I am,' she said,
pushing
back her chair and coming around behind him.
She placed her
fingers
lightly, like a net, around his skull and gently supplied the
inhibitors
that would reduce both the ache and the minute swelling of
the
cerebral area which governed all psionic activity.
`I'll be fine, Laria, really I will,' he
said, reaching up as if
to
disengage her fingers.
`Don't you dare,' Lionasha said, waggling
a finger at him.
`Laria's one of the best at healing.
What Laria also felt, because Kincaid had
no way to prevent it,
was
that his emotions were in a turmoil, more of the brew of hurt,
loss,
disappointment, and, yes, physical pain, that had not been
resolved
by the sleep and relief of bodily fatigue.
His participation
in today's
merge had almost wiped out the remedial effect of several
days'
much-needed sleep. Considering his
state, he'd been a real
trooper.
`Headache gone now, friend?' she asked
casually, removing her
hands
since se now knew more than he did about his condition.
He gave her as searching a stare as he
could without calling
attention
to the exchange. Then his taut lips
relaxed into a brief
smile. She resumed her seat and took another bog
pear from the bowl as
if her
treatment had been no more than a simple pain block.
`Yes, friend, much better. Thank you, he said and finished eating
his own
pear.
`Lionasha, it's just the lighter stuff
for the evening pushes,
isn't
it?' Laria said and managed a very convincing yawn. `Won't be
that
much to do when it cools down.
`Right-o, Lionasha said.
`I want to check that ping I heard before
I get my nap,' Vanteer
said,
moving towards the stairs that led to the Tower's machine level.
And that was how Clarf Tower managed to
deceive Kincaid until the
worst
of both the physical and mental fatigue began to heal.
When Rojer's profound emotional trauma
began to ease, Isthia
advised
that he be allowed to enrol in an engineering programme which
he had
been so keenly interested in prior to the tragedy. He must
learn
to shift his concentration from his loss.
She offered her
beloved
cottage, not so isolated any more as Deneb City was spreading
ever
closer to her lakeside retreat, and flattened arguments that too
much solitude
for the grieving boy might have an adverse effect.
And you think that one or another of us
won't be subtly aware of
his
state of mind at all times, Damia?
Isthia had snorted with
disdain. We are always but a thought away, yours,
mine, Afra's Jells,
added
Earth Prime.
The cottage worked for you and Afra,
didn't it? Isthia went on,
ignoring
her son's interruption. We all know he
needs to grieve. let
him. right now companionship is not on his
agenda. In fact, it would
only
serve to remind him of his loss. We've
done as much
metamorphically
as we can. Now he needs to be diverted
and, if its
engineering
that he has a passion for, let `s fan those flames and put
his
mind to work.
Damia and Afra drew Xexo into the
discussion and the Aurigae T-8
had no hesitation in supporting Isthia's
suggestion. Rojer had a
natural
engineering bent and it was right that he get his
qualifications. There were other engineering candidates on
Deneb, so
he
could have as much, or as little, social intercourse as he wished.
After all, how many Towers were there for
Primes to run? Xexo
went
further and, after a long and useful discussion with Commander
Metrios
of the Genessee, developed a curriculum meticulously tailored
to beguile
young T-1 Rojer Lyon into studying himself out of grief
After a
desultory and half-hearted start, Rojer began to respond to the
cleverly
devised study programme and to spend hours on the terminal,
competing
with himself on Engineering Teach. His
progress was duly
noted. If Xexo grinned fatuously as he tended the
generators at
Aurigae
Tower and adopted a smug smile whenever Rojer was mentioned,
no-one
contested him when he'd allude to Rojer's progress as one of his
own
better `engineering' accomplishments.
Occasionally, his uncle Jeran, Deneb's
Prime, called Rojer to
assist
in the Tower, `to keep his hand in' There he met cousins with
varying
degrees of Talent who were also pressed into service. Though
he had
never much liked his cousin Rhodri, he found himself drawn to
the
youngest of the Eagles, the shy and self-effacing Asia, who was
also in
the engineering programme.
He was constantly receiving invitations
from the cluster of
relatives,
Eagles, Ravens, Sparrows, but he rejected all, with the
excuse
that he had to study, keep up the garden and keep down the fish
population
in the lake. At first he had railed at
what he considered
their
tactless disregard of his loss. Except
for Asia whose deep
blue-grey
eyes always saddened whenever he caught her looking at him in
the
monthly tutorial sessions. But that
attitude was difficult to
maintain
when, empathic as he was, he sensed a supportive presence when
the
black moments descended on him.
Never the same person, and never an
intrusive one, but someone
there
when something sharpened the pain of his loss.
Damia was most
often
there or his father: once it was his grandmother, several times
Elizara,
particularly at the beginning, but mostly his grandmother
Isthia
or his aunt Besseva supplied the solace.
Once he was sure it
was
Asia who reached him one very black night but then definitely the
presence
was his grandmother. He could not avoid
knowing how deeply
they
were willing to share his pain, his sense of loss - especially
when
their thoughts became inadvertently specific in their own personal
experiences
with loss and grief While he was left to himself to heal,
he was
never truly alone and that, all by itself was the greatest balm.
Then, about six weeks after his
installation in the cottage,
either
Isthia or Besseva - both women insisted he drop the familial
titles
- started taking him out to dinner and an evening's company. At
first
he suspected some sort of `kind' conspiracy when he noticed no
`Dinis
present but his female relations, having so many homes to choose
from,
adroitly picked those which had no Mrdini associations. He often
rode
with Asia to her house because she'd listen to him sounding off on
engineering
theories. She often had some very
adroit suggestions.
`Why don't you speak out at the
tutorials? Anyone would think you
were
just being tolerated in the class?' he asked one day when she
startled
him with her grasp of jo-junctions.
`Oh,' and she waved her free hand nervously. `I might be wrong
and
then they'd all laugh at me.' `You haven't been wrong once with me,
Rojer
said, annoyed at her diffidence.
`Yes, but you're different from everyone
else in my family,' she
replied. `You listen to me.' Rojer kept his annoyance
to himself
remembering
all too well how much of a bully Roddie had been: probably
the
reason his sister wouldn't speak up for herself `Would you care for
a fish
dinner? Say tomorrow night?' he asked
her several weeks later.
`Only,' and he grinned broadly at her,
`you have to catch your own
fish.'
She had a rippling kind of laugh and, rather than send her
scuttling
back into herself he grinned back.
`I am, however, a very good cook so you
don't have to cook it.
`I really ought to study the quantums `
she said, already
retreating
from that moment of amusement.
`So ought I. We'll make it a work
evening: catch fish, eat fish
and
discuss quantums while we work.' He knew Asia was a T-4 - she'd
been
tested - but it didn't hurt to reinforce her and he was deft
enough
to do so. Like `so many Denebians, she
was lackadaisical about
honing
the ability she had. That made it all
the easier for him to
make a
few adjustments, to help her think better of herself `You do
understand
the quantums better than I do, -` `We'll find out whether or
not I
do tomorrow.
Right?
Gotta get on home now,' he said, as they came to her
turn-off. He kicked his pony, Koto, into a lope and
waved one hand in
an airy
farewell.
They got together once or twice during
the next few weeks. By
then
his studies had begun to intrigue him into making voluntary forays
into
the various aspects of spatial engineering.
Such problems were
the
best meat to feed a healing mind. Many
Ravens had been of an
engineering
bent and Rojer had caught his share of it, as well as a
keen
sense of spatial relationships. The
maths were soothing, too,
and,
over the next four months, he advanced as fast as the computer
Teach
would let him.
When he and Asia shared tutorials, he
realized that her grasp of
the
fundamentals was as firm as his own because she would volunteer
answers
if he was the only other student present.
Some days, when he had worked to total
mental fugue, his
grandmother
would suddenly require some item of hers from the cottage
and
he'd have to ride Koto to wherever she was.
He knew, and she knew
that he
knew, that either of them could have `ported the item to her if
she
needed it urgently but they both knew he was the better for the
exercise. He submitted to her careful bullying with
good grace.
Isthia never had cause to call him a
cocky boy and she approved of
his
friendship with Asia.
But, oh, in the night, how he missed the
feel of warm `Dini bodies
snuggled
against his. And oh, how often he was
about to ask Gil's
opinion
or share a wry notion with Kat. He'd
still wake to find his
pillow
damp but Isthia insisted that tears were well spent.
I'm over five times your age, Rojer Lyon,
and I still cry!
Isthia had told him rather forcefully the
first time he protested
that he
was too old for weeping.
It gave him a headache but he'd usually
feel better inside.
Then there was the morning when Jeran
required help to bring in a
large ship
of Mrdini specialists who wanted to prowl through all the
bits
and pieces that Denebians had found of the original two Hive scout
ships. As Jeran had no `Dini language skills, Rojer
had to perform the
landing
courtesies. That gave him his first contact
since the tragedy
and, to
his surprise, he slipped easily into the required formalities
of body
and language. Then, too, these were
`Dinis he'd never met
before
nor would be likely to meet again so there was no real personal
involvement.
Isthia had been right, Rojer decided on
his return home. Time did
heal. He recognized that he had taken one more
large step out of
mourning. He began to spend more time with Asia and
had managed to
teach
her to fry her own fish without burning it.
Rojer? His uncle Jeran's voice
was unmistakable. `Port yourself
here.
Rojer had also learned over the last year
not to expect
explanations
from Jeran so he saved the problem he was working on the
Engineering
Teach and checked to see if his clothes were clean enough
for a
Tower appearance. He'd depilated his
face that morning and had
had a
recent trim, though today's scrutiny in the mirror made him
realize
that the Gwyn silver lock seemed to have broadened.
Finger-combing it back from his forehead,
he exhaled a deep breath
and
`ported himself to the plascrete apron at the foot of the Deneb
City
Tower.
As well he picked the spot he did, for
there were quite a few
vehicles
parked just beyond him, and several of the ubiquitous Denebian
ponies
in the turn-out field.
He wondered what was up.
By the time he had assessed the
population of the large Tower room
and
`felt' the agitated presence of his cousin, Asia Eagles, he decided
that
today was Test Day for the several engineering students of Deneb
City. He took the Tower steps three at a
time. Jeran welcomed his
breathless
nephew with a solemn nod - his uncle could be more methody
than
his father ever was - and pointed to the one free workstation.
There were six, back to back and arranged
so no-one could see into
the
other. Asia was in the workstation
opposite him. He gave her an
encouraging
grin because her complexion had an odd green tinge to it.
`Maybe he shouldn't have sprung the test
on you so suddenly?' he
whispered
as he sat down.
`He knows how I'd fret,' Asia said,
looking sicker than ever.
`You'll do grand, Asia. You're faster'n'me in jojunctions and
quantums.
She cast him a dire look. `No-one's faster'n you at quantums, -`
NO
TALKING! `Of any kind, Jeran added
aloud.
`I'm the monitor.' Asia made a sorrowful
grimace.
`Your stations will display the test
questions in precisely one
minute
four seconds. Two hours are allowed for
the first section, to
be followed
by a break of fifteen minutes during which you may move
about
or relieve yourselves. There are four
papers, with a half-hour
break
for lunch. You may, of course, leave
the test-station whenever a
paper
is finished.' A mixture of groans and guffaws met that statement.
Jeran permitted himself a small
smile. `It has been known to
happen.
Is everyone prepared?' Deeper groans
greeted that query.
The dark screen before Rojer suddenly lit
and the initial page of
the
first paper presented him with a problem he knew he could answer
easily. That gave him considerable
self-confidence. He'd show them
all * *
* `There's no way I've passed,' Rojer heard Asia groan in a
tone of
abject defeat at the end of the examination day.
`Don't come on like that with me, Asia,'
he said as sternly as he
dared. Even with him, she'd sometimes retreat into
a silent
unresisting
victim. `I've been working with you too
long. I know your
abilities. And I won't have you belittling yourselfœHe
did a little
`tinkering'
to encourage more optimism. `There
wasn't a single problem
we
haven't gone over and you know all the structural ones because we've
gone
over them together. So, we'll just wait
and see if I failed,
too.'
Shocked out of her self-denigration, her ripple of laugh bubbled
up,
slightly hysterical with disbeliefœ You?
Fail? Rojer, you
couldn't!'
`Since I know as much as you know, then you couldn't either.
Or we both did. Pick your choose!' he added airily, grinning.
Somehow he could usually make her smile
back at him. It was a
tired
and tentative effort on her part, but it was a smile.
He gave his head a shake to clear the
tension of a long day's
concentration
and exhaled sharply. He really didn't
think he'd done
too
badly so there was no way she had.
Certainly not on the spatial
equations
and the jo-junctions. They'd been
snaps. He'd seen
Commander
Metrios work them often enough while on the Genessee - - He
pushed
himself back from the workstation, compressing his lips. He
hadn't
thought of Gil or Kat all day - even at the lunchbreak when
they'd
all been exchanging complaints about the severity of the
testing.
That is as well, Rojer, for you must move
on now, he heard Jeran
say
softly, and not because there was anyone who would listen but
because
Jeran wanted to convey more than sympathy and approval.
`Softly' expressed such multiples better.
`You're dismissed now, candidates,' Jeran
said out loud. `The
results
will be tabulated and sent to your personal terminals later
this
evening. You've been diligent and I am
certain that all who
should
qualify will.' `He says that every year, murmured one of the
boys
Rojer did not know.
`Rojer,' Jeran went on, though he surely
had heard the cynical
remark,
`Rami asked if you'd care to stop by before you leave the City.
Rojer grinned at the implied invitation
to dinner.
Jeran's wife was an extremely good cook
and tonight would be one
when
he'd appreciate having a meal he didn't have to prepare. He could
even
put up with the proximity of his cousin Barry's `Dinis.
Jeran also caught that and nodded once
again, his eyes, so like
the
Rowan's, brighter with approval.
`Not the fatted calf but that casserole
you're so fond of' Jeran
said,
after the others had departed. He was
closing down the station,
switching
the messaging system to his house unit.
`Can I help?' Rojer asked.
`This doesn't take long. Get a breath of fresh air, lad,' Jeran
said
and gestured for his nephew to leave.
Just as Rojer reached the bottom of the
stairs, he was astonished
to hear
the generators turn on.
Find yourself a carrier, Rojer, a voice
told him. You have five
minutes
to gather up any things you need from the cottage.
Mother'll send on the leftovers under
your bed.
Granddad?
Speaking as such, let me congratulate you
on the high{h scores you
achieved
on your exams. Honours, even. There was a chuckle. Speaking
as
Earth Prime, you're to get your lazy butt to the Mars Moon Base.
The refugee ship has just now assumed its
assigned geosynchronous
orbit
and the technicians are thronging to get inside it. High Council
has
insisted that I assign Primes to assist in this venture into alien
territory.
Father, Jeran interjected, Roger's had an
exhausting day.
And you know farely well that we Primes
can't bear proximity to
Hiver
metals. The reaction on a tired mind
will be all the most
intense
. - Jeran, you fuss more than your
grandmother over the boy.
And it's Rojer's choice. Care to come?
Suddenly mental fatigue vanished as the
adrenalin of challenge
swept
through Rojer. Even the Moon Base had
food dispensers. And
sleep? At this moment?
I got honours, granddad? If he had, then Asia had.
High enough to make Xexo impossible,
according to your mother, and
certainly
Earth Prime wants one of his own there to keep an eye on
things. You won't be required to go `in' the vessel:
just manoeuvre
lights
and rescue those who step into Hiver tubes.
Rojer wasn't certain if it was making
Xexo proud or the challenge
of
investigating, even at a remote distance, the undamaged Hive sphere,
that
was causing his elation.
Hell, granddad, I could even manage going
inside it - if I didn't
have to
stay too long, Rojer replied.
Then move it, lad, or the post'll have to
go to someone else.
granddad, did Asia Eagles pass?
Asia Eagles? There was a pause.
Yes. But don't waste time.
Rojer did not consider it a waste of time to try to give Asia that
reassuring
news but when he tried to reach her mind with the good news,
she'd
closed up tight as a pod in a misery of anxiety. Just like her,
the
silly clunch! She'd know soon enough
and he'd tease her - gently
about
her lack of confidence. Then he focused
his mind on his room in
Isthia's
cottage and started `porting tapes, disks, oddments, belatedly
remembering
to snatch a carisak into which he dumped these belongings.
You'll need at least one change of
clothing, lad, Jeran said with
an
amused snort and himself plucked several items of clothing from the
cottage,
more neatly folded than Rojer had left them.
These were added
to the
carisak.
Closing it, Rojer sprinted for the
nearest single personnel
carrier. As he stretched himself out on the narrow
couch inside, he
reached
out a long arm to haul the lid down. He
heard a brief second
thump
and grinned that his uncle bothered to check that the latches had
caught. So methody of him!
Please thank Raini for me, Jeran. I'm sure I won't eat as well
&ad
luck, Rojer, the brisk kindly voice of his grandmother cut in.
thanks for everything . . . and then Rojer felt the indefinable
sensation
that told the experienced travelling Talent that he was
nolonger
where he had just been. He heard a
chuckle.
Granddad? Now I'd call that cocky!
Would you? And his grandfather's chuckle renewed with a certain
pleased
edge to it.
`OK in there, sir?' a slightly less
confident voice asked.
`Fine!' The hatch opened to reveal a
double-domed darkness, well
sprinkled
with stars, but Rojer was too familiar with Callisto to
believe
that's where he'd been `ported.
He sat up and saw the naval rating
peering in at him.
`Rojer Prime. . . his grandfather corrected him firmly.
Lyon, Prime. Am I expected?' `Yes, sir, you are sir Rojer
grimaced
a bit at the `sirring' since it evoked memories which still
caused
him to wince. He hitched himself out of
the corner, slung the
carisak
over his shoulder and gestured for the rating to lead the way.
As he came round the carrier on his way
to the airlock that joined
the
carrier depot with the gigantic Moon Base facility, he stopped
abruptly. There, above him, half-lit by Sol, was the
complete sphere
of the
refugee ship he was here to explore.
She was appropriately
equipped
with regulation buoy lights.
`She's a beaut, sir, even for an alien
craft, the rating said with
an odd
ring of pride in his voice. `We were
lucky to snag her to Mars
Phobos
Base even if now there's as many `Dinis here as there would be
if
she'd been sent to one of theirs.' "Dinis bother you?' Rojer asked,
bridling
at the hint of intolerance in the rating's tone.
`Me, sir? No, sir,' was the almost startled reply as they entered
the
first of several lift shafts on the way to their destination.
`Cute little beggars, most of `em.
Better manners n some I could name not
too far from here. To
starboard
now, sir.
A quick scan of the rating's mind showed
Rojer that the man was
honest
enough - so long as he was not required to be much in their
company.
`Don't they keep that Hiver queen here?'
The rating visibly
flinched
and shot Rojer a nervous look. `No,
she's down on Earth's
Moon
Base. Heinlein Rojer depressed the
`deliver' button. A
mellifluous
Buildings. No way she or anything she
can make out of her
eggs
can get out of that place.' `Oh? Has
she hatched more of the
larvae?'
Surely someone would have mentioned it to him, Rojer thought,
if the
matter had been noteworthy.
`A couple of oddies. Small scuttling things,' and the rating gave
a snort
of disdain. `Vents got checked again,
thinking she might be
trying
to send `em outside. No way she can!'
The man had pride in his
service's
security measures.
As they traversed several corridors and
took one more long ride
upwards,
Rojer wondered how soon he could wangle a chance to get down
to the
Moon and observe her. If, as the
experts were now fairly
certain,
the queens controlled all ship functions, he ought to see her
for
himself as well as the attendants and other varieties she had
finally
allowed to hatch. As far as he knew,
his cousin Rhodri was
still
on duty there.
`Here you are, sir,' the rating said,
stopping by a door and
pointing
to a palm-pad. `If you'll just do the
necessary .
Rojer obliged by placing his hand on the
pad and felt the tingle
that
registered the quarters to his imprint.
Then the door whooshed open on a
good-sized, attractively
furnished
lounge area: a good few notches above the usual naval base
interiors. Peering about, he saw that he also had
separate sleeping
and
sanitary rooms. The rating was more
concerned that he know how to
operate
the internal comunit, where emergency life-support equipment
was
stored, and which numbers to dial for which services. He had no
sooner
finished this briefing than the comunit blinked a message light.
`I'll leave you to it, sir,' the rating
said and, with another
smart
salute, left.
voice - much kinder to the ear than the
usual `service' computer
voice -
informed him that Commandant Enarit del Falco would like to see
him as
soon as he was settled. A directional
node dropped out of the
message
slot.
Rojer checked the digital on the wall and
decided, as he reset his
wrist
unit to the local time, that as soon as he was settled' included
attending
to the rumbling in his guts. It was
mid-morning here and he
was far
too hungry to wait till lunchtime.
The dispenser unit was standard navy; the
menu that scrolled past
Rojer's
incredulous eyes was anything but.
Delighted, Rojer watched
long
enough to discover many favorite and esoteric dishes before he
ordered
the most unusual item he saw - a high protein described as
`genuine
beefalo steak', which tasted succulent enough to be genuine.
Then he contacted the Commandant's office
that he was now settled
in.
Donning the button which had been
forwarded by pneumatic slot to
him, he
let it guide him through the maze of corridors and lifts. He
knew
that the Phobos Moon Base was as many levels deep in solid lunar
rock as
above it and equally as wide. He
figured by the upward
progress
on which the rating had led him that he was housed in
`executive
territory' but he made another upwardly mobile short journey
to an
even more prestigious level, encountering more and more officers
of high
rank as he progressed - inward now, he thought.
Though he was an obvious civilian, he was
more often accorded a
salute
than a smile. Then, as he turned to a
set of wide double doors,
the
node informed him that he had arrived.
The Commandant's suite of offices were
imposing on a par with his
grandfather's
level of the Blundell Building. He
sensed many minds not
far
away and wondered if stopping to eat a meal had made him late for
an
important meeting. The handprint pad
was conspicuous enough to
suggest
that everyone put his hand there so he did.
One leaf of the
door
swung inward to a huge but empty foyer, walls and ceilings
impressively
decorated by naval ships, sea and space, down the ages.
Damn, Rojer thought, he should have made
some attempt to find out
this
Commandant's status in the table of Alliance organization.
He's not quite as important as
Grandfather, said a very welcome
voice,
but he thinks he is.
Where are you, Thian? Rojer looked at the many doors leading off
this
foyer.
Come now, brother, surely that's
elementary!
Rojer chuckled and confidently turned to
the righthand one of two
double-doored
entries. It opened to a huge,
well-populated
`operations'
area, dominated by screens wrapped round the walls, with
horizontal
plotting boards at various locations on the floor space, two
transparent
spheres, one of which was fitted out with some internal
components. All around the room workstations were
occupied and
equations
and displays flashed their messages to those seated before
them. He spotted five with engineering
configurations. The room was
full of
humans and Mrdini and no-one paid his arrival any attention
whatever.
Hi, there, bra, said Thian, his voice
buoyant with cheerful
welcome. Did you like the beefalo? Smart of you to eat while you had
the
chance because the Admiral is unlikely to take into consideration
that
you've done a full day's work already.
Once his brother began speaking, Rojer
located him at the far end
of the
chamber in a group of evidently high-ranking naval officers to
judge
by their static positions and sombre expressions. About them,
like
satellites, other uniformed personnel hovered, either busily
checking
note-pads or awaiting assignment.
As Rojer made his way toward his tall, self-assured
brother, he
noted
the more obvious fact that, while Thian wore a navy shipsuit,
there
was an FT&T insignia on his shoulder and the Prime tab on his
collar. He also thought his brother looked a lot
older than he had
when
they had last met. Whenever that
was. Ah, yes, when Laria had
come
home for her birthday. There were
subtle changes in his older
brother's
face and bearing.
Watch the one who's jabbering at me,
Thian added as Rojer made his
way
across the cavernous room, although Thian gave every outward
appearance
of total concentration on what was being said to him by a
shorter,
black-haired man with a strangely taciturn face.
If Prtglm had had the sense to get human
support to destroy Xh-33,
Admiral
Enarit del Falco, our Base Commandant, is the man who'd've
given
it and rejoiced. Del Falco is also
extremely shrewd, intell(gent
and
capable. There isn't a thing that
happens on this base that he
doesn't
know about within seconds. He's got
absolutely no Talent so
we're
safe to say all the things we want right in front of his face.
On the other hand, lie's got a natural
shield as impregnable as a
Hive
sphere, which is very inconvenient.
Even Granddad and Grandmother
can't
winkle in.
The admiral turned slightly just then and
Rojer gave an
inadvertent
shudder at the closed face and took the final steps to his
brother
under the admiral's scrutiny.
`Ah, Admiral, speaking of the devil
. Thian said as if he'd just
noticed
his brother's arrival. He raised one
arm which he then placed
about
Rojer's shoulders, squeezing his hand in welcome. And continued
a
mental briefing while he effected the introductions.
`Here's Prime Rojer Gwyn-Lyon, Eng. Mec top honours - yes, you
did get
top honours today which is exactly why you got snatched from
the
quiet of Deneb and Grandma's cottage and thrust into this situation
without
a chance for a day's rest - who's assigned along with me to
help
you penetrate the interior of the Refugee - That's her official
designation,
bra. Don't let his manner get under
your skin, Roj. He
tries
that one on everybody, even Granddad and Grandmother. Got
nowhere
with them so u'e have to keep up the family tradition. He
doesn't
like Talents but he needs the help only we can give him.
Fortunately both you and I are
independent of his authority even
if we
are assigned to help.
`Good to see you, bra.' And Thian dropped
his arm, smiling down at
the
admiral in his charismatic way, much as their grandfather might
have
done in a similar situation.
Having Thian in physical and mental
support with so much coming at
him all
of a sudden made all the difference. So
Rojer could smile,
too,
summoning up what Isthia had called the deplorable tendency of her
male
relatives to charm as easily as they breathed.
Adopting a casual confidence, he inclined
his head courteously to
del
Falco. The commandant did not offer his
hand to the young Talent.
Instead del Falco gave him such a
piercing stare - he had the sort
of
large black eye that appears to see through to the soul - that Rojer
was
very glad of his brother's warning.
`Privilege to be aboard, Admiral del
Falco.' `I thought you were
younger
than your brother.' `We're not far apart age-wise, sir,' Rojer
replied.
Pea response, Roj. He hasn't had time to read your transcript
because
we had to wait to see if you passed the exams before we could
snatch
you here. The team that's going on
board the Refugee requires
staff
qualifications. You got more than some,
less than most. He
won't
take long to assess you. He's got an
info-plant. And he's
accessing
your file right now. His eyes flicker
when he's listening to
it.
Updates on demand. Don't know why he isn't schizo. Oh, and our
birth
years are not given. Granddad's had
dealings with this bird.
Just as well you don't look
seventeen. That last was said in a
rueful
tone, acknowledging Rojer's bereavement and its tragic
circumstances,
and accompanied by an affectionate mental hug.
Steady
on. He's coming up with `the look'!
The Admiral was and, in spite of Thian's
warning, Rojer very
nearly
rocked back on his heels at the intensity of that black and
penetrating
gaze. So he smiled as equably as he
could until del Falco
broke
the eye contact, having evidently heard sufficient from his
info-plant
to place Rojer in the pertinent category.
`Dini coming up behind you, Roj! his brother said, his tone
coloured
with apprehension.
So Rojer had just enough warning to be
prepared when a `Dini voice
spoke.
RJR LN, YOU WILL NOT MIND TO WORK WITH
GREYS?' One of the good
guys,
Thian added, smiling at the newcomer.
So Rojer kept the smile on his face as he
turned and almost
committed
a solecism as he began to drop his eyes to the usual `Dini
height. But the `Dini who had spoken was nearly as
tall as Rojer. And
not at
all like the grey Prtglm.
GREY HAS ALWAYS BEEN AN EXCELLENT COLOUR,
rojer said, using the
body
language that expressed honour at being in its company while
inclining
from the waist with the bow deserved by a `Dini of such size.
The memory of Prtglm, or its colour, no
longer had the power to
distress
him. `WHAT NAME, PLEASE, IS ONE TO USE
IN ADDRESS?' `THIS ONE
IS KNOWN
AS GLMTML.' `I'm glad that you two Primes have the chance to
meet
Glmtml,' the admiral said, observing the exchange.
`It leads the Mrdini team that's going to
reveal Refugee's secrets
for
us.' A smile that was not a smile but nearly a threat spread his
lips
just slightly. `Prime Lyon has just
arrived, Glmtmi, so he hasn't
been
briefed `Not that Rojer needs it,' Thian said in a bland tone and
a shrug
of his shoulders. `Straight transfers
of carriers to the
Refugee
airlock, and then we act as guiding lights.
And we rescue when required. You know how many tubes a Hiver ship
has!'
Rojer nodded solemnly while the Admiral, unaccustomed to being
interrupted,
hesitated for one beat before smoothly continuing. `.
then there is no further need for delay,
is there?' He turned to
Glmtrnl.
`Your team is now assembled for
transfer?' `All are,' Glmtml said,
deferentially
switching to Basic since the Admiral apparently was not
fluent
in `Dini.
`Then let us proceed with Operation
Illuminate,' and the admiral
turned
his basilisk stare on the two Talents.
He snapped his fingers behind his back
and one of the waiting
ensigns
leapt forward.
The very gesture raised Rojer's
hackles. Maybe an admiral had
prerogatives
a space captain didn't, but the implied absolute obedience
to such
a discourteous summons rankled.
Why do you think I enjoy baiting him so
much, Roj?
Thian said.
`Escort the Primes to their ready room,
Ensign.' `No need for such
ceremony,
Admiral,' Thian replied. `I know where
we're stationed,' and
he shot
Rojer a mental picture of where they were going - a small room
with
three Tower couches. The room already
had one occupant.
More surprises, Thian?
Thian grinned. This evaluation operation is going to take all
three
of us and wish we were more. lit's
go. I love `porting away
from
him. He hates it and there's not a
thing he can do about it since
`porting
expedites troop movement. `My
compliments and best wishes,
Glmtml.'
Rojer had only time for a similar courtesy before his brother
`ported
away. He followed.
That admiral had better watch himself,
said the very pretty
occupant
of the room as Rojer and Thian appeared.
He has female
officers. Why do I have to creep about the place like
an anathema,
Thian?
`I told you that you should flaunt your
self Flavia.
This is, obviously, my brother, Rojer,
who will remember his
manners
when he stops gawking at you.' Completely surprised by the
sight
of such a lovely woman, Rojer willingly held out his hand to
touch
hers.
Green/minty/velvet. Flavia smiled quite gently back at him and
then
turned with a business-like attitude to Thian.
`They've got the right sort of beams now,
and I think every single
marine
and Mrdini're festooned with more light cells than Noel trees,'
she
said as she slipped gracefully onto her couch.
Thian directed Rojer's attention to the
huge transparent
three-dimensional
screen that dominated the wall facing their couches.
At the point which Rojer also identified
as the main hangar deck
of the
Refugee, there were three coloured globes: blue, green and
yellow.
Concentrating briefly on that area, Rojer
also sensed a large
number
of humans and `Dinis.
`Rojer, I'm supposedly in nominal charge
of our part in this
operation,'
Thian said. `That board'll light up
with each centimetre
we
cover so we'll know where we've been. I
know you had a little look
round
the frige `Through a glass darkly, bra, since the inside was
still
fogged with gas `Since you're so full of engineering honours, you
get to
hunt for the engine room .
`I found it before - I think.
`In the southern hemisphere, yes? Good.
My priority is the
life-support
system which the boffins think might surround the central
axis.
`Are they suited up?' Rojer asked.
`No, the navy flooded the ship with
enough oxygen to fill a volume
of
enclosed space equal to the size of the Great Sphere, and there's an
auxiliary
system as back-up stuck off in the corner of the hangar.
Plus, everyone's packing an emergency
breather. The sooner we get
the
integral life-support system going, the better.
The other priority for you is finding out
what sort of fuel the
Hivers
use but that'd also be stored in the southern hemisphere of the
ship. Flavia,' and Thian grinned at the girl, `is
going to penetrate
into
the queens' quarters and we might need you to switch there, too,
Rojer,
to figure out how to turn the power on.
Mostly we gotta keep track of people who
get into trouble,
slipping
off into tunnels and getting stuck in the small tubes.' `Like
you did
on the Great Sphere, huh?' Thian gave his brother a mock scowl.
`I was following orders when I found the
larvae.' `Still comes
down to
baby-sitting,' Rojer said with a spurious groan.
`I wouldn't let any of the marines hear
you put it like that,
Rojer,'
Flavia said in mock warning.
`Marines can break legs just like anyone
else,' Rojer replied
flippantly.
`Not with this Admiral,' Thian said
tartly. `Everybody
comfortable? Good, then,' and he pointed to the red light
blinking on
the
comunit, `the boffins are all loaded.
Let's hoist `em up there.' Rojer turned
his attention then to
three
large carriers, each filled with excited men and Mrdinis, cradled
and
waiting to be `ported up to the ship.
`OK?' Thian said, looking from one side
to the other.
Flavia and Rojer both nodded and
simultaneously the three Primes
lifted
the carriers and deposited them in a neat line on the Refugee's
hangar
deck where once the deadly Hiver scout ships had been housed.
What'n'ell is that? A smell or an emanation? The voice was
female,
the tone disgusted and uneasy.
`They've sent Talents up there?' Flavia
asked in surprised
indignation.
`Admiral doesn't believe in the
stingg-pzzt, Thian said, `although
I
explained it quite carefully and so did Granddad and Grandmother.'
`So
who's the speaker? Can we reassure
her?' Flavia asked.
Thian had closed his eyes briefly. `I think that's
Lieutenant-Commander
Semirame KIoo, head of the naval exploration team.
According to her file, she's a T-5
sender, with little or no
training.
She opted for a place in the Naval
Academy.' `So we don't know if
she can
receive?' Rojer asked.
Commander Kloo?
Huh?
who?
Prime Thian speaking. You are experiencing what we Talents call
the
`stingg-pzzt' of Hive metal.
That wasn't in my briefing. She sounded both relieved and
annoyed.
I don't believe the admiral accepts this
reaction as valid. As
you are
currently surrounded by Hive metal, you `11 be pleased to know
that
such a reaction confirms the possession of latent Talent.
Thanks!
was the droll response.
Anyone else in your team seem afraid in a
similar fashion?
So far I'm the only one complaining,
Prime Lyon, and her tone was
resigned.
Thian, please, me.
How'd you know my nickname? Nevermind.
Of course, you would.
How do I get rid of this stinggpzzt
sensation? Or reduce its
effect
somehow or other. It's rather . . . disconcerting.
It won't hurt you but continued exposure
might make you rather
short-tempered.
Ha!
I've already got that reputation so now I've a good reason.
So long as it doesn't bite me, I'll just
get on with the job.
Shall we?
My brother, Rojer, is your guide,
Rome. He can dampen the
reaction
to some extent. let him know you notice
anyone else affected
or if
it begins to affect your judgement.
Thanks.
Hey! That's better. And hey, I didn't know I could
receive.
Rojer took over. Primes can manage two-way communications
with
much
lower than a T-5, Rome. Now, I've
ignited my guide globe and, ri
you `11
just have your group follow it, we'll begin Operation
Illuminate
on its way to the engine rooms.
I've got enough ladders to climb us back
down to Mars. And hey,
this
beats staying on the combutton. Rojer
could almost see her grin.
lit's move it, and by the additional
depth to her tone, they knew
she was
speaking aloud to her detail. Follow
the yellow-brick road
right!
Forries, you take left, Maumu, take right
and plant those cells
whooops,
just lost Maumu down a tube. Oh, hey,
that's great!
Rojer retrieved the faller who was as
shaken by the unexpected and
almost
instantaneous rescue as he was by an equally unexpected descent.
Well, slap a light beside the dam tied
tube, sailor, was Rome's
testy
comment. And if you were stopped before
you hit the bottom, be
glad
we've got the Talents on our tails. Beg
pardon, lighting our way!
As the various teams proceeded, the
sphere slowly filled with
details. Oval tunnels of varying circumferences riddled
the periphery
and
evidently provided access for Hiver specialist life-forms from one
area to
another. Few were comfortable for those
exploring them but
gradually,
over the next week, a network in each quadrant and
hemisphere
began to emerge.
Rojer found the engine room and the incredible clutter of
components
that, when activated, gave Refugee its propulsion. Fuel was
discovered
in sealed tanks, each fed by intricate coils into one
section
of the vast engine mass. More powerful
light units were
requested
by those who had had a harrowing trip down smooth, cramped
oval
tunnels. The engine room was not all
that spacious either and
seemed
to be accessed by conduits much too small for either human or
`Dini
bodies.
`A combinant fuel,' was one expert 5
immediate theory.
`Then why is the mixture apparently run
over that large
crystalline
object so carefully bracketed in the housing?' Opaque pipes
around
the chamber suggested some sort of lighting: a theory that was
supported
by the fact that the various feed lines and coils were
colour-coded.
To prove it correct, the sphere's power
would need to be on.
`You'd have to be an acrobat to service
this bloody affair,' said
a
propulsion specialist from Earth. He
was attempting to get on top of
the
main unit for a better perspective.
Several fascinating boards, of a control
type, were discovered at
floor
level. They were segmented into
different colours and were
touch-controlled. Another few sections covered one of the
lower
ceilings
of the large oval chamber. Judiciously
removing some of the
floor
plates showed that these panels led directly either to the engine
mass or
the fuel tanks. Geting diagnostic
machinery into the cramped
engine
room required both Rojer's assistance and the removal of nearly
a dozen
specialists. By `removing' them back to
the main cargo bay
where
food was being served and remote screens had been sited did much
to
reduce their disappointment and anger at not being right on the
scene.
Flavia's group penetrated rather more
easily than expected to the
twelve
queen quarters which formed a circle around the inner axis of
the
ship. Four of the twelve were larger
than the others, suggesting
that
there was some order of precedence among the queens. Once again,
controls
were situated in awkward - for human and Mrdini - positions
depending
from ceilings, angled up from the floors and in the narrow
ends of
the oval-shaped quarters.
`No-one's found the starting button yet,'
Rojer remarked to his
companions. He was hallway to cancelling a random
thought as too
ridiculous
when his brother started to laugh.
`They may yet have to do just that, Roj.'
`Do what?' Flavia
demanded,
half turning her head in their direction while she kept most
of her
attention on her work.
We've got a queen, Thian said
softly. Presumably she'd know how
to
start up - Flavia's eyes went round.
lit her aboard that ship?
She can't take it anywhere but if all the
king's horses and all
the
king's men can't figure out how to turn the power on --- Thian said
and
shrugged without adding the obvious conclusion.
`Oh!' Flavia mulled that problem
over. `Surely someone `Hope so!'
Rojer
said but he couldn't be very encouraging as he watched his group
clambering
over the machinery, following coloured leads, attempting to
fathom
the unusual composition of the Hive drive.
It was apparently
much
more efficient than it looked.
There were only so many viable forms of
space drive, or so humans
and
Mrdini were agreed. Perhaps they should
have tried to capture one
of the
Xh-33 scouts or shuttles when they had the chance. But,
according
to what Rojer had been told, that had been impossible as well
as
unlikely. The kidnap of Refugee had
been thought to be enough of a
coup as
well as a solution.
After two full watches of exploration -
and the kind Wasn't this
more of
an academic exercise anyway, Rojer wondered.
They didn't
really
need to know how the Hive ship worked, or who did what where and
when. The navy did need to discover exactly where
to aim what sort of
missiles
to destroy a Hive ship, or render it helpless.
Thian had located the life-support area,
just above the queens'
level. The gas had destroyed whatever plant types
generated oxygen
although
emergency supplies in tanks were carefully racked in adjacent
storage
space.
Thian's second find were the round cases
of food stuffs: all
colour-coded,
though whatever glyphs the spheres bore were
indecipherable. The semantic experts were delighted with
this much to
work
on. The ship seemed oddly devoid of
signs of any type, though
illumination
proved that certain colours must be recognizable to
various
queen workers, or why bother colouring anything?
One of the `Dini xenobiologists suggested
that a sample of each of
the
food cases be sent to the Heinlein Base.
The queen had been
quiescent
far too long and the theory was that she might be missing
some
vital nutritional elements. Surely that
could be remedied by
supplying
her with home-grown sustenance.
On the main schematic board, tubes,
halls, oval access conduits,
pipes
and tunnels were appropriately coloured to match the originals.
Save for the irising airlocks, hangar and
cargo bays, there were
no
doors.
There didn't seem to be `crew' quarters
either but there were more
of the
larvae tubes, all spiking out from the various queen quarters,
similar
to the ones Thian and Lieutenant Auster-Kiely had discovered.
Empty, of course.
of vigilance required of the three Primes
- Thian sent a message
to
Admiral del Falco that the Primes were going off duty.
`Don't let him argue you out of it,
Thian,' Rojer said, the
inexorable
fatigue of nearly thirty hours of intense activity making
itself
felt in his mind and bones.
`I'm bushed.' `That is quite obvious,'
Flavia said, but she spoke
with
such kind concern that Rojer couldn't resent it.
She swung her legs to the side of her
couch. `They've more than
enough
to keep them going with the main objectives found. They have
enough
personnel to swap round but we don't have that option. I'm
quite
hungry!
Those sandwiches they sent up - oh, hours
ago now have left a
larger
gap.
When contacted, the Admiral grunted and
frowned.
`And what happens if there is an
emergency requiring a Prime's
abilities? Had you thought of that?' `Indeed we have:
Earth Prime has
delegated
a capable T-2 for such duty,' and right on cue, someone
rapped on
the door. `Here is Clancy Sparrow now.
Another cousin? Rojer asked in amazement just as the door to
their
ready room slid open.
`I know.
I keep trying to live it down,' Clancy replied with a
grin
which widened appreciatively when he turned to Flavia. Then he
noticed
the sphere and whistled. `Boy, you guys
lit the great white
way!'
He swallowed then, eyes rounding in concern.
`Let's just hope I
don't
get more than one emergency at a time with such an area to cover.
Thian laughed and gestured for Clancy to
take his couch. `Call on
Beva
Margellis if you do get pushed.
She's a T-3 Healer but she can `port
independently or in merge.
You met Beva, didn't you, during the
briefing?' `Yup, got her
touch.
See you.
And, hey, Roj, congratulations.
So much had happened that day that Rojer
couldn't remember why
Clancy
would be congratulating him.
`Oh, yeah, thanks. How did Asia do?' Clancy grinned. `i'll coz
was
only two points below you!' `I told her she'dpassed. Asia's not
stupid!'
`Oh, hey, I know it,' Clancy said, recoiling from Rojer's
fervent
partisanship. `We all know it back home
on Deneb. We just
can't
seem to get her to know it.' `Go to bed, Roj,' Thian said and
Rojer
wasted no more time, using the last of his energy to `port
himself
to his quarters. He took time for a
shower and a nutrient
drink. When he gratefully stretched out on the
excellent and
comfortable
bed, he had time for one guilty thought: he'd've had plenty
of room
for Gil and Kat in with him.
`Those are emergency repair ways and it's
the scuttling critters
that
were used for `em,' Thian was saying the next day when Rojer
reported
for duty. He was speaking on screen to
a scowling, grizzled
naval
officer with commander tabs on his collar.
`If you've plumbed
`em
with remotes, that's the best that's available. Doesn't that help?
Or do you want to borrow one of the
scuttlers the queen hatched?'
Hi,
Roj! Boy, do you feel a hundred per
cent better this afternoon.
You shouldn't have let me sleep so long.
You needed it and we need you alert.
`Permit one of those those vermin . . into the Refugee?' The
commander
turned brick red with outrage.
Flavia waggled fingers at Rojer as she
lay on her couch, without
turning
her head about. Rojer could see that
she was directing a
remote
node down one of the narrower tubes.
To judge by the colours that crisscrossed
the sphere map, the
internal
investigation of Refugee was proceeding well.
`The vermin , Commander, were designed to
manoeuvre in those
spaces
as mobile repair units. The wiring
seems to be coded by an
imbedded
design since there wouldn't be sufficient light to see colour.
Since neither humans nor `Dini come in the
appropriate size, it
was
just a suggestion!' `And totally unacceptable!
Totally! You may
be a
Prime but you're here to do just one job.
Now stick to that!' `As
a
Prime, let me remind you, sir, that I would be in complete control of
the
critter,' Thian replied and Rojer had no trouble `pathing how much
Thian
enjoyed the present exchange.
No-one's thrown the power switch, Flavia
said, her mind alive with
laughter
though her expression was serenely polite.
The navy's having
knicker
attacks. The `Dinis are sulking and
it's all our fault.
Sipping from his third cup of really fine
coffee, Roj sat on his
couch
to listen to both levels of Thian 5
conversation. Interesting that his brother had had much the same
notion
that had occurred to him. The only
beings who could operate
that
ship were those for whom it was designed.
For all the
consultants,
advisers, experts and technicians swarming about in the
Refugee,
not one of them had the shape, height or digital equipment
that was
required to power up the ship. Until
then, no `complete'
investigations
could be essayed.
`Just forget that asinine suggestion,
Prime, and I'll forget you
made
it.
Thian shrugged. `As you wish, Commander, but I feel obliged to
mention
that there would be no risk.
The creatures are purpose-built, as it
were, and can do no more
than
they were designed to do - run those small access ways to make
necessary
repairs.' `Repairs are not the problem, Lyon.
if' and the
commander's
pause was significant, `and when you come up with any more
such
bright ideas, use the proper channels.' The screen went blank.
Flavia then doubled up with a fit of the
giggles.
You were marvellous, Thian, she `pathed
since she was physically
incapable
of speaking intelligibly through her laughter.
Oh, Roj, that
man `5
been impossible since we came on duty.
To begin with, he
doesn't
like Talents and resents having to work with us. And the
stupid
things he wanted Clancy to do - - The only one on this watch
with
any sense is Rome Kloo. She thinks we
should make a device like
the
palps of the queen and see if the board can't be activated by using
those.
Pressure operated? A sequence needed? what? which?
Thian had turned away from the blank
screen, his facial expression
one of
disgust and frustration.
`OK, engineer, you got any ideas? I sure would like us Primes to
start
up that bloody ship of theirs. Hell,
we've done all the work on
it so
far, following it, capturing it, stealing it, and bringing it
back. Lighting the whole damn thing up so they
could see where they
were
going. And now we're supposed to turn
it on.
They're the naval experts. We're just lousy T&Ts.' Then Thian let
out a
long breath and apologized to them for sounding off.
`You got the right, bra, Rojer said and
then cocked his head.
`You got the right idea, too. Only putting one of the queen's
scuttle
bugs isn't going to solve anything. If
I remember correctly,
Grandmother
Rowan was under the distinct impression that the queens
gave
all the orders, so if the scuttle hasn't any orders, it'll just
sit
there.' Thian regarded his brother, flicked his grey eyes to Flavia
and a
smile started to curve his lips.
Now, just a minute, Thian, Rojer said
with more intensity than he
intended,
I got in trouble - - You didn't get in trouble, Roj, Thian
said,
his eyes sparkling with sudden anger as he corrected his brother.
And you had enough smarts to recognize
Big Trouble when you saw
it. So did Gil and Kat.
The unexpected reminder brought tears to
Rojer's eyes. This was
the
first time anyone in his family had spoken so bluntly about the
incident. But Thian was wound up and Rojer forced
himself to ignore
that
painful reminder and concentrate on what his brother was saying.
But I think we all have the same
idea. Flavia? She nodded. I'll
clear
it with Granddad, Thian added. Besides,
we'd need his help and
Roddie's
at the Observatory. But it could be
done.
The navy'd have apoplexy, Rojer began, although the idea was
taking
firm root as the only way to many objectives, not the least of
which
was confounding people like Admiral del Falco who fundamentally
did not
like Talents and made their distrust and hatred as obvious as
the
commander had. OK, Thian, how would we
go about it? Rojer asked.
Thian crossed his ankles, dangling them
off the side of his couch,
his
hands clasped between his thighs. Well,
it'd take a fair amount of
timing. One, getting Roddie to falsify the recorders
in the
Observatory
so no-one knows the queen is gone. Two,
we gotta have the
queens'
chambers on the Refugee cleared of people and now technicians
are
crammed into them, each thinking he or she'll find the switch-on.
Three, we need the right sort of
personnel on duty, both `Dini and
human,
so no-one panics when the ship turns on.
How can we be sure the queen `11
co-operate even if we could get
her
there? Flavia asked.
if you'd been locked up away from all
that was familiar to you,
and you
were suddenly in a ship you could operate, wouldn't you try to
escape? Thian asked.
I would, being a human, Flavia said.
A `Dini would, too, Rojer said. But would a Hive queen?
I think so, Roj, Thian said
thoughtfully. You said they didn't
waste
any time scramming from Refugee when they were threatened. I
think
survival is the highest priority of queens.
But if it takes twelve queens to crew a
ship, Flavia put in, and
that's
what even our experts believe now So, if she just stands there
as
she's been doing, we won have lost anything, will we? Thian said.
But look how survival oriented she is -
hatching attendants to
tend to
her needs first, then the tiny ones she obviously hoped would
be able
to get out of the facility. She hasn't
done a thing since they
failed.
Common sense suggests she'd try.
And that's all we need her to do, isn't
it? Try? Flavia said.
Show us how to start that wretched ship
up. Then we can leave
this
installation and do something more appropriate to our rank and
skills.
Thian and Rojer both regarded Flavia with
surprise.
I'm tower-trained, Flavia said with a
touch of asperity, and while
I've
certainly enjoyed a break from my usual duties, I do not
appreciate
being belittled by persons like that commander. She pursed
her
lips and regarded the brothers with a slightly defensive
expression,
as if daring them to reprimand her.
Thian smiled, and Rojer rolled his eyes
as his brother soothed
Flavia. `Yeah, it could get under your skin. But then, you have every
right
to be annoyed at the treatment we've been getting. I've been
serving
on navy ships so it doesn't bother me as much but that
commander's
attitude needs adjusting.' He winked at Flavia and then
Rojer. They'd been reasonably sure that their ready
room conversations
were
being recorded, a standard operating procedure. So, do we put
this
bnght idea through the proper channels?
Granddad? what if he doesn't like it?
Conflicting emotions which
obviously
didn't worry Thian at all besieged Rojer.
But then Thian
Rojer
cancelled that line of thought.
So, we get our heads handed back to us by
one more authority.
Thian shrugged. I think it'd be kind of fun to try! Hell's
bells,
Roj, it was your notion to begin with.
Yeah, but . . . Then Rojer stopped to ponder the ramifications.
Yeah but, and Thian dared him, if it's
young Engineer Prime Lyon
who
shows the navy boffins just how easy it was to determine where to
turn
the power on . It'd shake a lot of
people and `Dinis up and
certainly
give us Primes a minor triumph.
I'm game, Flavia said with a laugh, her
eyes twinkling as she was
caught
up by both mischief and a possible triumph.
Then her expression
sobered. Can we transport a Hiver?
We've never run across anything we
couldn't `port, Thian said, and
both
Roj and I have handled some pretty odd packages. Hell's bells,
Flavia,
you were in with me and Grandmother stealing that sphere. We
just
steal the queen for a few minutes.
OK? And before his fellow
conspirators
could restrain him, Thian sent a finely tuned message to
Earth
Prime.
Are you available, Earth Prime?
To you, Thian, always.
We've an idea which needs your clearance,
sir, and your help.
lit me have it.
When Thian finished the explanation, all
three young Primes held
their
breath throughout the seemingly endless silence from their
superior.
As the naval operation seems stymied,
obviously an unusual step
must be
taken to break the impasse. Yours makes
more sense than any
others
I've heard. And certainly poses no
danger to anyone. Of
course,
the queen might not be docile once she realizes where she is.
Can you cope with that possibility and be
able to restrain her?
All we'd have to do is `port her back to
Roddie.
But should she start the ship up Sir,
Rojer said, a ship this size
takes
time for its engines to warm up to take-off power. We'd have her
back in
her quarters before she'd get that far in a countdown.
Look, I'll hedge that possible problem
with a little safety net of
my own,
Jeff Raven said. I'll contact Roddie
myself to see how we
organize
the - ah. . . excursion from his
end. I gather she's in one
of her
immobile states now.
Lieutenant Rhodri Eagles was only too
happy to conspire to `loan'
his
prisoner to the scheme.
I've kilos of recordings I can set in
place. But you are sure she
can't
just scuttle out of the queens' quarters and get loose in the
ship?
That possibility's being handled, Thian
assured his cousin. There
had
been so many minor injuries of personnel falling into tubes,
tunnels
and crawl spaces that grilles had been placed over apertures
not in
use.
The ones leading from the queens'
quarters could be
telekinetically
`locked' down.
Sort of mean of us, though, isn't
it? Giving her false hope?
Roddie added, showing an unexpected
sympathy for the Hiver queen.
Hey, man, you need a change of duty if
you're starting to think
like
that, Thian replied.
Well, you know, maybe I ought to apply
for a transfer.
This duty was exciting - for a
while. But the glamour has long
since
worn off Any chance of you guys speaking up for me? Roddie
asked.
Sure thing. who to? Earth Prime or
your CO? what sort of duty
did you
have in mind?
ANYTHING. I've even learned enough `Dini to get along with them!
We'll tell you when to switch tapes. Get one picked out and ready
to
substitute because we'll have to move fast when we do.
Getting a chance to speak privately with
LieutenantCommander
Semirame
Kloo might have presented some problems but she solved that by
appearing
at their table, tray in hand, during the next meal break.
They had chosen this end of the officers'
mess-room because the
next
table was empty.
`Can I join you? Or are you off naval types?' `Why would we
be?'
Thian
said, surprised at her query.
`Baldwin!' she said succinctly, sliding
her tray onto the surface
and
seating herself. `I heard how strong he
came on today, the
xenophobic
pea-brain. He hates having to work with
mixed crews, and
that
means you as well as the `Dinis. He
also wants to take all the
credit
for any progress made on his watch as he's a little overdue for
promotion,
you see.
Thian grinned at her. This mess-hall bug free?
Rome Kioo rolled her eyes and grinned at
Thian.
`Sure is. Whatcha got to say?' While her eyes began to sparkle
with
curiosity and her body tensed ever so slightly with anticipation,
she
started on her meal, acting in a perfectly normal manner. But
remember
to say something out loud so no-one'll wonder why this corner
of the
room's gone silent.' So Thian began one of the double-talking
conversations
he was becoming adept at. `Chow's good
today and we sure
need
the break.' We have an idea that we could get the queen to show us
how to
power up the Refugee.
`Hmmm, so it is.' And Rome chewed with
evident relish. Tell me
more,
you delightfully dembus man!
All three Talents took turns explaining
the plan, sprinkling
innocuous
comments now and then. When all was
made clear, Rome looked
wisffully
down at her empty plate.
`I know that was a good meal but I've
absolutely no recollection
of what
I ate `You nearly choked once his face straight with an effort.
`And had two coughing fits helpfully `But
we can do it,' Rome
said. `Only it will have to be on the next
watch. I'm on, so is
Glmtml
`It'd go along with this?' Thian was surprised.
Rojer said, keeping Flavia added `Oh,
you'd be surprised,' and she
switched
to covert speech, at what old Glmtml'd do it's ofrd up with
some of
the brass on this project. She blotted
her lips with the
napkin,
rose and picked up her tray. `Thanks
for the company. Like to
do it
more often while you're here. I may
need your discreet help in
rearranging
the duty roster? Like having the less
co-operative types
sent to
check out ordnance? She grinned with
sheer malevolence. The
Refugee
had racks of missiles but no launchers set in installations
clearly
awaiting them: yet another sign of how rushed the Hivers had
been to
leave their system and its decaying primary.
`Any time,' Thian said. `See you around?' `Yup!' and Semirame
Kloo
strode confidently towards the disposal slot, slipped in her tray
and
left the wardroom.
Slightly more than an hour later, Kloo
gave a polite rap at the
Talents'
ready room door before she slipped quickly inside, a grin
plastered
on her face, as she flattened herself against the wall.
Got some tinkering for you to do with the
duty roster. Gotta get
it done
in the next five minutes. Can you?
Throw it up in the air and I'll catch,
Thian said without moving
from
his couch.
Rome hesitated a moment, shrugged and
tossed a folded piece of
film up
in the air. It disappeared.
I can have everyone crucial to this
operation of yours in position
fifteen
minutes before this watch ends.
OK? she added.
Couldn't be OKer.
She was gone as smoothly as she'd
arrived. Thian spread the film
on his
thigh and smiled.
Cover for me, will you, Roj, Flavia? I'll have to get myself into
the
main . . . ah, here. Hmmm.
That gal's pretty clever.
There, that should do it. Roddie?
You rang, coz?
Thian gave him the time.
Uncle Jeff agreed? Ohhohohoho!
I take back half the things I've
said
about my illustrious relative, Rhodri Eagle chortled with gleeful
anticipation. If he's going to cover your asses, he'll
cover mine,
too. Wow!
why is it that you can never brag about the really neat
things
you've done?
Because then they wouldn't be the neat
things, Flavia said
unexpectedly. `I do believe they have the life-support
system on
line,'
she added out loud. `D'you think sgit
leaves will make a
difference
. . . to the quality of the oxygen, I
mean?' `They do on
all the
ships I've been on which added sgit leaves to their plant
banks. And the `Dinis never have foul air.'
`In'trusting,' Flavia
said,
drawling. `Well, it will save the drain
on the Moon Base
supplies,
of course.
Because the Talents were more on a
stand-by basis now that the
Refugee's
interior had been diagrammed, the rest of the watch seemed to
drag
almost interminably.
My crew's in place, Thian, Rome
said. Then over the comunit, `Ah,
Prime
Thian, this is LieutenantCommander Kloo.
Can you stand by?
We're effecting a decontam drill.' `We
heard you, loud and clear,
Commander. Work away.
Rojer caught a shadow out of the corner
of his eye and, turning to
investigate,
nearly fell off his couch.
Granddad's here, he tried to whisper to
Thian.
Thian didn't turn his head but grinned
broadly.
Sort of thought you might, sir.
Since I might have to save your asses, as
Roddie so inelegantly
put it,
I thought I might as well be in on the fun.
And as back-up, too. Don't you trust us, sir? Thian said, only
half in
jest.
I trust you all right, Thian. It's that elongated insect that
worries
me. We know so little about their
psychology.
Ready when you are, came Rhodri's
cheerful voice.
Your plan. Go ahead, Thian, Jeff Raven said, folding his arms and
standing
approximately where Rome had earlier in the watch.
Merge, Roj, Flavia, Thian said.
The three minds linked neatly, just as if
this wasn't the first
time
they'd made such contact. With Thian in
the lead, Rojer was more
aware
of the strength of both minds than he'd been during their more or
less
solo workings on the Refugee. He was
also conscious of another
potency
which both bolstered and encouraged, yet was not a part of the
triple
merge.
`They' had no difficulty finding the
Hiver queen where she nestled
in her
shavings bed, her attendants polishing her body parts and
smoothing
the fine hairs of her limbs. The
stingg-pzzt from her was
unbearably
acute as the Thian merge made contact but the hesitation
lasted only
that brief second of surprise and then `they' neatly placed
her in
the now darkened queens quarters of the Refugee: in one of the
larger
chambers.
Somehow Rome had rigged `night' lighting
which showed the watchers
the
queen's form. She had been in a
semi-recumbent position in her
shavings,
but the Merge had placed her upright and she had to adjust
her
limbs for the standing position. That
done, she remained
motionless.
Hell's bells, Thian said, we don't have
days for you to decide
where
you are and what to do.
Stay calm! said the confident watching potency.
Abruptly the queen moved into action with
such speed they nearly
missed
her first movements. Palps reached
ceilingward, seeming to
slide
across the panels.
She had also rocked back on one set of
nether legs, freeing the
front
set to dance across the floor panels.
Instantly orangey lights came up around
the room in the tubes that
had
been designated as Hiver lighting.
Next the panels lit, decorated with odd
symbols and different
shadings.
We got power all over the fucking place,
Rome said, in choked
amazement. I'm not sure I can explain this.
Don't bother.
Oh Lord, engine room's going crazy. Hey, I think this has gone
far enough,
Thian! Panic coloured Rome's tone.
Don't worry, Commander, Jeff Raven
said. This ship's anchored so
tight
not even full speed forward could break her loose.
I know the sequence to turn the power on,
Rojer said.
I've got the pattern of how she activated
everything, Flavia said.
Sorry, gal, your parole just got
cancelled, Thian said and the
Merge
replaced the queen in her prison.
what'd you guys do to her? Rhodri complained. She's going wild!
Can `t say I blame her, Jeff remarked
placidly. I'd be a bit
pissed
off too, fil thought I'd just seen the way home and it
disappeared.
Your decontam drill just finished, Rome,
Thian told her.
Queen's back in stir and doing a mad
dance.
wheeee!
But can you start it all up again when we want you to?
the commander asked, doubt colouring her
tone.
Any time we want to.
For all the good that does, Jeff
remarked. Well done, Primes, not
an ass
in jeopardy. I'll leave you to the fun
of explaining it all to
the
Admiral. But I'll be listening so don't
say anything I'll have to
apologize
for.
Granddad!
`Admiral, it was a concerted effort,'
Rojer repeated, an
edge to his voice now because he was
growing weary of the barrage
of
naval doubts and, particularly, del Falco's aggressive
interrogation. He was sorry that, as the engineer of the
three
Talents,
he had volunteered to answer any technical questions. `Any'
had
turned into an incredible `many'. And
none of his answers pleased
xenophobic
Baldwin who was as close to sulking as a grown man should
get. All three Talents had been particulary
careful in answering his
stabbing
questions since his suspicions were so clearly `heard' in his
public
mind. `Given the height of the queen,'
Rojer explained
patiently,
`the positions of her manipulative limbs and her optics, the
upper
panel was the logical main control, while she received status
information
from the lower one. The three of us
merely fiddled with
variables
until we hit the right combination. I
think it was Flavia
who
actually got the lights turned on.' `The queen's upper limbs have
triangular-shaped
palps,' Flavia said, her voice falling into a `rote'
pattern
as she repeated her part of the explanation, `so that was the
form of
pressure I used.' `Why did you call a decontam drill at that
time,
Commander Kloo?' Baldwin demanded, abruptly switching to the
other
`culprit', the duty officer.
`Sir, if you will remember, you yourself
suggested that we start
emergency
drills on the Refugee, due to the fact that the life-support
system
was only just on line,' Semirame said in an earnest tone,
leaning
slightly towards him, not quite apologetically but with an air
of
gentle reminder. Actually, he gives so
many orders, he'll never
remember
he didn't. A drill is s.o.p especially
with a new
installation. If he hadn't ordered it, he should have.
I don't know about you and Rojer, Thian,
Flavia said with
considerable
vexation in her voice, but I find their attitudes
suspicious,
disagreeable, ungrateful and positively spiteful. what
difference
does it really make who found out how to turn on the power
in that
wretched old ship? It's never going
anywhere. But it IS now
powered
up and I do not like being accused of `going behind their backs
for
personal glory', or `overstepping' the parameters of `our assigned
functions
We kept their personnel safe and we made the ship just that
bit
more safe when we turned on its heating system. We've explained
and
explained and diagrammed as much as we know, so I think it's time
to
leave this merry-go-round.
With no brass ring. And I concur with your analysis, Flavia,
Thian
replied. I'm up with such a
catechism. We have finished `our
assigned
functions'. Therefore we can leave.
Rome, will our stalk irig out in
indignation put you in jeopardy?
Don't know how you `ve stood it as long
as you have. As I was
busy
overseeing a decontam drill and nowhere near the site of your
crime,
they can't even pin dereliction of duty on me.
`Sides, del
Falco's
not after me. I'm crew. He's after you because you're not.
Flavia, do you wish to make the statement
aloud or should I?
You'd better do it, Thian, Flavia
replied. I might lose my
temper.
Thian and Roger exchanged surprised
looks.
`Mr Lyon!' del Falco said, obviously
having had to repeat the call
to
attention for he was scowling with annoyance.
Both Mr Lyonses
regarded
him.
He asked you why did you choose that
precise moment to try out
your
theory, Rome supplied.
Thian rose, the signal for both Flavia
and Rojer to follow his
example.
`We chose that moment because the queens'
chambers were empty and
we
would not be jeopardizing anyone's safety in case we hit the wrong
buttons,'
Thian said. `Now you can turn the
panels on and off at your
discretion. The ship is thoroughly and safely explored,
independently
lit and
supplied with oxygen so our assignment has been completed.
Earth Prime has just informed me that we
must return immediately
to the
Blundell Cube. It has been our pleasure
to assist in this
project
for the navy on Mars Phobos Moon Base, Admiral, Commander
Baldwin,
Commander Kloo, Glmtmi, and sirs.' Thian bowed to the panel of
human
and Mrdinis that had been interrogating them for the past three
hours,
then he strode from the room.
The courtesies that Rojer and Flavia gave
their inquisitors were
as
polite but briefer and then they were in the corridor.
lit's blow this joint, Thian said.
They all heard the commotion inside and
`ported to their quarters
where
they collected their possessions in deft sweeps of closets and
drawers.
where away? Rojer asked Thian.
Blundell, of course, Thian replied as if
there could be no doubt.
There's a large enough carrier on the
transport deck.
They met there moments later, Flavia
looking attractively flushed
by
their dramatic and precipitous exit.
And we won't even have to use the Base
generators, Thian said,
chuckling,
last to enter the carrier. He pulled
the lid firmly shut.
OK?
At Rojer's mirthful shout and Flavia's
giggle of acknowledgement,
their
minds merged and they propelled themselves off the Moon Base and
down to
the headquarters of Federated Telepaths and Teleporters on
Earth.
You're a cheeky lot, said Jeff Raven, but
he, too, was chuckling.
Report to my office so you can repudiate
the blast I'm getting
from
Admiral del Falco.
The man is not only ungrateful, Flavia
said firmly, but
unmannerly. He never so much as thanked us for solving
his problem for
him.
`Port right up to my office, kids, I've
cleared the way for you,
Jeff
said as the lid of the corner was opened by the head expediter of
Blundell
facility.
`Boss wants you pronto,' but he was
grinning broadly.
Is the word out all over the world
yet? Rojer asked Thian on a
very
thin line.
No, nor will it be, Jeff answered, having
no trouble at all
insinuating
himself into his grandsons' link. Hurry
up. The Admiral's
just
getting to the part about gross insubordination, exceeding orders,
and I
suspect mutiny will figure in there soon.
`Sorry,' Thian said to the expediter and
`ported himself as
ordered,
Rojer and Flavia a nanosecond behind him.
Knowing Jeff Raven's office well, all
three made sure to arrive at
a point
out of range of the occupant on the screen.
Admiral del Falco,
Commander
Baldwin visible on his right, was waxing eloquent about the
`antics'
of these `unruly, undisciplined and unprincipled Talents `I
thought
you kept more control on your people, Raven.
You told us they
were
well trained, skilled and capable of the assignment. They walked
out of
a half finished debriefing with many questions unanswered. I
don't
mind telling you that I, Commander Baldwin here, and ` He turned
to his
left and his scowl deepened before he gave a snort of
displeasure
and faced directly into the comunit again.
`We will not
recommend
that those three receive assignments from any navy unit
again.'
`Oh, really?' Jeff said. `How odd. Because I've had twenty
urgent
requests - - and he lifted a pile of message flimsies from his
desk to
plain view of the Admiral' from naval exploration groups,
Squadrons
C and D, now refitting at Clarf and from Captains Osullivan,
Ashiant,
Cheseman, Quacho, Plr, a priority urgent one from Captain
Spktm
of the KLTS, and another top-security assignment which I don't
believe
you are cleared to know.
Hey, Granddad, that's a low blow, Thian
said chuckling.
Hit `em again, harder, Rojer suggested,
delighted.
Admiral del Falco glared and his
impassive face settled into an
even
more threatening blandness. `They may
change their minds when
they
see the report I shall insist be attached to their NE-440 forms.
`Really?
That they prevented serious injury by rescuing
seventy-five
crew members, human and Mrdini, during the course of your
exploration
of Refugee which was completed in less than thescheduled
time:
that they were also able to discover and turn on the ship's
independent
power system. That, by the way, was not
in their
assignment's
parameters but Talents pride themselves on doing "more"
than
they are required to do. Part of the
dedication of our personnel,
Admiral.
And don't go riffing out NE-440 forms on
FT&T personnel: a waste
of time
as they're not under your jurisdiction.
Thank you for your
perceptions
on this mission and good luck with your operational enemy
ship.'
With a peremptory wave of his hand, Jeff blanked the screen.
`And that makes the Phobos Moon Base low
man on FT&T job
priorities.'
He rose from his chair, still taller than his grandsons,
vigorous
and obviously amused by recent events.
`I don't think they
gave
you anything to eat during that three-hour grilling, did they?
Name your pleasure,' he added, gesturing
for them to take seats in
the
lounge area of his spacious office.
`My guts wouldn't've let me eat any more
of their food anyhow,'
Rojer
said and, turning his head to the dispenser, called out the
elements
of a sustaining meal.
Jeff chuckled at the choice, then urged
Flavia to send her order.
Thian realized that his stomach was
unknotting as well and shortly
had as
comprehensive a spread of dishes as his brother.
`Hope you haven't taken a dislike to navy
life, Flavia, Jeff said
when he
had ordered a salad and all were sitting about the beautiful
Altairian
fruit wood table, now laden with succulent comestibles.
`No, sir. I had no
trouble with the lifestyle, sir. Both
Thian
and
Rojer have told me a little bit ` She shot Rojer an anxious glance
until
she realized he was applying himself diligently to his meal and
only
half listening. ` - - about the services
they performed. I'd
have no
apprehensions of serving as a Talent on a ship.
Taking an objective viewpoint, I did feel
that Admiral del Falco's
internal
conflicts and ambitions were the source of much of his
behavioural
pattern.
`Well said,' Jeff murmured with a laugh
and roguish grin at his
grandsons.
`Were you considering another naval
assignment for me, sir?' she
asked.
Watching Flavia delicately consuming a
pasta dish, managing a neat
twine
of strands of hot cheese around her fork, Thian could well
imagine
the impression she'd make on any crew.
Maybe he'd read more
into
Granddad's choice of her as a mission member than existed.
Except he knew Jeff Raven wanted his
grandchildren to marry into
Talented
families to produce yet another generation of gifted children.
`Several situations have come up for T-1s
so I'll spread the lot
of them
on the table,' Jeff said. `Squadron C's
been brought back for
refitting
and resupply, as well as a change of personnel. C's been out
longer
than D.' `Then they're going to follow the other Hive ships to
their
destination?' Thian was excited as well as relieved. He hadn't
liked
the idea of that ship loose and preying on an unsuspecting
planet.
`That's what I hear,' and implicit in
Jeff Raven's voice was the
caution
that what he had heard might be altered.
`Squadron A replaces elements of C and D
and will continue the
search
with augmentation and would very much like you back, Thian,
especially
Captain Spktm.
Squadron B will now consist of four human
and four `Dini ships
and, if
you'd consider that assignment, Rojer, you'd have no prejudice,
believe
me.' Jeff glanced reassuringly at Rojer.
`The KTTS is one of
them
but the ship has a new captain, officers and crew.
Captain Quacho's finally been relieved at
Xh-33, but the Arapahoe
will
need refitting. There's to be some
other reshuffling of units in
B, but
I don't know what.
The squadron's been ordered on a mission
to survey the M-5 planets
the
Hiver ships by-passed. The
xenobiologist lobby is rabid to get to
those
damaged planets, as much to see what went wrong as to see if
anything
can be salvaged from Hiver occupation.
I'm also not sending
any T-l
on these long cruises without a personal support team, and with
such
augmented squadrons, I'd be happier to have two T-1s, or a T-1
and a good T-2 as back-up. There are also some shorter-term
exploratory
cruises, in the Xh-33 quadrant of space, if you don't care
for the
longer journeys.
Having Talents aboard has been of great
assistance.
Don't know why I didn't think of it
before, except that FT&T has
been
mainly planet-based. Think about your
options. And there are
always
dirtside openings if you want a complete change.' Then Jeff
grinned. `One more matter, just before del Falco got
on to me, I had
word
from Heinlein Base that the queen's been energized.' He grinned,
cocking
one eyebrow, his deep blue eyes twinkling.
`I don't know if
it's
the food you sent over from the Refugee or what, but Roddie
reports
that she's minutely re-examined every single one of the Great
Sphere
larvae that were sent there and she's done something to more of
the
eggs she herself laid - in between having a good munch-out on three
of the
nine containers. The others she hasn't
opened.' Flavia gave a
little
sigh of regret. `Maybe it was truly
unkind to raise her hopes
when we
never intended to let her escape.
`I don't think the Hive psyche has
evolved sufficiently to
recognize
kindness,' Jeff said gently to Flavia.
`They've sure shown none,' Rojer said,
remembering the destruction
of the
queen pods by their own species at Xh-33.
`Isn't it a good thing that she's
active?' Thian said to Flavia.
`Better for her.
`Samples of what's in those food
containers have been sent to the
Heinlein
labs for analysis, haven't they?' Jeff asked.
`Sure did,' Rojer said. `There were more than enough containers
with
the same markings to allow us to `port one each to every biology
and
xeno group active in Hiver study. That
didn't even make a
noticeable
dent in the amount still in store in the cargo holds. `Good
thinking,'
Jeff said, nodding approvingly.
`Wasn't me, sir. Roddie suggested it. He thought her own sort of
food
might contain basic elements she isn't getting in the diet they've
provided
her.' Thian grinned broadly. `Now
wouldn't the right food
cause
the queen to activate?' Jeff s grin was just as broad, with just
the
slightest hint of malicious delight about it.
`I think that will
certainly
be the official position and supported by the resident
xenobs.'
`Granddad,' Rojer began, `backtrack a bit, would you? You
mentioned
M-5 type planets where the Hivers didn't make colonies work?'
`Ah
yes, you wouldn't be up to date on that, would you?' Jeff said,
tossing
his napkin to the table before pushing his chair away. Cocking
his
knee against the edge of the table, he leaned back. `We'd a T-2,
Kincaid
dano. Name's not familiar? No matter.
It was fortunate that
he was
with Squadron C. I'd only just initiated the programme of
Talents
on long-cruise missions. When the Hive
ship C was chasing
didn't
investigate any of the M-5 systems they were passing, the High
Council
asked me if probes similar to the ones Rojer used couldn't be
deployed
to investigate. Clearly those two
Spheres were looking for a
place
to colonize so why did they keep passing likely systems by. We
shipped
dano probes. He'd enough other low
Talents on board to help
him
`port them on a parabolic course. In
and out. Rather interesting
details
emerged. Of the four planets
investigated, two had obviously
been
colonized by Hivers because there were the ruins of the sort of
installations
the Xh-33 has.' `Ruins?' Thian asked.
`Ruins.
Hive ruins. Including the same
sort of space garbage
around
Xh-33 and, in one case, an orbiting sphere ship. Another planet
is
ecologically on the point of ruin, presumably because the Hiver
extermination
policy eliminated something vital to its ecosystem. The
point
is that there are more M-5 type worlds out there that the Hivers
never
bothered with. Why? is one of the questions asked. Do they
have
records of all the systems their species have colonized? Another
question
is, obviously, can one of the Alliance species use any of
these
abandoned worlds? And there're more out
there - as we've always
known
there were - to be investigated. C
Squadron is being recalled.
While the expanded Squadron A picks up where
they left off,
Squadron
B will do evaluations of the abandoned colony worlds `And
knock
out the inhabited one the way we did the Xh-33?' asked Thian with
a
certain eagerness in his voice.
Jeff gave him a long look. `I've no specific directions as yet.
I'd rather one of us didn't start another
battle.
The navy feels that that's its
prerogative.' Then he grinned.
`Even if certain Talents do seem to lend
a helping hand when least
expected. However, I've had my wrists slapped by the
High Council so
orders
are to be followed this time.
Each one felt him gently prod their
minds.
`Granddad,' and Thian waggled a finger at
Earth Prime.
`Sorry,' Jeff said, lifting his hands in
a gesture of compliance,
`force
of habit.' His grin had not a vestige of apology in it.
`That means, sir, that the squadrons will
continue to hunt down
the
remaining Hive hips?' Flavia asked.
`I repeat, that's the current,' and he
lightly emphasized the
word,
`plan. These chasings off into
unexplored regions of space keep
lasting
longer than anyone anticipated - - -` `A lot that's happened
couldn't
be anticipated,' Thian said, thinking of the Great Sphere and
the
dead star that had once shone on the Hive home world.
`You can say that again,' Rojer murmured,
remembering the
unexpected
events in which he had taken part.
`Where are your `Dinis,
Thian?'
he asked suddenly.
Thian shot him a glance, adding a mental
touch blended of
compassion,
affection, pride and relief that the question had been
asked. `Hibernation. They should be out in another week.
`Oh!`Mur and Dip would like a chance to
see you, if that's all
right
with you, Roj.' Thian turned to the Earth Prime. `That is, if
Granddad
hasn't shipped us off to the different ends of the galaxy.'
`Not in
the next two weeks,' Jeff said affably.
`Your parents have
expressed
a wish for your company,' and his eyes twinkled as his mobile
face
suggested he couldn't understand why they would, `and you all
require
leave after running those naval hazards.' He turned to Flavia.
`My wife and I would be delighted to have
you stay with us at
Callisto,
Flavia. Damia has also extended an
invitation to you to
return
to Aurigae with the boys if you'd prefer.' `Old home week's fine
on
Aurigae,' Rojer said. `Do you
ride? We've great ponies and good
hunting.'
At that prospect, Flavia brightened. `I
haven't had a decent
hunt in
ever so long. What sort of game do you
go after? I'm afraid
that I
don't know much about Iota Aurigae.' `Any chance of Laria
getting
home leave, too?' Thian asked his grandfather.
Jeff smiled and nodded before he folded
his hands behind his head,
leaning
back in his chair at an almost dangerous angle. Relaxing with
his young
relatives around him was a good way to get perspective on
completely
different problems.
`Give a think to the various assignments,
Squadrons A and B, or a
dirtside
assignment, or one of the shorter exploratories. Talents
don't
have to ship out from a dock.' He grinned.
`Those who want you
will
welcome you all the more when you do get wherever you choose to
go.' He
set his chair back down on all four legs.
`I may have to make
the
final decisions but your preferences will be taken into
consideration. I owe you that much, Talents.' Thian and
Rojer
exchanged
surprised glances at his deference.
In line with that generosity, Jeff Raven
persuaded in a manner as
near to
coercion as he ever came, to get the Raven-Lyons all home at
the same
time. He got David of Betelgeuse to
release his T-1 son,
Perry,
to take charge of Clarf Tower, borrowing Yoshuk from the Sef
Tower
until Perry became comfortable with the peculiarities of the
planet.
Perry has'n't dealt with enough Mrdini
yet and he'll need to, Jeff
told
the Betelgeuse T-1. You won't let him
have your damned tower
until
you're mouldy so he might as well have some variety in his hfr.
Jeff then made extravagant use of
pressure to get Clancy Sparrow
and
Rhodri Eagles leaves of absence and had Damia invite them to
Aurigae. He also suggested to his daughter that Asia
Eagles could use
some
Tower engineering work experience with Xexo and wasn't it time for
Zara to
get a break from her arduous training under the T-1 Healer
Elizara? Damia was so eager to have all her children
home again at
once,
especially Rojer, that she would have struck a deal with a Hiver.
You're matchmaking again, Jeff Raven, his
wife accused him.
How can you say that when all these young
people will be `polling
off to
distant star systems and not see each other for years?
Tkat doesn't matter ri they are only a
thought away from each
other,
does it, Jeff Raven!
Jeff grinned and firmed up all the
private arrangements before he
called
in his administrative assistant, Gollee Gren, to see exactly
which
Talents suited which of the many other assignments he had to
fill. At least, he thought gratefully, he had more
available options
than
Peter Reidinger, his predecessor, had ever had, with all the new
generation
of kith and kin growing splendidly and strongly into their
Talents. Now, if the High Council would get its joint
act together,
he'd
know where he needed the heavyweights of his corps.
Once again he thanked the ghosts of all
the Earth Primes who had
managed
to keep Federated Telepaths and Teleports autonomous and
apolitical.
A-what?
asked a laughing voice and Gollee Gren, his dark,
close-cropped
hair showing a sprinkling of silver, entered the spacious
office.
`I always do what's best for my Talents,'
Jeff said in a gruff
voice,
mimicking his predecessor, Peter Reidinger, so perfectly that
Gollee
grinned even more broadly.
`So what's best for whom this time,
Jeff?' Jeff steepled his
fingers
briefly, pressing them against his lips.
Neither mimicry nor
laughter
was present when he answered. `I hope
we'll see that they've
been
able to make the proper choices.
By the time Damia had settled all her
guests, she almost wished
that
they could have come singly, with a good day between arrivals, so
she
could fully savour each return. She'd
worried most of all about
Rojer,
returning without Gil and Kat to a house full of `Dinis. The
moment
the capsule arrived with the brothers and Flavia, she `reached
out'
for Rojer. He was steeling himself but
foremost in his mind was
an
eagerness to be home. No sooner was
that carrier down, than Laria,
Tip,
Huf and Kincaid dano arrived. The dust
in the Tower yard hadn't
settled
when Zara with Pal and Dis `ported in.
Morag, Kaltia, Ewain and Petra, plus
their `Dinis, were dancing up
and
down with the excitement of having their `famous' brothers and
sisters
back on Aurigae. Xexo and Keylarion
were trying to keep order
but the
Tower yard was in minor chaos as the younger children kept
running
from one to the other older sibling, `Dinis dizzy from
following.
Like a hard knock on a painful bruise,
Damia felt Rojer respond to
energetic
greetings from Kaltia's and Ewain's `Dinis.
They were so
caught
up in the general elation that none of them remembered to give
Rojer
the time or space to initiate contact.
Damia was all set to
abandon
protocol and `port down to intervene when she felt the sudden
shift
of emotion in his mind. Then he was
lifting Petra up in his arms
- Rojer
had got taller all of a sudden and muscled up, Damia noted,
testing
the strength of him - while Big and Sil affectionately flapped
against
legs which surely had got longer. Any
reluctance or hesitation
dissolved
in the warmth of affectionate kisses and pats showered on him
by his
totally unselfconscious youngest sister and her friends.
`He'll be fine, Damia,' Afra said
gently. `This was perhaps the
best
way to get over that hump.' He held her briefly in his arms,
kissed
her tenderly and released her. He
peered out the Tower window
and a
fatuous grin spread across his face. `A
bit overwhelming even if
they
are all ours.' `Mostly ours,' Damia corrected him as she noticed
that
Flavia and Kincaid dano were being introduced and as warmly
welcomed. She hurried down the stairs to add hers.
Parental embraces were perhaps more
restrained but just as
heartfelt. Damia tried not to hug Rojer any harder or
longer than she
did
Thian, Laria and Zara but she had to know.
I am all right, Mother, he said on a very
thin line to her.
Really, coming home is going to work
out. `GOOD TO SEE TRP AND
FLK
ONCE MORE.' And Rojer bowed to his parents' `Dinis.
Surprising everyone, Trp and FIk bowed
very low to Rojer, their
poll
eyes almost touching the ground. Then
each held out one upper
limb to
him which he obediently grasped.
Silently, as they began to
lead
him towards the path to the house, all the other `Dinis, even
ùPetra's,
fell into step behind.
ùI'm still all right, Mother, Rojer said
so she turned to speak
with
Flavia and Kincaid, and introduce them to Xexo and Keylarion.
`Shall we all move up to the house then?'
Damia said.
`Don't hang on your brother, Ewain. Yes, Petra, Zara can
certainly
see how much you've grown. C'mon now,
all of you, we'll
adjourn
to the house.
`Noisy lot. No manners whatever,' Afra said, staring hard at
Kaltia
and Morag who were determined to monopolize their oldest sister.
Then he turned to Kincaid. `Earth Prime told me that there were
some
ùunusual aspects to your recent tour of duty with Squadron C.'
`Even
if you had help from other Talents, it was asking a great deal
too
much,' Damia said, having deafly assessed the young man's fatigue.
`The navy treats Talents far too
off-handedly. We are not
stevedores,'
she ùadded with some heat.
Mother!
Laria said on a very thin line.
Let Father handle him.
As T-2 to T-2. what Kincaid doesn't need is another
brain-browsing
TùOh? Were you a little clumsy,
dear? asked her
father.
`No,' Laria continued aloud, `but we're
suckers when someone asks
us if
Talents can do this or that, in just that tone of voice that
forces
us to prove we can.
Frankly, the labels "performing
bear" or "packmule" are becoming
more
appropriate than ``stevedore''.' `Laria!' Damia exclaimed,
halilaughing,
half astounded by the comment. Then she
frowned,
glancing
ahead at Rojer, being ù `herded', the term came to her mind,
towards
the house. And . . . She had a compelling urge to run
forward,
to be with Rojer. Then Zara caught her
by the arm.
I feel it, too, Mother, Zara said. But it is not for us to be
present
what are you two talking about? Afra
asked.
I'm not at all sure, Damia replied, trying to rationalize the
`Dinis'
odd actions with the growing sense that some extraordinary
event
was about to happen. This morning when
I told Fok that everyone
was
coming, it asked if I meant Rojer also.
Then it muttered about
suitable
reparation and an apology for the length of time it had taken.
Laria strode up beside her mother and
Zara, her face twisted with
concern,
one hand absently rubbing her diaphragm as if to relieve a
tension
there. `Mother, I've the oddest
sensation `I, too,' Flavia
said,
equally puzzled.
`Well, Fok and Tip have been cooking up
something, Mom,' Morag
said. `They've been acting funny and I can't get
why out of Fip and
Kim. But all the `Dinis're almighty pleased with
themselves, whatever
it is
they're doing.' Every one of the Talented family by now was
touched,
and wondering, about the strange imminence.
From the puzzled, almost wary expressions
of Flavia and Kincaid,
the
atmosphere was affecting them.
`There are moments when I wish I had a touch of prescience,'
Damia
said,
lengthening her strides just short of a run.
`And what the hell do you think this is,
then?' Thian asked,
grinning
at his mother.
She shot him a reproving look. `It's too nebulous to be useful!'
They
were in sight of the front terrace of the house, Rojer already
halfiway
up the steps, surrounded by various sizes of `Dinis. Then he
halted.
A blast of totally unshielded astonished
emotion stopped everyone
midstep,
but this was followed by such joy that everyone also broke
into
vicarious smiles, until Damia, Laria, Zara and Morag began to cry.
The four of them ran forward so that they
could see what prompted
such a
cascade of feelings, followed by the remainder of the family and
its
guests.
The `Dinis had ranged themselves on the
top step, their colours
bright
with their own joy. On the porch Rojer
was on his knees, his
arms
about two `Dinis, clasping first one, then the other tightly to
him, caressing
each before snagging them together against him.
It's Gil and Kat come back to me! Mother!
Dad! Everyone.
I've got my `Dinis back. Young still but they are GrI and Ktg!
They are!
It took time to sort it all out even with
the full cooperation of
Trp and
FIk, the elder `Dinis of the household, and occasional comments
from
Tip, Huf, Mur and Dip. No human had
ever been allowed into a
hibernatory. Although it was understood that this was
where Mrdini
procreation
occurred, the process of gestation was not understood.
`I'm not confident that I do even now,'
Damia said when Trp and
FIk had
done their best to explain.
`Like the amoeba, splitting apart,
Mother,' Zara said.
`Or, like a human placenta splitting in
two to form fraternal
twins
in utero. Not quite like .
`Thank you, Zara,' Damia said, but she
patted her daughter's hand
to
apologize for stemming a xenobiological lecture. Zara didn't take
offence.
The `time' problem had been taken up ;by
the necessity of checking
back
through hibernatory records to discover which pairings had
originally
produced Grl and Ktg. They were not
from the same `split'
for a
`split' only produced one new Mrdini.
So that both sets of
original
parents had had to be contacted and brought to the Aurigaean
hibernatory
at the appropriate time and a new `split' of the same
elements
as the original Grl and Ktg had to be `programmed' which, FIk
said,
was an intense form of meditation to `urge similar traits' to
occur
in the new form. With this sort of
procreation, no worthwhile
`persons'
were totally lost, but could be retrieved by encouraging a
`split'
by the same two Mrdini which had produced the original. Those
who had
gone on the line to preserve their elders on long voyages were
therefore
not `lost' but their living deferred.
`Oh!' Laria said at one point during the
explanations.
`So that was why Prtglm was... So nothing
of it would come back
into
the procreative cycle. Wow! What a punishment!
`That also explains why the Mrdini
grieved so when ships were lost
to the
Hivers,' Thian said.
`NO, THN,' Flk said, `THOSE ON THE
SUIDICE SHIPS WERE SPECIALLY
CHOSEN
BECAUSE THEIR COMPONENTS WERE AVAILABLE FOR RE-CREATION.
MRDINI ARE NOT WASTEFUL.' `THEN THAT ALSO
EXPLAINS WHY MRDINI CAN
BE
BRAVER THAN HUMANS AND MAKE THE SACRIFICE OF DEATH,' Thian added,
nodding
with relief at his comprehension of this facet. `MRDINIS DO
NOT
REALLY DIE. THEY CAN BE REPLICATED.
`NOT REPLICATED,' Flk said firmly. `NOT THE SAME PROCESS. MRDINI
LIVES
ARE NOT REPLICATED. THEY ARE
REPRODUCED.
`WHATEVER!' Damia said with a shaky
laugh. `BUT COULD NOT YOU
HAVE
TOLD RJR THAT HE HAD NOT LOST GRL AND KTG.
HE HAS MOURNED THEM.
THAT, TOO, IS NECESSARY,' Tri said
without apology. `MRDINI MAKE
A
SPECIAL DISPENSATION FOR RJR. HONOUR
REQUIRED IT. AND TIME. WHAT
HAS
BEEN SAID REMAINS WITHIN THIS FAMILY.
`OF COURSE,' Afra answered, inclining his
whole body forward in
acceptance
of that requirement. `A SIGNAL HONOUR
FOR US ALL. TRULY AN
INESTIMABLE
HONOUR.
`Speaking as a healer,' Zara said, `it
certainly does clear up a
lot of
crazy theories.' Then she sighed.
`Well, I know and, while it
is
privileged knowledge, it is a privilege for me to know it.' She
stroked
her `Dinis, Pal and Dis, who were wedged in on either side of
her.
`JUST SEE THAT IT DOESN'T HAPPEN TO YOU
TWO!' NOT LIKELY TO,'
replied
Pal, waving its forearms and wriggling its digits.
`This whole family is high!' Damia said
with some asperity but her
grin
broke out again and, once more, she had to brush tears of joy from
her
eyes. Just seeing the radiant look on
Rojer's face was enough to
set her
off again. `Now, let us all try for some
decorum.' Afra rose
with an
air of renewed vigour. `And resort to a
few practical matters.
Hunters are needed to fill the pots for
tonight's feast. Who'll
go
out?' They were all willing so Damia showed the guests to their
rooms
while her children found their own much as they had left them and
changed
into riding gear.
When all reassembled, Afra told them off
into smaller groups,
excusing
Rojer so he could spend uninterrupted time with his `Dinis.
Thian chose Flavia to come with him,
Ewain and Kaltia. Afra and
Damia
took Morag and Petra who proudly informed Kincaid that she was a
crack
shot with her sling-shot. That left
Laria, Zara and Kincaid.
`Ever ridden?' Laria asked Kincaid.
`Ridden what?' Kincaid replied uncertainly.
`Ponies, small horses.' `Oh, animal
riding. Yes, somewhat,' he
said
and Laria beckoned him to follow her to the stables.
`Can I join you two?' Zara asked.
`Sure,' Laria said without
hesitation. Saki's mine! she roared
after her
siblings who were already in the stable.
who'd dare take her with you around?
Laria thought that muffled response came
from Rojer for it had the
ring of
an elated personality.
Is he yours, sister? Zara asked on a thin line.
Kincaid?
He's not for either of us, dear.
And you a healer to
miss
it! And carul, Zara, `cause I know you
can't resist a healering
`look'. He was as near burned-out emotionally as
I've ever touched.
what does the navy do to the empathic?
Emotional burn-out? Zara asked sharply, her healer's instinct
alert
Plus considerable strain on a T-2's abilities.
I think he's
healing
but ri you could, at your deftest, slip in and check, I'd be
relieved,
Zar, Laria said gratefully. I'm
speaking as Kincaid's Prime.
Zara nodded as she slipped the headpiece
over her pony's ears
while
Laria found a saddle suitable for Kincaid's size. She found it
very
good indeed to be surrounded by ponies; grateful to see that the
oldest
were still vigorous and whinnied anxiously against being left
behind. The entire complement was needed to mount
the hunters, with
three
spares taken on lead ropes in high hopes of bringing back much
game.
Kincaid eschewed sling-shot and bow and
arrow, choosing a
small-bore
rifle and ammunition for it as if he knew what he was about.
Laria was rather surprised to see Flavia
take bow and arrow. She
also
saw the grin on Thian's face.
As each hunting party was armed and
mounted, they moved off in
preferred
directions. Laria decided on an eastern
route, to the
foothills. With only her parents, the four younger kids
and the
`Dinis,
there wouldn't have been much call to go too far from home for
scurriers,
rabbits and the small plump-breasted avians that nested
nearer
by. Although Laria had thoughtfully
chosen a steady mount for
him,
Kincaid's `somewhat' was near enough to the level of her own
abilities
that her respect for him went up another notch. She raised
her
arm, signalling a faster gait, and kneed Saki into the
ground-covering
canter, a rocking gait that required little more than
balance
for a rider. She heard the other two
ponies pick up to the
same
gait. A second, surreptitious glance
showed her Kincaid, easily
sitting
into the canter and grinning with pleasure.
He was also a good shot, as he proved
when their approach flushed
a covey
of avians from their hedges.
He got two brace of them, each neatly
shot through the head. Zara
had
also chosen a rifle but she went after the scurriers, which broke
cover
when Kincaid's shots startled them.
Laria got three rabbits, two
scurriers
and even one avian hen in that first stop.
`No-one's been hunting this way in a long
while,' she said to her
sister
as they bagged their catch.
`When was the last time you were home?'
asked Zara with a bit of a
snort. `This always was the route you preferred.'
`Yes, but you'd
think
someone would have tried to keep the game down all over the
hills.'
`Do you always hunt for your table?' Kincaid asked, handing
over
the birds he had retrieved.
`Uhuh!' the sisters said in unison and
all three laughed.
`When we were younger, we used to take
our `Dinis with us . . .`
Zara
began.
`They were small enough to ride pillion
then Laria continued.
- ù And didn't consider it beneath their
dignity to grab a stirrup
leather
to get up the hills.' `Ah - - `Kincaid began tentatively, `what
did
happen to your brother's original `Dinis?
I've only caught
snatches
and I'd rather not misinterpret.
Laria and Zara exchanged glances and
begged his pardon.
`Apologies, Kincaid,' Laria said, taking
the initiative.
She related the incident quickly, trying
not to let her emotions
colour
the facts. Neither sister expected his
bitter reaction.
`Bad enough to try that sort of coercion
on someone of full age
and
your own species, but to subject a kid He flushed, thinking he
might
have belittled their brother's abilities.
`I admit that I like
Clarf
far more than I thought I would, even in the short time I've been
at your
Tower, Laria, but I haven't changed my mind about naval
practices
at all.' He looked down at the ground, at the pattern he was
scuffing
in the thick moss.
`You'll never know how grateful I was to
be transferred back to
the
company of civilians!' Zara touched Laria's wrist, where the riding
glove
left her hand bare, and Laria `heard' the message: This bears
investigation. The problem `s festering. I'll do it when he sleeps.
`Grateful, are you?' Laria said with a
light laugh. `I haven't
half
worked you yet, Kincaid. You may wish
to transfer back to the
navy.'
He looked her squarely in the eyes, his jaw set at an obstinate
angle. `No, I wouldn't. Not ever.' He turned and, with a respectable
vault,
was astride his pony. `Have we got a
large enough bag?' `Only
if
you're feeling the saddle,' Laria said with a challenging grin.
The hunt's good for him, Zara said
tightly.
`I'll feel the saddle tomorrow,' Kincaid
said with a rueful grin
as he
kneed his pony forward to follow the nearly overgrown path, `but
let's
get on with the hunt.
The hunt had been so enthusiastically
pursued by all participants
that
Damia decided, as the `Dinis helped them dress down the results,
that
they probably wouldn't need to hunt for the rest of the week. She
sent
Zara out with Petra and their `Dinis to pull vegetables to go with
the
evening meal and set Rojer and Ewain and their `Dinis to dig
tubers. With her friends, Laria began to make a
dessert while Flavia
watched
in fascination as Tip and Huf measured ingredients, set out
appropriate
pots and pans. Thian took ùKincaid with
Nil and Plus back
to the
stable to feed and secure the stableyard creatures. Kincaid
enjoyed
the chore, having missed working with tamed creatures while on
his
naval assignment.
-There turned out to be time enough for a
quick swim before dinner
and
there was more aquatic rough stuff than energetic laps of the large
pool.
By dinner, Rojer's joy had settled to a
glow and the new Gil and
Kat had
acquired enough orientation, between his efforts and those of
the
other `Dinis, to appear quite comfortable at the large table. If,
at
first, they were clumsy with unfamiliar utensils, they learned with
amazing
speed and obviously enjoyed the meal.
Leaving children and guests to clear the
table and cleanse the
dishes,
Damia and Afra settled in the lounge, to have a quiet liqueur,
watch
the sun set over the sea, and get a few words with their `Dinis.
`TELL US PLEASE, Damia asked Trp and FIk,
`HOW MATURE ARE THE NEW
KTG AND
GRL?' `OLDER THAN THE FIRST BECAUSE THE IMMATURE WOULD NOT BE
ABLE TO
ACCOMPANY RJR USEFULLY `CAN YOU TELL US HOW THIS WAS
ACCOMPLISHED? WE DO NOT PRY Damia left the thought
hanging.
FIk resettled itself right next to Damia,
laying one upper hand on
her
arm, stroking its head against her shoulder.
`DM IS TOO GOOD A FRIEND TO PRY. IT WAS PART OF MEDiTATION THAT
THESE
BE MORE MATURE.
THIS REQUIRES VERY CAREFUL ATTENTION TO
DETAILS NOT USUALLY
REFINED
SO EARLY. HALF GROWN KTG AND GRL ARE
BUT NOT MORE GROWN THAN
CAN
ABSORB NECESSARY DATA NOW THAT RJR IS OLDER TOO.
`DO YOU KNOW HOW MUCH THIS MEANS TO US AS
WELL AS RJR?' Damia said
and,
although she knew perfectly well there wasn't an ounce of
telempathy
in Mrdinis, she exuded gratitude and knew that Afra was,
too.
`WE KNOW. ALL MRDINI KNOW. THE
REGRET IS THAT TIME HAD TO GO SO
SLOWLY
FOR RJR.
SUCCESS HAD TO BE ACHIEVED OR
DISAPPOINTMENT WOULD MAR RJR FOR ALL
TIME.'
`YES,' Afra said slowly, `TO HAVE RAISED HIS HOPES PREMATURELY
WOULD
HAVE CAUSED MUCH MORE PAIN. YOU WERE
WISE.
YES, WE WERE VERY WISE,' Trp said with
such a smug tone in its
voice
that both Damia and Afra burst out laughing at its
uncharacteristic
arrogance.
Then the chores were finished and Damia
and Afra were joined by
children,
guests and `Dinis. It made for rather a
full room, but a
very
happy one.
The next day, to shake out of the kinks
caused by riding after a
long
absence from the sport, Thian, Laria, Zara and the two guests took
an easy
hack to another part of the foothills.
Rojer grinned at their
stiffhess
for he'd been riding regularly on Deneb and he had other
plans
for his day. Afterwards, Thian and
Laria gave Flavia and Kincaid
a tour
of Aurigae City, the `Dini village where they caught a fleeting
glimpse
of Rojer, Kat and Gil making a formal call on the inhabitants.
WILL RJR KNOW WHO . . .` Laria couldn't resist asking Tip.
NEVER KNOW. WE DON T. WE KNOW IT WAS DONE.
THAT IS ENOUGH.
Well, you would ask, Thian said when he
saw the chagrined look on
his
sister's face from the brusque reply.
There was no harm in asking, she said
with a sniff Otherwise how
would I
know that there is a limit to the knowledge they have of the
process? They aren't offended.
No, they're not. They know us too well for that.
Thank goodness. Sometimes . and Laria
halted, closing off her
thought.
Thian nudged her. Hey, it's me, your brother.
Laria gave him a sideways look. If I could analogize the
nebulous,
I would, but I can't. when I can figure
out the question I
need to
ask, I'll bring it to you, and Zara.
There was a sad and
perplexed
tone to Laria's mental voice that Thian had never heard
before
from his practical, sensible sister.
Not Mother or Dad?
Laria gave a little laugh. when I know enough to ask, I might.
But I think you and Zara might know
better.
I'm highly complimented. Thian tousled his sister's hair.
She was tall but he had centimetres on
her.
`Hey, what gives you the right to mess me
up?' she demanded in
mock
outrage. Their mental exchange had
taken so little time their
guests
could not have been aware of discourtesy or such a tightly
private
colloquy.
`Hey, I'm bigger'n you now, sis. I got the right!' Thian said,
grinning
back. He noticed Flavia and Kincaid
exchanging amused
glances. `Where to now?
A view of the open mines? A fascinating scenic tour of the river?
Ah, I know. Breakfast was a long time ago and there's a great
place
where they've fresh crustaceans I'll bet neither of our guests
have
ever had a chance to eat!' `Gotcha!' `I'd rather you didn't use
that
word around me, sis,' Thian said, having had to catch his breath
at the
shaft of remembered fear and terror the innocent vernacular
phrase
produced in him.
`Ooops, sorry, Thi,' and Laria was full
of remorse.
Once again they inadvertently excluded
their guests and smiled
apologies.
`Maybe if you spoke of it to us who will
understand as others
can't
?` Flavia asked, peering up into Thian's pale face.
Thian knew himself to be tempted by
Flavia's obvious concern but
he also
caught the wariness in Kincaid, a rigid seizing of muscles in
the
man's body that made -`him loath to add to whatever burden Kincaid
already
coped with. For Thian was as perceptive
as Zara about the T-2.
So he made himself grin.
`You would understand, Flavia,' he said,
lightly and briefly
touching
her shoulder, `and so would dano, but at another time. Laria
just
caught me unawares.
They ate fish of all kinds as well as the fresh crustaceans and
Laria
put in an order for ten kilos of frozen shellfish to be sent on
to
Clarf.
`I'd forgot how much I liked `em,' she
said as they turned back
towards
the Tower. She took a meandering
course, turning the sled just
beyond
the main mining complexes and into the next level of hills.
`You wouldn't know there was a highly
industrialized city just a
hill
away,' Flavia said, as Laria slowed the sled so they could all
enjoy
the panorama.
It was late summer on Aurigae and the
ground vines were beginning
to turn
colour, rivalling what flowering shrubs and plants still
bloomed.
`This is a pretty time of year, too,'
Laria said with a sigh.
She was now accustomed to Clarfs heat but
the crisp air of Iota
Aurigae
IV and the softness of us primary's distant light were subtly
soothing,
relaxing. But then this was home and
all that the term
implied:
familiar, safe, comforting, pleasant.
Even Kincaid seemed
easier
in himself his attitude languid.
Flavia, on the other hand, was
eagerly
absorbing all the views, glancing all around her, or peering
down as
they passed over some particularly lovely setting. Thian had a
droll
smile on his face as he watched the Altairian.
She is lovely, Laria said on a thin line.
No question of that, Thian replied easily
and his smile broadened
a
trifle.
Grandfather?
I'd hate to surrender easily to his
manipulations.
Is that fair on Flavia?
I don't know. She's pretty cool. I
can't get past her public
mind.
Have you tried?
Ethics are involved, Lar.
In love and war, all `s fair, isn't it?
This is neither love nor war sister
dear. Speaking of which, how
come
Kincaid dano got posted to Clarf?
As to that, I couldn't get on with that
wretched Clarissia.
She was even worse than Stierlman and
proved `Diniphobic to the
point
of acute embarrassment for the Tower. I
can't keep breaking up
Yoshuk
and Nesrun They are a pairing, then?
Far's I know.
How's Kincaid working out?
As well as could be expected with someone
as mentally fatigued as
he
is. But he's improving.
Laria had been skimming quite low and had
set the sled's speed at
almost
a walking pace so that Flavia could enjoy the landscape. She
was
ascending a shrub-covered hill when all of a sudden a large flock
of
avians sprang up in front of the sled.
In an effort to avoid
unnecessary
slaughter, Laria hauled the sled sideways but, in doing so,
unbalanced
her passengers so they slid to the portside.
What with the
sled's
slow forward speed and the proximity of the hill, the imbalance
tilted
the sled out of control. The humans
grabbed at the lighter
`Dinis
to keep them from tumbling overboard but they were, in turn,
over-balanced
and fell over the side. Laria caught
Tip's arm, saw that
Kincaid
had fell, and had to leave Thian and Flavia to manage his
`Dinis. They all `ported safely away as the sled ploughed
its nose
into
the hillside.
Setting Tip down on its feet, Laria
regarded the sled, its motor
still
running, with stunned surprise.
`I didn't think I was that out of
practice,' she said, shaking her
head. `After all, I do a great deal of sledding
about on Clarf and
Vanteer
prefers me to drive him.' The motor cut suddenly, with a loud
discharge
from its exhaust tubes which blew back a noxious smell.
`Hoooo,' and Thian waved the reek off
`Everyone's OK?' Laria
asked,
looking about her.
`I must say you lay on unusual
entertainments for guests, Kincaid
said.
Laria flushed. `I probably did overcompensate for the flock but
they
make such a mess if they get sucked into the intake.
Kincaid laughed. `Don't get me wrong, Laria. I'm not objecting.
A relief to know that emergency reflexes
are in working order.'
Thian,
followed by his `Dinis, walked over to the tilted sled, peering
at the
underside.
`How bad's the damage, Thi?' Laria asked,
not quite sure of
Kincaid's
jest.
`You did a lot worse when you were
learning to fly `thian Lyon, I
never
put a single Thian laughed and suddenly the sled backed out of
the
trench it had dug in the shrubs and soil and settled on as even a
keel as
the rough ground permitted. Flavia and
Kincaid joined him so
that
Laria broke out of her outraged pose and sprinted the few metres
to join
them.
`Shouldn't've overbalanced like that,'
Thian said.
`No, this model isn't supposed to, is
it?' Kincaid said
her mother generally kept them in, beside
the tool
and opened the access panel.
`D'you think it'll restart?' Laria asked.
`Probably,' Kincaid said, `but I think
there's something wrong
with
the d lines or there wouldn't have been that backfire.' `I'll
check
the intakes,' Thian said and levered himself down for a good look
at the
hooded opening on the starboard side of the sled.
`Good heavens, Thian, why not just
"look"?' Flavia asked.
`More fun to tinker when I have the
chance,' Thian said, his voice
muffled
by his position. `Yeah, flight pinions
clogging this one.
Check the other, will you?
Laria?
Flavia?' Flavia made a sound of disgust, totally out of
character
to her elegant exterior. She deposited
a bloodied clump
beside
the mess Thian had extracted.
`Couldn't we just `port back to the
Tower?' she asked.
`What?' Laria asked, `and admit that we
came a cropper?' `Any
tools
on board?' Kincaid asked, holding up a very greasy-looking
object.
`I doubt it,' Laria said. `This sled's only used for short hops.
The big sled has a full kit, of course.'
`No-one's using it today,
are
they?' Thian asked.
`I don't think so.' Laria concentrated,
`found' the mass of the
big
sled in its garage, `located' the tool kit, and `ported it to a
spot by
Kincaid's feet.
`Thanks,' he said and, opening the metal
locker, began to search
for the
tool he needed. `No rags?' he asked
querulously.
`Here!' Laria dumped a pile, scavenged
from the bin kit.
Flavia watched another moment and then,
turning, leisurely began
to
venture from the scene of the crash to examine the clumps of little
blooms.
`Any toxic plants I should be aware of?'
she asked Laria.
`None,' Laria replied absently, more
interested in Kincaid, the
mechanic,
for he went about cleaning the component with a competent
air.
Thian cleared all the intake openings.
`That's done, but I don't think that was
the whole problem. Xexo
usually
keeps this serviced,' he said with a frown.
`Xexo usually does but we don't know when
he did it last and
Mother
said Morag's allowed to drive now.
`Hey, that's not fair,' Thian cried with
mock indignation. `We
were at
least fifteen before we were allowed and she's only thirteen!
Laria grinned at her brother. `I suspect they may miss us and
have
had to revise a few directives now they're down on staff Besides,
Morag's
capable.' `I think we have to get to the filel injection and
clear
the line,' Kincaid said.
`That's underneath,' Laria said, pointing
to the bottom of the
sled.
`No problem!' The two men said it
simultaneously, grinned at each
other,
and the sled slowly rose to a suitable height to allow them to
work
easily on its underside.
She could see Flavia off in the distance,
picking wild flowers,
occasionally
holding a bloom up for inspection and smelling it for
scent. Not many had any aroma but none that Laria
could see in the
immediate
area were the stinkweeds which had a reek that could linger
in
nasal passages for days.
`I'll hold the sled up if that'll free
you up to do the
nitty-gritty,'
she offered, leaning comfortably against a boulder.
`Vanteer says that helps him no end.
`Oh, well,' Thian said in reply to her
offer, `if you want to feel
part of
the team She took over the `lift' and the men `removed' the
bolts
holding the panel, slipping it to one side where it hovered as a
receptacle
for the pieces they began to remove to get at the line.
`Can't you just "see" into it,
Thian?' Laria asked.
`You've spent the last couple of weeks
"looking" inside pipes and
conduits,
haven't you?' `Not quite the same thing, Laria,' Thian said
with an
obvious exercise of patience. `This is
hands-on stuff' `Ah!'
Kincaid
had given a moderate tug to a hose and it had not only come
away in
his hand but disintegrated.
`I didn't pull that hard!' he said in
surprise, looking at the
mess
and the fuel that spilled down his hand.
`But that's the faulty part,' Thian
said. `Completely perished.
Where does Xexo keep his spares,
Laria? Can you remember?' `I
couldn't
but Roj would know.
Thian grimaced. `I'd hate to interrupt him .
`Well, it's that or admit to Xexo we
crashed,' Laria said.
`What's wrong with that?' asked Flavia,
returning.
Then she began to laugh. `Xexo's a T-8. You could be in and out
of his
mind before he knew you were there.' Laria and Thian exchanged
thoughtful
looks and then began to grin at each other.
Thian chuckled
and
scratched his cheek with a dirty finger.
`Old habits suffice when
you
least expect them.
`You're not that old, Thian,' Flavia
remarked, thoroughly amused.
Holding the damaged hoseline by each end,
Thian could be seen to
concentrate
on it briefly. Then a second length of
similar but
brand-new
hose appeared.
Laria cheered, then said ruefully, `I
suppose it'll be my job to
tell
Xexo who messed up his inventory.' `Leave him a docket. That
keeps
everything in order.' The sled was quickly repaired. Kincaid
even
straightened the ding in the prow.
`While we're about general
repairs.'
They were all in good spirits on the way back, Laria giving
Thian
the drive since she wanted to name the blooms in Flavia's bouquet
of wild
flowers.
The first week passed very quickly in all
kinds of leisure
pursuits
that the Talented enjoyed as ordinary people.
Laria and
Kincaid
went to the mixed school the younger Lyons attended to speak to
both
human and Mrdini students about working on Clarf Although Kincaid
begged
off Thian and Rojer were also in demand in secondary-level
classes,
describing their adventures with the two squadrons. With his
`Dinis
back, Rojer had no trouble taking part, with discreet evasions.
Afterwards they told the dinner table
that they might have made
the
service seem a bit too adventurous for some of the young people.
`Navy is actively recruiting,' Afra
said. `It's a good career if
they
don't fancy staying on here.
Damia smiled fatuously at her mate,
knowing the experiences with
his own
family which had generated such tolerance.
What he did not ask
his
sons was if they had decided which duty they would take on their
return
to work.
Flavia was included in an evening
appearance when the exploration
of the
Hive ship was discussed with miners and engineers of both
species,
eager to have first-hand information on the matter. They also
wanted
to know if the great new long-cruise Nebula-class ship had been
completed. Thian wasn't sure but said he suspected it
would soon be
launched. Its bulk had been noticeable in the working
orbit it
maintained
about the Phobos Moon Base. No launch
date had been
mentioned
and the disappointment of the men who had supplied the metals
to
build it was palpable.
`Is it because this planet is so new,'
Flavia asked Damia on the
way
back to the Lyon home, `that everyone seems so so relaxed with
their
Talents?' Damia had to think about her answer.
`Well, the Tower
is
perhaps more important to Aurigaeans since it's still mainly a
mining
planet, and so much is imported. Also,
even when I was here by
myself
before my marriage to Afra, I was always accessible.
Our children have grown up with their
children mine always ran
wild on
their ponies - their `Dinis with ours.' She gave a sigh. `I'll
be
sorry to see Aurigae spreading out and losing the closeness we've so
enjoyed!'
`I'm lucky I've had a chance to see it,' Flavia said, her
tone
envious.
Damia laid a light finger on Flavia 5
arm. You would be welcome
here
any time.' `That is very kind of you.' Flavia ducked her head so
that
her expression was obscured.
Don't!
Afra said sternly to his wife.
Really, Afra! As ri I'd ignore protocol with someone we barely
know.
Someone I think you `d like to know
better.
She could hear the teasing in his mental
tone. Kincaid has shown
more
interest in her than Thian.
Kincaid is not interested in women,
Damia. Or hadn't you caught
that?
Damia managed not to gasp in
surprise. She was rarely caught out.
And jaria She tried that the day he
arrived but she likes him very
much. That friendship already means a lot to him.
I must say the choice astonishes me. Surely Dad knew that about
him Or'
course he did, but Kincaid's worth salvaging and jaria `5
so stable that she'd do that and give him
a breathing space.
Kincaid has more need of a real friend
than a lover and she'd have
the
support personality she needs.
She also needs a man of her own. Damia's tone was adamant.
She's only twenty-two, dear heart.
I'd had her and Thian by her age.
She has an entirely different
personality, darling, and Afra's
tone
was teasing again, and your needs do not match. Now our Zara, who
has
also tagged Kincaid quite accurately, says he was in the midst of a
destructive
three sided relationship that added more stress to a
dificult
enough assignment. He can relax at
CThi", and heal - all the
injured
parts. laria has her own soothing
effect on people which is
why
Jeff tried such dificult ones as Stierlman and Clarissia at Clarf
Tried? Damia shot a flash of anger at her father's
manipulative ploys.
Afra laughed. I think your father understands and appreciates
laria
far more than even we do.
That remark both annoyed and mollified
Damia. So how long must
jaria
wait to forfil herself. she asked with
some traces of
indignation.
I have a suspicion that jaria only needs
to look a little closer
to
those she already knows.
Yoshuk?
Vanteer.
Really?
I'm guessing but you'll have noticed how
often his name came up.
Damia thought about that on and off
during the evening. She
hadn't
met the Clarf Tower engineer, although she would have preferred
a
higher Talent than 6 for Laria. But
that hadn't, apparently, all
that
much to do with inheriting the genes that produced T-is in totally
unexpected
families. Like Flavia like the Rowan
and Jeff Raven for
that
matter.
The second week, T-2 Clancy Sparrow,
Lieutenant Senior Grade
Rhodri
Eagles, and his youngest sister, Asia, the recently graduated
honours
engineer, arrived.
None of them had been as far out as Iota
Aurigae, even though they
laughingly
claimed Deneb IV was almost as remote in its quadrant of the
inhabited
galaxy.
Roddie, once the bane of the young Raven-Lyons'
adolescence, had
improved
beyond belief Clancy, having so recently worked with Thian,
Rojer
and Flavia, eased himself into the household and asked permission
to do
some hunting if that was all right.
Instantly he had Morag,
Kaltia
and Ewain begging their parents to be his guide. Permission was
granted
and the three younger Raven-Lyons swept their cousin to the
stables.
Despite all the efforts of Damia, Laria
and Afra to welcome and
reassure
Asia, she was stiff with uncertainty and so afraid to say or
do
something `wrong'.
She didn't even complain when half the
household slithers decided
to
investigate her slender body where she sat, rigid on the stool on
which
she had seated herself eschewing a large number of more
comfortable,
empty chairs.
Petra regarded Asia for a moment and then
briskly walked up to her
and
unwound all the slithers.
`Next time say that you don't like
winding things crawling all
over
you,' Petra said, rather disgusted that anyone would put up with
such
inconvenience. She ignored Asia's deep
crimson blushing and,
cocking
her head, added: `D'you mind cats?' `Oh no,' Asia hastily said.
`That's a relief What about darbuls?'
Asia gulped. `What are
darbuls?'
she asked in such a low, meek voice that Petra gawked at her
for a
moment before summoning one of the canine-like creatures.
`Oh, they're not bad either,' Asia said
hastily, apparently trying
to
redeem herself in Petra's eyes for being so silly about the
slithers.
`I'll tell the coonies they're to watch
out for you, Petra said
with
all the brash authority of a confident six-year-old. As she went
off to
do just that, she said to her parents: Someone here ought to do
something
positive about this Asia girl. She
doesn't know how to
complain
properly. The first Talent I've ever
met with that problem.
Petra's right. That one needs some major sorting out, Zara said
to her
mother, though her mental tone dripped with disgust for such
abject
self-effacement. why on earth didn't
she peel the slithers off
ri
their clinging was so abhorrent to her?
And why didn't we notice her distress
before Petra did?
Damia responded, annoyed with herself
that she had misinterpreted
Asia's
quietness for courtesy.
She's used to being ignored, isn't
she? Zara said after a
moment's
thought.
Being the tenth of a big and noisy family
that could produce
Roddie
would result in that posture, Damia said.
And sighed. None of
you
allowed yourselves to be ignored for any length of time. Asia
might
be soothing company.
Zara gave her mother an odd glance to see
if Damia was teasing, or
serious.
A bit of both, dear.
She's pretty, too, Zara remarked, if you
look at the bones of her,
though
that outfit is not the best style for someone with bones to show
off. ù ù well, that'follow the personality
problem. However, she'd do
a
little something with herself You're right, she is pretty, though I
doubt
she's as delicate as she appears. The
Eagles are a physically
strong
family. Afra, we must do what we can
with this child, Damia
told
her husband. She's got some Talent but
she's even locked that up
as
tight as hot weather seed pod in snow.
Before any of them could step in, Rojer
walked up to Asia, took
her by
the hand and hauled her shrinking self up from the stool.
`I want you to meet my Dinis. I got the new improved models when
I got
home. Since you're here to learn a few
things from Xexo, I'll
just take
you along and do the introductions.
You'll like Xexo,' Rojer
said as
he hauled his reluctant victim beside him.
`C'mon, now, Asia.
I don't want to hear a single moan of
"oh, I can't do this" out of
you,
d'you hear me?' Stay out of this, Zara, Asia's mine! And, as he
left
the room with the girl, he shot a stern warning at his sister over
Asia's
head. And a second one at his
mother. I know you two ladies
too
well! You keep away.
Berated from such an unusual source, Zara
and Damia exchanged
bemused
glances and grinned as they `heard' Rojer telling Asia all
about
the puzzle and how many pieces he had part credit for fitting
together
when all the engineers on Alliance worlds were trying to
reconstruct
the Great Sphere.
`Of course, that was before we all
snitched Refugee out from under
the
Hivers' noses. `Is our Rojer smitten?'
Afra asked quietly of his
womenfolk.
`I'm not quite sure . . .` Damia replied.
`Well on the way to it, if you ask me,
Zara said with a knowing
sniff. `Deciding to protect someone who appears
defenceless can lead
to a
meaningful relationship. Provided, of
course, it doesn't lead to
an
unsuitable over-protectiveness that inhibits the less confident
party.
Damia grinned at her suddenly
authoritative young daughter who was
only
just in control of her own hormones and burgeoning womanliness.
And don't even think like that about me,
Mother, Zara said with
some
asperity. I've learned a great deal, a
very great deal, from
Elizara
and Isthia in the past three years. I'm
qualified on
first-level
psychotherapy and Asia's problem is not that complex.
leave Asia alone. She doesn't need two more mothers!
came Rojer's acid rejoinder.
Do as he says, Afra suggested, casting a
mildly stern glance at
wife
and daughter.
Rhodri had changed into a very elegant
leisure suit, remarking
that
it- was a relief to be out of uniform as he passed his host and
hostess. He took Zara by the arm and insinuated them
both neatly into
the
group comprised of Flavia, Laria, Thian, and Keylarion, the Tower
expediter.
Later it was he who suggested they roll
up the rugs and dance. If
he
danced more with Flavia than the Lyon girls, he also danced three
times
with Damia, two slow dances with Asia, one each with Morag and
Kaltia
and a boisterous polka with Petra, a dance which he insisted was
well
within the scope of the `Dinis and shortly had them cavorting as
wildly
as he and Petra.
And he's Asia's older brother? was Zara's enigmatic comment.
People come in all shapes and forms, Afra
said, even mentally
breathless
from his exertions with Damia as his polka partner. Then he
smiled
broadly at Petra's prim curtsey when Rojer took her hand for a
waltz,
the next dance on the tape of assorted musics.
Was or was not Petra `porting half the
time Rhodri was flinging
her
about? Damia asked, mopping her
perspiring face with one hand
while
she worked a fan with the other.
I doubt it. She's as agile as a slither anyhow. Afra sank to one
of the
chairs pulled to the side of the large room and `ported himself
a long
cool drink of water.
There were all kinds of wines, beers and
assorted spirits set out
on the
refreshment table. While a medium
strong, cold Aurigaean beer
would
have been appropriate, Afra was already charged with the heady
ambience
in which young, high spirits devoted themselves to fine
dancing.
Asia was not allowed to sit by
herself. Either Rojer or Xexo, who
had
suddenly presented himself for the family evening - he was more
often
involved with ailing mechanical objects - sat or danced with her.
Apparently she didn't like the more
exuberant dances and that
preference
was catered to. But, if she sat a dance
out, Rojer, Xexo
and one
of the coonies - to keep the slithers away, so Petra had
informed
him - were with her.
Afra would have been delighted to dance
with her for he, too,
deplored
her lack of self-esteem and confidence.
He also had the
thought
that the rambunctiousness of his family might be too
overpowering
for her, being similar to what she contended with in her
own
home. He would have danced with her, as
he had with Flavia, Damia
and
each of his daughters, but she reacted so negatively to his
approach
that he pretended to be winded and sat down beside her,
emanating
as much reassurance and kindliness as he could without her
awareness. But she was closed down too tightly even for
his gentle
persuasions.
The next morning, he and Damia attended
to their Tower duties,
though
Keylarion moved carefully and admitted to aching muscles from so
much
dancing.
Xexo was all businesslike, announcing
that Rojer and Asia were
with
him, learning more about Tower requirements.
Teleportations and
telepathic
messages were both light so that the Tower could be put `on
call'
and its resident Talents returned to the house to find a sleepy
Clancy
being fed by Morag and her `Dinis.
Roddie had `asked' for a bucket of coffee
which Petra had insisted
she was
able to bring him with her `Dinis carrying cup, sweetener and
milk. Denebians were known to drink quantities of
milk even in their
mature
years.
Clancy, Damia began on a tight line to
the T-2, are you awake
enough
to talk about Asia?
Clancy gave his hostess a quick and not
at all sleepy look before
resuming
that pose. There have been times when
I've suspected that our
Asia
puts on an act . .
That's no act, Clancy No, it's been borne
in on me that it's for
real. And how could I let such a thing happen to
my sweetest cousin?
Clancy sighed, took another sip of coffee
and smiled gratefully at
Morag
who presented him with a cooked breakfast of gargantuan
proportions. It just happened. You know what Roddie `5 like - well,
there
were thirteen others in the house, too, and I suspect Aunt Alicia
was
relieved to have even one who was quiet and content to do things on
her
own, and responsible enough not to need much supervision. Asia's
always
been responsible, and quiet, and self effidng.
It's only after
not
seeing her for a while - and hearing how Roj has been going on
about
`negligence' and `deprivation' - that I realized that she was
deprived
and neglected. Only what's to do
now? She's smart as she can
be, got
enough Talent to get along most places.
She used to repair all
the
machinery at our place as well as Aunt Alicia's. We kids used to
tease
her that she'd rather play with machinery than play with us.
He grimaced.
`Doesn't it taste good, Clancy?' Morag
asked anxiously.
`Breakfast tastes real good, Morag
m'darling. It's my feet are
killing
me from all the dancing last night.' His grin reassured Morag.
`Are you really my cousin?' she demanded,
half of him and half of
her parents.
`Second or third cousin, I believe,'
Clancy said, ploughing his
way
through the eggs, potatoes, beans, grilled tomatoes and flingi on
his
plate.
`And do you really have to report back to
Blundell in just six
more
days?' Clancy, she's thirteen! Damia
said on a tight line as she
recognized
the adolescent symptoms in her daughter.
Don't think I don't regret that,
Damia. You've mothered a brood
of
heartbreakers, so you have, and it's not fair on poor mortals like
us
Denebian backwater boonies.
Backwater? Boonies? Then Damia burst
out laughing, knowing that
Clancy
would handle Morag's crush gently, Don't ever let my father hear
you say
that!
It's your father I learned the words
from, but I'd never have the
gall to
repeat them near your mother!
Roddie appeared next and it was his
intention to swim off the
exertions
of the evening before and that seemed like such a good idea
that
the heated pool was crowded by the time the last Lyon arose.
`Thought you'd like to hear what else
happened,' Roddie said to
Rojer,
Thian and Flavia after brunch when they found themselves more or
less
alone in the lounge area.
`Like what?' Thian asked.
Roddie grinned. `Our queen's hatched up a lot more speciality
creatures
and, while I don't know for sure, I'd say she was assembling
a crew
to help her fly Refugee out of her vile durance.' He paused,
waited
a beat, and then went on. `She's a lot
more active, too, and
sends
the scurriers out on all kinds of errands.
Some of the new
hatchings
are the kind that would go down the conduits and pipe lines I
understand
connect the Refugee. And she's got a
couple of big bruisers
we
couldn't quite figure out a need for.
They're not true males so it
isn't a
mating she's after. She's also started
planting . . . of all
things
- the seeds and pips she's saved from her food. Used her own
dung to
plant `em in. Got herself a trio to
take care of the garden,
too.
`What sort of things is she growing?'
Flavia asked.
`Broad-leaf plants,' said Roddie with a
significant wink and nod.
`That's going to be one disappointed
female,' Thian said with a
thin
smile.
`Counting on hatched eggs isn't wise,'
Rojer said.
`No, no, you mean don't count on eggs
until they're hatched,'
Thian
said.
`Uhuh,' Roddie put in, waggling an index
finger.
`You've both got it wrong. It's putting all your eggs in one
basket.'
`What are you talking about?' Laria asked, joining them.
Each one answered simultaneously. `Eggs!' `Chickens!'
`Expectations!'
Rojer looked about him, concerned.
`Where'd Asia get
to?'
When no-one knew, he went to the kitchen.
`Mother, you seen Asia?' `Xexo has her,'
Damia said and added to
Rojer's
disappearing form, `she is here to learn Tower engineering, you
know.
The last day of their holiday Rojer,
Thian and Flavia were asked
to
attend the Tower for a conference with Earth Prime.
Thian wondered if Rojer felt as odd as he
did, to be sitting on
their own,
on their parents' couches. The
generator silence, too, was
unusual
but then a link between Primes did not require the use of the
gestalt.
That fact gave Thian a certain glow of
satisfaction probably about
to be
blasted by whatever his grandfather had in mind for him.
thian Lyon, Rojer Lyon, Flavia
Bastianmajani, Jeff Raven said,
stating
the official nature of the interview, I know I offered you
choice
in your next assignments but there have been some unusual
developments. I heard that groan, Thian.
Yes, sir, so what's happened? They've cancelled the pursuit, and
Thian
felt a wave of almost prescient dread that that was what Jeff
Raven
would say and he knew that to discontinue the search right now
could
only have serious repercussions in future generations when the
Hive
imperative sent yet more Sphere ships forth from their colonial
fastnesses,
looking for more M-5 worlds to colonize.
The Washington The who? Thian thought he was familiar with the
names
of all the major Alliance ships. Rojer
raised eyebrows and
shoulders,
puzzled, too.
The Washington is the Nebula class
battle-wagon that the Alliance
has
built, mainly from Aungaeon metals, I might add, Jeff replied with
a droll
tone to his voice, and that's not yet to be public knowledge.
As I was saying, The Washington has been
assigned as flagship,
with an
escort of six Galaxy class and four destroyers, all armed with
the new
Hive hull-piercing missiles. There're
two more spheres to be
tracked
down. Jeff paused, allowing his
listeners to absorb that.
Then there's a second expedition, equally
as important to the High
Council,
by the way, as the Washington's mission, to explore and
evaluate
the M-5 class worlds which the Hivers by-passed and any more
that
are identified.
Squadron B's got a five-year mission and
has been assigned an
additional
lightweight destroyer craft. The
Genessee `5 got a new
captain;
there's a completely new complement on the AS KTTS, and
Captain
Brikowski of the Peking, plus whoever's sitting in the
captain's
chairs of the smaller craft.
Wow!
Rojer said.
Sir, I'm ready to go to the Washington,
ri they'll have me, Thian
said
with quiet reserve.
HAVE YOU, Thian lad? You're top of the list. Ashiant's been
bumped
up to command the Washington. Told that
paper asshole of a base
commandant
that Ashiant had asked particularly for you.
He did?
Thian could not restrain his elation and had a foolish
grin of
utter delight on his face.
Captain Spktm also implied that it would not budge the KLTL out
of
orbit
unless you're on the Washington as Prime.
Wow!
Rojer repeated, amusement at his brother's reaction turning
to
respect.
I hope you can think of saying something
more than `wow', Rojer,
when I
inform you that you are also to be part of the Prime team on the
Washington.
Me, sir?
After That's better. Yes, you,
sir. Your conduct
during
the KTTS incident met with approval in many `Dini quarters. And
then
there's the expertise you displayed during the debriefing of
Operation
Illuminate.
After that? Rojer's eyes went so wide that Flavia grinned at his
astonishment.
`I told you you did well and you didn't
believe me.
Quiet, Flavia, I'm getting to your
appointment. Let me add here,
Primes,
that I never expected FT&T would have to supply naval ships
with
personnel. But the distances covered
and the lengths of these
current
voyages as well as the need to maintain close contact require
the services
only Primes can offer the navy.
You will not be under naval authority and
I have specified that a
Prime
on a navy ship has rank equal to the ship's captain.
We do?
Rojer was delighted at that.
`Don't let it go to your head, Roj,' Thian
said aloud.
I won't, but it's nice to know.
They all heard a chuckle from Earth
Prime. I didn't get as much
argument
as I thought I might. AND I expect you
lot to be cognizant of
the
fact that you ARE to conduct yourselves at all times with the same
probity
and discretion a captain uses.
Yes, sir. Even Flavia's reply was suitably ingratiating.
I'm assigning the Pursuit Squadron two
Primes because I am never
going
to leave my people open to the problems that you boys both faced.
Bearing on that problem and preventing
any sort of a repetition, I
want
you to give me the names of support personnel, Talents by
prepreference,
whom you would like to have, either overtly or covertly
on your
staff There is always the possibility that you might have to
mobilize
additional support.
Lieutenant-Commander Semirame Kloo, Thian
said immediately.
Clancy Sparrow, Rojer said at the same
time.
Lieutenant Alison-Anne Greevy from the
Vadim, Thian added.
Good choices, all three. Especially Greevy, Thian, or had you
heard
that she's been taking extracurricular training in `Dini diseases
and
problems and she was to be transfered to the Washington in any
case. The Washington will have a mixed crew.
Thian had had only the briefest note from
Gravy, in which she had
said
she was `OK, and busy. Hoped he was,
both.' He was inordinately
pleased
that she had the initiative to extend her abilities. He'd have
to tell
her that, while he had kept his promise, she'd out manoeuvred
him. He looked forward even more now to being on
the same ship with
her
again.
I may send along some others who would
have various duties but
they
will make themselves known to you.
Thian, as the elder, you are
nominally
in charge but I believe that you two brothers work well
together
anyhow so I anticipate . . . and Jeff
paused just briefly to
emphasize
his point no discord.
Now, Flavia, I would like you to
undertake the Thadership of
Talents
in the Exploration Squadron. I know you
have been in several
Towers
so you might know the specialists you `d like to have with you.
I'll do my best to reassign them to you
for this mission - ri
they're
willing. Tower experience would be
helpful, but Talents in
biology,
engineering and sociological fields would augment the
specialists
already slated to join that expedition.
I'd like Zara, Asia and You'd like Zara
and Asia?
Thian and Rojer managed to suppress their
glee that Flavia had
totally
surprised their grandsire.
Yes, Earth Prime. Zara has first-level therapy qualifications
which
would be invaluable on a long cruise.
She can undertake further
medical
education with whatever medical personnel is aboard. Asia took
honours,
you know, in mechanical engineering, just two points below
Rojer. Travel would be invaluable to personal
development and
selftconfidence. She would be the responsibility of both Zara
and
myself
I would also like Rhodri Eagles whose talents as a liaison
officer
are wasted on a queen who's going nowhere, and Morgelle of
Betelgeuse
because she's got archaeological credits.
I didn't know that, and there was still a
slightly bemused tone to
Jeff
Raven's voice.
That doesn't surprise me, considering her
situation, and Flavia's
tone
was terse.
Your selections are excellent, well
thought out, Flavia, and I
don't
think those appointments will cause much trouble. His mental
tone
held more than a tinge of amusement and satisfaction. The newly
appointed
captain of the Vadim which is Squadron B's flagship, is one
Vestapia
Soligen and, while her crew is as usual mixed, she requested a
female
Prime ri that was possible.
There are also two men of my acquaintance
who would be most
helpful,
a T-3 and a T-6, Flavia said in a bland tone.
But her eyes sparkled at Thian and Rojer
who were grinning broad
encouragement
at her.
Their names?
The T-3 is my brother, Mallen, and the
T-6 is my cousin, Jesper
Ornigo,
who has `Dinis and is keenly interested in alien civilizations,
though
it has been more hobby than practice Understandably ù Both are
Altairians,
and currently in positions which could be filled by anyone
of the
same Talent rating.
Never let it be said, Flavia, that I
stood in the way of someone
else's
nepotism.
I beg your pardon, sir?
`Family joke, Thian and Rojer chorused
while Jeff repeated it
telepathically. That set them all laughing.
There is a serious aspect of this initial
briefing, my young
friends. I have laid down certain conditions on your
assignments that
must be
upheld no matter what the circumstances: your duties are
strictly
outlined in the FT&T Charter and you are definitely aboard as
civilian
specialists and non-combatants.
With the possible exception of launching
the sort of surveillance
probes
Rojer used on Xh-33, you may give no more assistance than that
to any
explorations or contact, no matter what the provocation, up to
and
including the saving of lives. Any
`projects' beyond the ordinary
despatch
of your duties must be discussed with me and I will answer the
commanders
involved.
You may not like it, but you will
preserve your own skins first,
although,
as Thian was once instructed, you will do your best to rescue
whichever
other essential personnel are designated by the captains.
The navy is supposed to be able to fend
for itself.
Flavia, all you Talents are to be
escorted at all times while on a
planetary
suce. Special suiting has been
developed for Talents that
might
reduce the stingg-pzzt of proximity to Hiver artefacts and I hope
the
material proves effective.
A final caution - the launch of the
Washington has already taken
place
and she is well outside our system at this moment.
They were afraid of demonstrations,
sir? Thian asked.
Around the best holograph ever attempted,
and Jeff's voice was
both
amused but with a grim edge. So common
sense prevailed over
ceremony
and, should you hear that the Washington was blown up by
isolationists,
ignore it. You are, however, not to
discuss your
assignments
with anyone, even your parents. Orders
are being cut for
the
additional personnel requested. Rhodri
and Clarence will receive
ordinary
Tower-hour communications as will Zara and Asia. And the
others
will be contacted through proper channels.
You three will
report
for transport to your respective postings at 0800 Aungaeon time
tomorrow. Enjoy your last day dirtside.
Before any of the three could even thank
Jeff Raven, his contact
was
broken.
`That's just like him, too, Thian said
with a grimace of chagrin.
`He plops exactly what you've dreamed of
in your lap and bounces
off
before you can thank him.
`Maybe,' Rojer suggested with unusual
ambivalence, we won't thank
him in
the long run. That damned Operation
Illuminate ought to have
been a
snap and it turned out to be a hang-over from the Spanish
Inquisition.
`The what?' asked Flavia.
`I thought you knew all about saints,
Flavia,' Rojer replied,
grinning. `And I want to thank you for wanting Zara
and Asia along. I
really
didn't fancy them on a pursuit mission - - `I'll work their
butts
off;' Flavia said, being quite serious as she rose from her
couch. Then she grinned.
`I thought it was worth a try, but I
never believed Earth Prime
would
let me have them. And Mallen and Jes.
They're both in such stultifing jobs and
I know they're capable of
much
more. And if that's nepotism, I really
don't care!' She gave her
head a
sharp nod.
`Good on you, Flavia,' Thian said. `And now, let's assume
slightly
lugubrious expressions and try hard to enjoy these last hours
before
the booms of hard work and long separation fall on our innocent
heads.'
Rojer made a derisive noise.
`It is going to be hard work at that,'
Flavia said and started
down
the Tower steps.
The two brothers rolled their eyes at her
pragmatism and, taking
the
steps three at a time, reached the ground level before she did.
Rojer opened the door while Thian in his
easy fashion. `Done your
lesson? Let's all go waved Flavia through it with an
exaggerated
flourish
of hand, arm and leg.
`Great Stars above!' Rojer said, stopping
so short that Flavia
nearly
bumped into him. `Whaddawe tell the
parents?' `What's to tell?
Our leave of absence is over. Grandfather is having us report to
Blundell
Cube at 0800 tomorrow,' Thian said in an airy tone and started
down
the outer Tower steps. `Hi, Asia, has
Xexo let you get your hands
oily
yet?' `Yes, he did,' the slender girl said with an air of startled
delight
on her face. `I greased and lubed one
of the back-up turbines.
Xexo made me do it by myself. Though I had the manual open all
the
time!' `As you should when working with unfamiliar machinery,'
Rojer
said but grinned so proudly down at her that, for once, she
didn't
retreat into her usual shyness. `Which
one? The 8-32-XR? Or
the
184-QJ?' `The QJ,' she said equably.
`It's not that great a model
but
Xexo says it's given very good service with a minimum of trouble.
`That's all to the good when you don't
have easy access to spare
parts.
`You know very well that you'd have to
make spare parts for the
QJ,'
she said, tilting her head up to Rojer with a grin for his forge
fulness.
`And have done, now you mention it.' Asia
cocked her head at him,
a smile
wanting to appear on her lips. `Did you
have good news?'
`Yes,'
and Rojer turned to both Thian and Flavia for support since her
question
took him a bit unawares, `I'd guess you'd say we have.' He
heaved
a resigned sigh.
`But vacation's over.' `Back to Blundell
Cube in the morning,'
Thian
said swim!' If, occasionally, their parents regarded them oddly
as
departure preparations were undertaken, the newly gazetted trio
managed
to keep shields up and excitement down to an acceptable level.
There had been a bit of a flurry from
Damia to know that Asia as
well as
Zara and Clancy were to report to Blundell.
Rhodri was
surprised
but delighted to get orders from his superiors to report to
the
navy base for reassignment.
A last long ride at sunset brought what
Afra jokingly called the
`Raven-Lyon
cavalry' back with appetites capable of dealing with the
masses
of food that had been prepared. Even
Petra was allowed a sip of
the
sparkling wine that was served as a special accompaniment to the
feast. The evening was so convivial that even
Kincaid appeared totally
relaxed
and smiled more often. It was, of
course, possible that Rojer
filled
Asia's glass more often than necessary but she, too, beamed
happily
about and laughed at every joke, even the ones she didn't quite
understand
which Rojer would then explain quietly in her ear.
During the week, her wish to relax the
tight control she held over
her
mind had verified her T-4
status.
Towards the end of the evening, though, as she realized
this
was the last night of such a marvellous holiday, she began to
brood
with such intensity that Rojer very privately told her that the
best
was yet to come and she'd have to be patient until tomorrow.
Between the unaccustomed wine and
reassurance, Asia fell asleep,
leaning
against Rojer's shoulder before anyone, even he, noticed.
I'll take very good care of her for you,
Rojer, Flavia said scope
of the
demonstration had proven the wisdom of when she noticed him
sitting
unnaturally still, so as not to disturb his sleeping companion.
Am I that obvious? Rojer asked.
Well, not obvious to her, at any rate, Flavia
said with a ripple
of
laughter. Right now you're good for her
- - And when she gets more
confidence
and finds' h&sell.
Rojer's tone held a cynical and sceptical
note.
I know it's trite, but she'll only be a
thought away. You
certainly
can reinforce your position. if the
relationship is to grow,
it
will. And I personally think it
will. She's already improved a
hundred
per cent since she came to Aungac.
As far as everyone was concerned, 0800
came earlier than usual to
Iota Aurigae
the next morning, but all the travellers were fed, packed
and
gathered at the personnel carriers minutes before the appointed
time. And the generators were up to maximum.
Dad says he has something special in mind
for you, Thian and
Rojer, Damia
said as her sons and Flavia made themselves comfortable in
the
carrier, the boys' `Dinis secure in their smaller slings.
He loves to have something special for
us, Thian said with a
resigned
groan. if you're born into this family,
you're likely to tour
the
galaxy.
You're only ever a thought away, Afra put
in. Ready?
Steady!
Go! Rojer couldn't resist
saying, and heard his parents'
laugh
as his `go' was perfectly timed with th& `port.
Thian and Rojer were only allowed to help
Flavia out of the
capsule
before Earth Prime announced they were to be sped to the
Washington
where it had already passed out of the Sol system. Jeff
Raven,
bringing them up to date on the so-called Washington riots, said
that
the all the precautions.
There had been numerous attempts to
damage the `hologram' missiles
exploding
on target but doing the massive hull no damage `because of
its
unusual construction and tough design which proved that it was
advanced
enough to go against even a Hive Sphere.
Adherents, trying to protect that launch,
had been as numerous as
the
protesters and nearly as cunning in their attempts to protect the
great
state-of-the-art ship.
We managed quite a show for all when the
Washington was duly
christened
by Gktmglnt and Admiral Mekturian, down to the firing of
thrusters
to disengage from the building gantries and then the inner
rockets
to begin its majestic voyage of pursuit.
Grandfather, I didn't know you were
poetic!
I'm quoting, Thian, replied Jeff.
who staged the effects? Rojer wanted to know.
Everyone got in the act, Jeff said,
slightly smug. Haven't had
that
much fun since your grandmother and I took on the Hiver scouts
over
Deneb more than a quarter of a century ago.
You'll like the Washington. Once you learn your way around her.
Your first task, however, is to get her
the hell out to the poor
destroyer
the Maine who was left behind by C Squadron to keep on the
Hiver's
trail. D Squadron left her behind
because the two Hiver ships
split
up. You'll have to bring the other
ships of Squadron A in one at
a time
over the next twenty four hours. Even
with all the help the
Prime
merge can give you, that's going to be an exhausting task.
Flavia, Zara, Asia and every Prime in the
family is ready to
assist,
so don't hang about. You'll enjoy your
luxury quarters. The
Washington's
quite a beauty.
* * * Grandfather wasn't kidding, was
he? Rojer said to Thian as
they
climbed out of their carrier into a hangar four times the size of
any
other one, - including the commodious one on the Refugee.
`Permission to come aboard, Captain,'
Thian said, nudging Rojer
sharply
with his elbow, because he'd seen who was in the welcoming
committee. Ashiant himself. Brother, are we getting the treatment!
`Permission to come aboard, Captain
Ashiant,' Rojer blurted out.
`Permission granted, Primes, and very
glad to have you two
aboard,'
Ashiant said, stepping forward as Thian and Rojer stood on the
deck. He then helped the `Dinis scramble out. `The rest of your team
is
reported on its way so we can get The Washington and there was great
satisfaction
and pride in Ashiant's voice as he named his new command,
`out to
where she's supposed to be most effective.
GREAT PLEASURE TO SERVE WITH YOU AGAIN,
CAPTAIN SPKTM,' both Rojer
and
Thian said to the large `Dini to whom their friends were making
proper
obeisance.
THIS ONE ASKED FOR YOU, THN, RJR. WITH YOUR HELP WE WILL
OVERCOME,'
Captain Spktm replied, bending its poll eye in a
complimentarily
flattering fashion.
`Prime Thian, you will notice a few
friendly faces have followed
me to
the Washington, but we'll leave that until dinner, when we've
made
the initial push,' Ashiant went on.
He can't wait, can he? Rojer said in private amusement to his
brother.
Nor can we, added Earth Prime. Work now, play later, boys.
Another carrier was deposited in the
cradle beside theirs. Clancy
Sparrow
sprang out, repeating the traditional request to board.
Ashiant welcomed him and Clancy's `Dinis
made their courtesies to
Spktm.
As Captain Ashiant nodded to ratings
standing near by to handle
the
duffies of the new arrivals, he gestured for the Talents to follow
him and
Captain Spktm, Clancy bringing up the rear.
`You'll want to learn the intricacies of
the Washington's many
decks
and facilities, Primes - ` and he gave Thian a long look.
`I was afraid you'd hold that against me
for ever, Captain
Ashiant,'
Thian said with a broad grin.
`Well, it made naval history,' and
Ashiant turned to Rojer. `Has
your
brother ever told you how much protocol he shattered the first
hour he
was aboard my old command?' `Sir, you should have heard what
Dad had
to say about it, and he's not even navy,' Rojer said
mendaciously
but with a broad smile.
`It's good to know you will not try to
outdo him.
`Me, sir, no, sir. That's not what I do best.' `And what do you
do
best, Prime Rojer?' `Classified, sir.' Ashiant regarded Rojer with
the
same cynical look he had once levelled at Thian.
`I see that this trip is going to be
instructive - - - for all of
us,'
and there was warning in that mild remark.
There was only the one short walk to a
turbo-lift and then another
dog-leg
down a carpeted corridor clearly in officer territory before
Ashiant
stopped at a double door, guarded by two marines who
immediately
braced to attention.
`These accommodations were specifically
designed for the use of
Talents,
Primes, so if you'll press the palms and Ashiant nodded to the
security
pad. Thian, Rojer and Clancy laid their
hands on it.
`Sir, you will need access, too,' Thian
said, `she's your ship.'
Ashiant
nodded and placed his palm on the pad as well.
`I appreciate
the
courtesy.
Then Thian pressed once again and the
double doors slid apart.
With considerably more poise than they
were inwardly feeling, the
young
men walked into a large lounge, the captains following.
`This is sinfully luxurious,' Thian said,
glancing around at the
appointments
of the room. Doors, slightly ajar on
either side of the
lounge,
showed sleeping accommodations but there were two doors in
front
of them that were not open, and one set cater-cornered on the
left-hand
side.
Now Ashiant strode across the
lounge. `This, - and he opened it
with a
palm pressed to the door's pad, `is your Washington Tower, if
you
will, and this,' he opened the second room, `a ready room, while
that,'
and now he pointed to the cater-cornered one, `is the access
corridor
to the bridge. So you're right on top
of everything.' `This
is all
much more than we had any right to expect, Captain,' Thian said,
making
a bow of appreciation.
`Earth Prime's orders,' Ashiant replied
with an expressionless
face
which altered to a smiling one. `No
more than you deserve for the
services
you supply an entire fleet. If you'll
assemble the rest of
the
team you have aboard immediately,' and he gestured to the intercom
system
in the Tower room, `we can get going.' `Right, sir,' Thian said.
`Just leave those duffles there, lads,'
Clancy said as the ratings
arrived
with their luggage.
`If you'll proceed to the bridge, sir,'
Thian added, opening that
door,
`we'll organize the advance. Oh, sir,
who's the Washington's
engineering
officer?' Ashiant regarded him with surprise.
`Tikele, of
course.'
He pointed to the screen. `When you've
the chance, check the
roster. I brought as many of my officers with me as
I could.' Captain
Spktm
followed Ashiant, murmuring that it would join its own ship when
the
Primes were free to `port it there.
`Rojer can oblige you right now, sir, as
I imagine you'd prefer to
be on
the KLTL on her jump,' Thian said, giving his first order in his
new
position.
`Sure can, Captain, if you will be good
enough to return to the
hangar
and your carrier,' Rojer said and strode to the Tower room.
Boy, have we landed in gravy, bra?
WHAT?
And Thian `ported in beside Rojer, peering around the
place.
Enough nonsense! said Earth Prime, his tone slightly peevish.
Rojer slid on to the couch beside him,
which happened to have been
made to
his height so he settled comfortably in it.
Clancy and Thian
took
two of the remaining six couches and settled themselves.
As soon as Rojer had `ported the Mrdini
captain to its
Constellation
class ship, Thian took him into the merge, then Clancy,
and
announced the merge's readiness to proceed.
First came Jeff Raven, assuming the focus
position while the Rowan
slipped
in right beside him. Sublimated in her
mind Thian recognized
Flavia,
Zara, Asia, the indistinguishable current complement of both
the
Blundell Cube and Callisto Tower, then the familiar touches of his
parents
arrived, Laria and Kincaid, David of Betelgeuse, the T-2s of
Altair,
Capella and Procyon Primes, his Uncle Jeran and Aunt Cera and
even
the only faintly familiar touch of his Uncle Ezra on Vega and
other
Talents as the teleportation force gathered more strength than it
had
ever before had and launched the immense bulk of the Washington in
a
long-drawn breath to where the tiny mote of the Maine patiently
followed
the strong ion traces of a Hive sphere's course.
Then one by one the other vessels - two
Constellation class, four
of the
Galaxy and four destroyers - were `ported fluently to take their
assigned
positions in the fleet. Despite the
restrictions of the
merge,
Thian activated the forward screens in their Tower room and saw,
no
longer quite a mote, but decidedly small in comparison, the lean
shape
of the Maine. He wondered if her crew
were aware of their mighty
neighbours
but he was too integral to the merge to enquire.
Abruptly, most of the merge, having
acquitted their part of this
gargantuan
transportation, disengaged. Only the
Earth-Callisto element
remained.
Thian, you can tell the Maine now, that
merge said, that they are
relieved
of their duty. The merge was amused.
Captain's name is Bremerton.
Still elated by the contact with so many
energies, Thian had no
trouble
making the contact. Bremerton's mind
was wide open with the
relief
he was experiencing at the arrival of his replacements.
Eleven ships at once? was Bremerton's half-stunned, half-exultant
response. Thian had the distinct impression of sudden
physical
movement
along with peripheral mental jolts of relief and joy. Oh, my
God,
you are. Fleet's here! Look lively. Fleet's here. Open a
channel
to the Washington, Sparks. We're about
to be relieved!
Captain Bremerton, we can `port you back
to base as soon as you're
ready,
Thian said. Though I hate to rush you,
sir' the merge is
on-line
and waiting.
Clancy was nearest those controls so he
cut on the bridge screen.
Despite a crisply neat shipsuit, the
tired face of a relatively
young
captain was visible on the ùWashington's main comscreen, saluting
smartly.
`Clark Bremerton, Captain Ashiant, and my
respects.
ùHis face developed a broad smile
comprised of respect, awe and
amazement. `I'm sending my log over for your records
but I can't say
that
anything unusual has happened, sir. No
deviation is noted in the
ion
trail since the split-up three weeks ago and the Hiver we're
ùfollowing
hasn't altered speed.' `Good work, Captain.
I won't keep
you as
I imagine both you, the crew and the Maine are looking forward
to
home.' ù`Indeed we are, sir,' was the heartfelt response.
ù`Your log's been transferred. On your way, Maine.
Ashiant saluted smartly and it was being
returned by an obviously
grateful
Bremerton when his image on the ùforward screen faded.
`Your turn, Primes,' Ashiant said into
the chair com.
And about time, Thian heard the unmistakable
voice of his
grandmother
Rowan, all this naval pomp and ùcircumstance is
time-consuming.
Thian felt the pressure of the merge in
his mind and the Maine
disappeared. So did the constriction of the merge. Beside him, Rojer
gave an
exaggerated sigh of relief while Clancy stretched until his
sinews
cracked.
`Do we know where we are?' Clancy asked.
`Since I'm the engineer,' Rojer began and
slipped off the couch
and
over to the console. It was so
shiningly new, not so much as a
scratch
on any surface, but it was also familiar and he had their main
screen
showing the vista before them: an expanse of stars of all
variations
in colour and pulsation.
`Far, far away from every star we know
and recognize,' was
Clancy's
thoughtful comment.
All three were startled at a discreet rap
on the door `Come in.'
`Lieutenant
Senior Grade Greevy reporting for duty, Primes, and I've
taken
the liberty of ordering peppers for you.
Alison-Anne was
appropriately
solemn-faced as she advanced with the tray of tall drinks
which
she presented first to Thian, managing a sly wink before she
served
his brother and Clancy.
`Good thinking, Lieutenant, and
congratulations,' Thian said
formally,
then grinned. `Alison's taken courses
in `Dini health-care,
Rojer,
Clancy .
`Yes, while waiting for you to perform
your first duties,' Gravy
said,
still very much in a dignified naval attitude, `I've had the
chance
to meet all your `Dinis.
So has Commander KIoo .
`Rome's here?' Rojer cried and, careful
not to slop the drink from
his
glass, he made his way to the lounge where Semirame Kloo snapped
him a
salute before her face broke into a proud and grateful grin.
`I can't thank you guys enough. Del Falco turned piss ant with a
vengeance
when you skived off' she said, `which made him difficult
enough
until Clancy was yanked off too. When
the Admiral discovered
his
destination, the shit really got recirculated.
I was clenching my
teeth
in expectation of where he'd land next when I got my orders. I
don't
think anyone's ever cleared the navy base as fast as I did. And
to the
Washington, of all assignments! D'you
guys have any idea how
many
people hate my guts now?' `And we don't bloody care,' Clancy said,
swinging
Semirame up and around before he put her down on her feet
again.
Still grinning, she pulled her tunic
straight because she was
wearing
the same formal uniform that the medic was.
`Then you've already been on the
Washington a week?' Thian asked.
When she nodded, still grinning, he asked
who else Ashiant had
brought
of his Vadim officers.
`I haven't met even half my own watch
yet,' Rome said, `but I know
for
sure he brought his engineering officer, Yuri Tikele, Ailsah
Vandermeer
is first officer and Commander Fadh Ah Minas weapons, plus
quite a
few of the Vadim's chief petty officers, too.
`Not his number one? Commander Germys?' Rome grinned. `He got
booted
up to captain on the Genessee.
`Commander Exeter's here in sick bay,'
Alison Greevy said, `and
we've a
Mrdini unit because this is a mixed crew and I'm liaison.' She
added
that with a grin of pride.
I always said you were cleverer than you
knew, Gravy, Thian said.
And you kept your promise.
Only because you added an element that
made it absolutely
possible.
With due ceremony, Rome then handed a
disk to Thian. `I'm told
you're
officially the head of the Talent facility, Prime Thian, and I
personally
received this from Earth Prime Raven with instructions to
give it
into your keeping. It's for you three
only: a listing of all
the
Talents in this fleet. A handful are
known to their superiors as
possessing
"some" Talent but mostly higher than the grade they're
listed
as. Some have come aboard in minor
capacities with T-2 and T-3
qualifications. I respectfully suggest that you either `port them
in this
lounge privately or allow me or Lieutenant Greevy to make
contact.
A code word for all Talents to open their
minds to you has been
set up
throughout the Fleet. That's in the
orders, too, and every one
of us
has been primed to response, though Earth Prime told me that we
don't
know what the word is.
`On an open frequency, the code word,
"Saki", will alert us to be
on
guard, for you and whoever else is named after that code.' `Now,'
and
Alison took a step forward, `pepper not withstanding, Misters
Prime,
or is that Prime Misters, or what?' `I'm not a Prime, Clancy
said
with a grin.
`In here, we're informal, but if you've
got to use titles,
Prime'll
do,' Thian said.
Alison cocked her head slightly. `I heard - scuttlebutt, mind you
- that
you got captain's rank.' `I,' Thian responded with a broad
smirk,
`was told that, humble civilian though all Talents are, T-is are
considered
as holding a rank similar to that of a ship's captain.' `But
that
doesn't mean we're captains,' Rojer said, finishing the
explanation.
`So a T-2 like me would be equal to a
lieutenant commander?'
Clancy
asked.
Thian shrugged. `Why not?' `You did well - Clarence,' Semirame
Kloo
said, arching her eyebrows.
`I've got the Talent, kid.' `What I
started to say,' Alison began
in a
stern tone, `is that peppers notwithstanding, you Primes have a
captains'
dinner tonight, and that's captains plural plus all first
officers,
so that's a mess of people. So you
Primes get some rest.
That was a big push you just made. Even Rome and I felt it,
didn't
we?' She looked towards the shorter commander for verification
and got
an answering grin.
`We're fine,' Rojer said negligently.
`That's because you've never been to a
captain's captains' dinner,
coz,'
said Clancy and glanced around at the half-open doors. `Which is
mine?'
Rome shrugged. `Whichever - since
you're informal here.'
`Haven't
you - - -` and Clancy stopped, gesturing vaguely at the room
doors.
She shook her head. `I'm quartered near by but Alison's down in
sick-bay. Now, you guys sack out!
C'mon or they'll never stop talking.'
Gravy managed one more sly
wink at
Thian as the door slid shut behind her.
`Eeney, meeney, miney mo!' and Rojer's
finger ended up pointing at
the
middle door on the portside of the lounge.
Thian grabbed his duffle and made for the
top room on the other
side as
Clancy made for the nearest starboard one.
Thian noted with approval that this was a
proper bedroom, though
there
were storage units under the double bed, and wardrobes, as well
as
private shower and toilet. He didn't
feel fatigued at all until he
had
dutifully lain down. Almost as if
there'd been a subliminal
command,
he fell instantly and deeply asleep.
The captain's captains' dinner was every
bit as formal as Thian,
Rojer
and Clancy dreaded. Captain Ashiant made
good use of their
fluency
and acquaintanceship with Mrdinis and each had a `Dini on
either
side.
Opposite them were humans and it was
permissible to talk across
the
table from time to time.
Captain Ashiant sat at the head of the
table, with Spktm, now
Captain
of `Dini Constellation LSTS, on his right and Thian on Spktm's
right
with the `Dini first officer, Mgl, from the Galaxy KLTL as his
other
partner.
Rojer was across from his brother with
the `Dini Galaxy class
Commander
Ktpl of the KLTS on one side and AS LSTS's first officer,
Tipi,
on the other. All four -`Dinis were
quite conversable so there
was no
problem for the brothers. They both
`pathed messages of
encouragement
to Clancy who was seated at the bottom of the table
between
the `Dini destroyer captain and a Galaxy class number one. But
Clancy
was also seated across from one of the three women, a very
attractive
commander. The captain of the destroyer
Athene was seated
beyond
Rojer and the third woman, another first officer, was beyond
Thian
by two places. Clancy quipped back that
he was better off than
they.
The food was good and each species
treated to specialities
designed
to satify different palates. The wines
were excellent and
Spktm
obviously relished the yellow beverage it was served, though the
first
officer, Tipi, drank only water.
The dinner went on and on, with numerous
courses, and much
conversational
time between each. Then Thian began to
appreciate the
ulterior
motive of such a lengthy and seemingly formal affair. By the
end of
it, every one of the top ranking officers had had a chance to
assess
each other, and the Primes, either by direct conversation or by
observation.
When the final course of savouries had
been finished, and
after-dinner
beverages had been replenished, the stewards withdrew, the
double
doors swooshing shut and Captain Ashiant rose.
`Captains, Primes and commanders, while
we are still far enough
away
from the Hiver's objective, wherever that may be,' Ashiant began
and
received a few chuckles, `I suggest that you take advantage of the
lull to
inspect the new facilities aboard the Washington personally. I
know
that the two Constellation class ships have had the new weapons
systems
installed and so has the Solidarity but we must all be aware of
how
these missiles can be effectively used.
if we need to employ
them.'
WHY HAVE THEM IF NOT TO USE THEM?' Ktpl asked bluntly.
Ashiant levelled a glance at Ktpl. `OUR ORDERS ARE WRITTEN SO
THERE
IS ONLY ONE MEANING, CAPTAIN KTPL.' He glanced around to be sure
that
all the humans had understood his `Dini reply.
While Thian noted
that
Ashiant's command of the `Dini language had improved in accent and
fluency,
he wasn't surprised when the captain continued in slow and
well
enunciated Basic. `The Alliance High
Council has spoken in these
orders
and guides us all in the performance of the objectives of this
mission. We have the greatest fleet ever to set out
across this
galaxy. We will accomplish its aim: to be sure the
remaining Hive
spheres
do not destroy life-forms, do not begin two new colonies. When
that is
done, as you all know, this fleet is to separate and
investigate
other G-type star systems with M-5 planets that have been
by-passed. And establish their condition. Five years have been
allotted
to these tasks. Let us drink to
success, captains, Primes and
commanders.'
Solemnly all rose and the toast was repeated by human and
`Dini
alike.
Thian rather hoped that this ended the
evening but the diners left
the
long table and congregated in smaller groups: some officers
renewing
acquaintances while others solemnly discussed details.
`Don't turn,' said a low voice behind him
and, recognizing
Ashiant's
tone, Thian complied. `Would you be
good enough to `port me
to your
quarters for breakfast tomorrow morning, Thian? Raven said
you'd
know me well enough to find me wherever I am on a ship, even the
size of
this one.' Thian bent his head, appearing to smooth down his
hair as
he murmured his reply. `I can if you
really require such
security,
sir.' `This once, I do.' Ashiant immediately drifted away,
raising
his voice to address Captain Cheseman of the Solidarity.
Thian was still puzzling over that
request when Clancy wandered up
to him
to say that they could politely leave any time now that two of
the
captains had bid Ashiant a polite farewell.
Thian `told' Clancy about Ashiant's
request. `Why should a
captain,
a fleet admiral, have to resort to such tactics, Clancy?'
Thian
asked, uneasy about subwrfiige.
`Doubtless he'll tell us tomorrow morning
at breakfast,' Clancy
said,
not at all perturbed. `And that's going
to come soon enough,' he
added,
glancing at the digital which flashed 0235 at them. `At 0645.
`I'll just secure this door,' Rojer said,
waving his hand across
the
inner door pad. `I never knew a dinner
could last this long and
everyone
- well, neady everyone still be stone cold sober.' Having set
his
internal alarm, Thian was awake at precisely 0630, showered and
dressed
by 0642. He found Clancy in the lounge
ahead of him with a
table
for four loaded with covered dishes.
`Thanks!' `Know my way about a ship's
galley better'n you would.'
`Nonsense,
- said Rojer, yawning as he joined them, his short hair
still
wet and soaking the neck of his fresh shipsuit. `You took a good
few
peeks into those stewards' minds last night so you'd know the exact
layout
and when not to freak `em out of their minds, porting stuff up
here.
Clancy dismissed that accusation with a
wave of his hand. `Thian,
time!'
Clancy said as the digital went from 0644 to 0645.
Thian easily located Captain
Ashiant,whose quarters were on the
same
deck and not far away, but the man had had no warning to set down
the cup
he'd been drinking from when Thian transported him. He glanced
quickly
to be sure the liquid hadn't spilled from the cup and seemed
mildly
astonished that it showed no ripple of its recent
transplantation.
`Damned smooth, Thian lad, damned
smooth,' he said and then
gestured
for Clancy to stand down from attention.
`In these quarters,
Sparrow,
Talents don't stand on ceremony.
`Thank you, sir,' Clancy said with one of
his irrepressible grins,
`have
some more breakfast, Captain?' Simultaneously, a chair was pulled
back
from the table and covers whisked off the hot food they had
concealed.
`Humph,' Ashiant remarked with a wry
smile for each of the young
men,
`breakfast in here could get to be a pleasant habit.' `Any time,
sir,'
Thian and Rojer chorused.
Ashiant laughed. `I doubt you mean that, lads, so I'll give
advance
notice.
They were all seated when Ashiant handed
Thian a slender disk four
centimetres
square.
`From Jeff Raven. It's his authorization for you lads to keep
your
minds' ears on general - and I do mean, general - morale.' Trying
to hide
his distaste for that aspect of a Talent's ability, Thian
carefully
placed the square in his breast pocket.
`You don't like it, lad, and Ashiant
included Rojer and Clancy in
his
quick glance round the table, `and I don't like to have to ask you
to do
it, but you know the trouble we had with the Washington launch.
If it hadn't been a hologram, some of
those missiles would have
inflicted
sufficient damage to keep her from being launched.' Thian
hadn't
known that but Clancy nodded complete understanding.
`There are dissidents aboard then?' Thian
asked, beginning to
appreciate
the need for Talented surveillance.
Ashiant gave him a sardonic grin. `We know who most of them are.
It's the ones we didn't or couldn't
identi - the sleepers - and we
have to
assume that there are some. You
wouldn't have had any reason
to know
that the subversive elements have tried to sabotage the
Washington
from the moment her keel plate was laid - as much as you can
lay
anything in space. She was built in
sections, you know, as if she
were
four smaller ships of a revolutionary new design.' Ashiant
grinned.
`By the time we had those sections
connected, we could then mount
the
sort of security so that her outfitting could be completed without
too
much risk of implanted remotes.
`Now, I'm not asking you lads to
"spy" in the old-fashioned
melodramatic
way. I'm certainly not asking you to
delve into anyone 5
private mind - unless you have bloody
good reason to do so or my
specific
orders for such an action,' and Ashiant swung a thick
forefinger
to include all three, `but I am asking you to liaise with
all the
Talents available on all human ships and have them keep on the
alert
for any anomalies, strange behaviours, oddities and report them
to
you. If your `Dinis can legitimately
mix with the crews of the five
`Dini
ships, that would help, too.
`You're expecting trouble from our
Allies?' Thian asked, since the
`Dinis
were the last ones he'd expect to sabotage the expedition.
Ashiant nodded once, not looking at
Rojer. `We don't want a
repetition
of the Xh-33 either, Prime.' `No, sir, Captain Ashiant,'
Rojer
said with more vehemence than he intended, `we don't!' `I don't
expect
any problems immediately. This is
likely to be a long, long
journey. That's why I felt that now was the most
appropriate time for
me to
make you aware of this aspect of your duties.
Even in this, you
are
non-combatants and, as your boss'll tell you, it is compatible, in
this
instance, with Talent ethics. I'll have
more of that toast, if
you
please, Sparrow.' As he buttered it, he added, `The more often
you're
seen beginning today - in all parts of the Washington, and on
the
other ships, either singly or as a group, the sooner that sort of
habit
will become so established no-one will find it odd. Rojer,
you'll
find immense puzzles on one ùor another cargo deck on the six
human
ships. We're having intership contests
of all sorts, including
VR
endurance rides,' and he grinned briefly at their surprise.
`The other excuse Jeff Raven concocted
was that every ùcrewman or
woman
has the right to send a private message home.' When Rojer rolled
his
eyes, Ashiant chuckled. `I know we've
six thousand crew on the
Washington
alone but there're a lot of families aboard so that
drastically
cuts the number who might use the ùprivilege.
Nevertheless
some'll
be too shy to deliver them here,' and he jerked his head
towards
the doors, `but that'll be one excuse for you to circulate
frequently.'
He glanced up at the digital. `Any
questions?
I've to be back in my quarters, finishing
my breakfast, by 0710.'
`Yes,
Captain,' Thian said, `who are the priority personnel we must
rescue
in the unlikely event of an emergency?' `Me,' Ashiapt said with
an
amused snort. `Contrary ùto naval
history, the captains of every
vessel,
especially and including the `Dinis, plus as many first
officers
as possible, any Talents 5 and above, your `Dinis, Commander
Tikele
and Commander Yngocelen ù`Where's he?' Rojer interrupted,
remembering
Yngie with affection.
`On the Genessee and he'll be delighted
to see you, Lyon. So, as
one of
your first duties, figure out which each of you'll be
responsible
for. As you know, the Washington
carries six scouts `But
there're
only three of us,' Rojer said in some consternation.
`There are also three other T-2s whom
you've yet to meet, Primes,
so
count them in your calculations.
Scouts can accommodate fifteen easily,
twenty cramped.
Most of the Washington pods are built for
fifty persons each: for
one
hundred on the family decks.
Constellation pods thirty `We'll take
care of
the disposition, sir,' Thian said, noting the time on the
digital.
`We'll have the usual drills,' Ashiant
said, rising then.
`You can practise then.' He nodded to
Thian.
`Sir?' and Rojer solemnly handed him the
cup he had come with.
`Good lad!' Cup in hand, a friendly and
amused grin on his face,
Ashiant
was `ported back to his own quarters.
`Talk about security ù ù -, Clancy said,
dramatically wiping his
face
with his napkin.
`Actually, it's a sound idea,' Rojer
replied.
The door chime sounded, almost
imperiously.
`Whoops,' Clancy said and hastened to
disable the inside lock,
allowing
the door to slide open to admit a puzzled Semirame KIoo. She
regarded
her palm.
`I thought I was keyed in to that pad.
`Rojer, I told you we didn't need to
enable an inner lock on the
Washington,'
Thian said with a hint of pique in his voice.
`Sorry about that, Rome. Coffee?' the culprit asked, holding up
the
thermal pot.
Thus began the first of many long days on
the way to their distant
and
unknown goals.
Flavia, with her team - Asia, Zara,
Mallen and Jes arrived at
Clarf
Tower for a conference with Kincaid.
Flavia had checked with Laria whether or
not Kincaid (1) would
object
or (2) could expand on his initial report.
He certainly doesn't object, Flavia, was
Laria's reply, and I
don't
know whether he doesn't want to expand on the reports or it's the
time
when he wrote those reports that bothers him.
We don't have to No, and Laria's negative
came out as a slow
mental
drawl, I think it might do him the world of good to have to
speak
of those days. He's much easier in
himself now, you know.
That's good to hear. He's a very likeable person.
I know.
Laria's brief comment had echoes that set Flavia
wondering
about Laria's feelings about Kincaid.
I caught that, Flavia Bastianmajani, and
I'm his friend. I really
like
him.
He's lucky then.
I'm the one who's lucky. I'll catch you tomorrow then at 1400
your
time. That `11 put you here in the
cool, cool dawn of Clas
autumnal
day.
Laria's facetiousness made Flavia even
more thoughtful but that
exchange
she could keep to herself and did.
Zara's enthusiasm for practising her
qualifications could well
extend
to her oldest sister and that, in Flavia's mind, would be
totally
improper. Flavia's opinion of Laria was
quite high and,
whatever
her relationship was with Kincaid, it was a very private
matter. As all such matters should be.
* * * `This is cool?' Flavia asked
Lionasha, her forehead beaded
with
sweat from the short walk up to Clarf Tower in the crepuscular
dawn
light. Behind her, Zara, Asia, Jes and
Mallen were also finding
the
closeness of the sultry air uncomfortable.
`Yes, rather,' Lionasha said with the
cheerfulness of someone
thoroughly
accustomed to the vagaries of the local climate. `When are
you
joining your expedition?' `More or less as soon as we've had a
chance
to confirm details with Kincaid.' Lionasha nodded. `He really
enjoyed
himself at Aurigae,' the tawny woman said.
`We all had a great time,' Zara said,
ending in a sigh.
`It'll be months, years maybe, before
we'll get back.' `Homesick
already?'
Mallen Bastianmajani asked in a teasing `elder brother' tone.
`I've never been homesick in my life,'
Zara replied smartly, `but
I miss
the things I can do there that you don't have anywhere else in
the
Alliance.' `That's part of homesickness,' Mallen said, shooting a
glance
at his older sister to see if he was laying it on a bit thick.
He enjoyed teasing Zara Raven-Lyon: she
gave back as good as she
got.
Jesper's long legs carried him to the
door into the Tower first
and it
opened for him, a whoosh of cooler air warring out.
`Oh, my word! What a relief!' `For now!' Lionasha said with a
meflil
smile, `but we have to turn the temperature up in here if
anyone's
going outside or they'd have a relapse.
`Hmmm, yes, or heat stroke - Laria, with
Kincaid at her heels,
came
down from the Tower room and there were wide and happy grins,
renewing
the acquaintances established on Aurigae while Flavia
introduced
Mallen and Jesper.
`This way,' Laria said, taking charge
and, with a nod for Lionasha
to
assume the Tower watch, led her guests into the living quarters.
Refreshments awaited them there and the
`Dinis served them cooling
drinks
and finger foods before they settled into the comfortable chairs
and
couches.
`I don't know if you're aware that this
scientifically based
expedition
does not have full support of the Council,' Flavia said.
`That may be luckier than you know, Laria
replied.
`There is great curiosity here on Clarf,
especially if some of the
planets
can be cleared for our colonization.' She grinned. `Any
disruptive
problems?' `Not for us,' Zara said crisply and wrinkling her
nose
with disgust. `But some crew members
got mauled when the list of
ships
in Squadron B was posted' Asia sort of squinched herself down in
the
couch corner she had chosen and stopped eating her snack.
`So we began our duties,' Flavia said
with a rueful grin, `by
`porting
sailors out ofbrawls and safely aboard.' `Their families had
to be
sent to protected enclaves, Asia added.
As that was the first information Asia
had ever volunteered in her
presence,
Laria paid close attention and sent a strong reassurance to
the
girl. Though Zara was younger by
several years, Asia `seemed' the
junior.
`Rather silly, isn't it, though?' Laria
said. `As if the families
had
anything to do with the orders. And why
the fuss over Squadron B's
goals? It's scientific, not combative.' `Well,
there had been quite an
organization
formed,' Mallen began, `to prevent the Washington from
being
formally launched. So there was a lot
of undissipated anger and
resentment
which was then turned on perfectly innocent targets: the
nearest
being crews of the second squadron. The
dissenters got bilked
out of
blowing up the Washington,' Mallen said with a grimace for such
folly.
`And even that was only a hologram,' Zara
added.
`Biggest one ever attempted.' `So's the
Washington. Ship, that
is,'
said Mallen who'd been impressed by the cover operation as well as
the
immensity of the newest Fleet addition.
`So, what can I do to help your. . . ah.
. .scientific venture?'
Kincaid
said with a wry smile, looking from one expedition member to
the
next, his glance sliding quickly away from the shy Asia. `I'd've
thought
the probe files would be sufficient.' `They show what you saw,
Kincaid,'
Flavia said slowly. `But everything we
see we interpret from
our own
experience. As you're telempathic, did
you have further
reactions
that wouldn't have been taped?' Kincaid regarded her for a
moment
with a very blank expression, but then tension left his long
frame
and he smiled rueftilly.
`There isn't any empathy possible between
humans and the Hivers,
and
little between humans and `Dinis, no matter how close we are to our
`Dini
friends.' His Nil and Plus were busy talking to the visiting
`Dinis,
their low voices an almost melodic descant to the human
conversations.
Zara smiled at him. `Tell us what we don't know, Kincaid.'
`Zara!'
Flavia called her to order. `What were
your impressions, your
reactions
to what you saw, particularly on the deserted planets.
`I deplored the waste of valuable
colonial property,' Kincaid
said,
slightly flippant. Then leaned forward.
`The first one `Marengo `Is that what
they ended up naming it?
Ah, well, it had once been reasonably
successful. Agriculture not
quite
as extensive as I understand it was on Xh-33, and I think I was
surprised
that there wasn't more He paused and regarded Flavia. `Is
this
what you mean?' `Yes, yes, exactly.' `Why?' `I don't know,' she
answered
honestly. `It just seems sensible to
gather as much
information
as possible from available sources.
`You're it,' Zara said, grinning.
`I wasn't the only Talent in the merge
that searched,' Kincaid
said in
a voice gone suddenly harsh.
`But you're down as the only T-2 and the
merge focus ù ù Zara
began. `Surely `I can only give you my
impressions,' Kincaid
interrupted
her.
Leave it, Zara, Laria said on a tight
line to her sister as she
spoke
aloud. `Even those would give some
insights . . . For instance,
you've
never mentioned any any detritus in the buildings you scanned.'
`Detritus?'
Kincaid gave a snort. `You mean bodies?
Not on Marengo. Too old.' `That's another fact I needed to know,'
Flavia
said, grinning with relief `So many people assume - and that's a
major
problem with the dissenters who are sure our interference" is
going
to make them the next victims - that ALL Hive colonies have been
successful,
ipso facto.' `We have to find out why those that failed,
failed,'
Zara said. `And why Hive Central didn't
know? Or didn't
care? Or what?
I mean, you said the second one looked-' `Waterloo `
Flavia
supplied.
`Thanks, the Waterloo planet looked as if
it had started out OK
and was
then abandoned. So what happened?'
Kincaid frowned slightly.
`Yes, I wondered about that one since the
Hive colony ship was
still
in orbit. Even with the plastic probes,
I approached both ship
and
planet very carefully. Spatially, the
Waterloo system wasn't far
from
Marengo. Had the Marengo group merely
switched to the Waterloo
planet?'
`We don't have all that much substantiating detail,' Mallen
said,
`but the `Dini do maintain that the Hivers haven't changed their
modus
operandi in centuries.
Comparing the installations on Xh-33 with
those on Marengo and
Waterloo
show that they use the same general structures and
agricultural
schemes - at least on those three planets.' `And on the
other
two I probed,' Kincaid said, relaxed enough now to lean forward,
elbows
on his knees, hands clasped together.
`They pick sites well
inland,
as if they don't like, or maybe are even afraid of large bodies
of
water.
`They irrigate fields ù Zara put in.
`I want to see what sort of hydra pumping
units they have ` Asia
put
in. `Did you see any?' Kincaid smiled
at her. `Asia, I wouldn't
know a
pump unless it had a big sign written all over it - Pump!
But where agricultural activity had been
started, there were
irrigation
ditches which I can recognize. On the
ecologically poor
planet,
the third one, Talavera, these were just straight gutters of
some
material, fiall of leaves or dirt and sand.
Very sad to see.
Very desolate.' `But nothing to show why
the planet was
ecologically
slain?' Kincaid shook his head. `If the
Hivers fiamigate
every
planet they want to colonize, they may not restore the necessary
ecological
balance. If it can be saved, it'd be a
lovely place,' and
his
face took on a wistful expression.
`We'll damn well try!' Zara said and made
a face at him when she
saw
Jesper regarding her with a slightly supercilious expression. `You
just
wait and see.' `Are you going there first?' Kincaid asked with a
hint of
eagerness in his voice.
`That's the plan,' Flavia said.
He leaned forward more urgently. `But that system's very close to
the one
the Hivers are active on.' `Don't worry, Kincaid,' Flavia
replied
with a confident smile, sending him a mental reassurance as
well.
With an impatient gesture, he waved that
off `That planet's
dangerous. They've a ship. And you'd be in range of their scouts.
`Squadron B's armed with the new
missiles, Kincaid,' Mallen said,
though
he did not dismiss Kincaid's obvious alarm.
`And the complement
includes
one of the fast `Dini destroyers.
`What bothered you so about that planet,
Kincaid?' Laria asked in
a
conversational tone.
He glanced over at her, took a long
breath and expelled it.
Flavia was empathic enough to pick up his
rising anxiety, and to
know
that Laria was deffly calming him and carefully shielding his
reaction. A quick touch at Zara and Flavia realized
that the highly
empathic
young therapist had been diverted. Zara
would mean no harm,
but
Kincaid had not completely recovered from whatever had depleted
both
mental and physical resources.
`The frantic activity, the almost
desperate urgency with which the
Hive
creatures pursued what, for any other culture, would be done with
. . .
energy . . . but not such frenetic
turmoil.' `Was it the spring
of the
planet's year?' Jes asked.
`No.
I would have understood that!' Kincaid shook his head and
began
twisting his hands together.
`I know what bothered you,' Zara
exclaimed, bouncing on her chair.
`The stingg-pzzt!' `The what?' Kincaid
stared at her and then,
almost
accusingly, at Laria when she began to laugh.
`No-one would have known to tell you,
dear friend, Laria said,
briefly
laying her hand on his shoulder, `but all Talents get a curious
reaction
from proximity to Hivers and especially Hive metals and
artefacts. We named it "stingg-pzzt" because
that's the way it echoes
in our
heads. It leaves a nasty, an
unmistakably metallic taste in the
back of
the throat and tends to make Talents very irritable!' To
everyone's
surprise, Laria then tousled his hair, laughing with relief
`Going
through all those Hive buildings and ending up on an active Hive
world,
you had a massive overdose of it.
`Stingg-pzzt?' Apparently
oblivious
to the hairmussing, Kincaid repeated the term in a witless
fashion,
obviously trying to relate it to his experiences. `The taste
I had
ruined anything I ate, which was bad enough to start with . . .
and I was certainly - irritable - - -`
`And a good bit beyond mere
"irritable",
I'd say,' Laria remarked. `What a
stupid I've been not to
have
seen what's been bothering you. You
must have thought you were
going
mad with the reactions.' `Yes,' and both Kincaid's expression and
his
tone echoed his amazement, `yes, I did think I was going insane.'
He
looked at the other Talents. `And
you've all experienced the same
reactions?'
`Not me,' said Jes and Mallen shook his head, but both Zara
and
Asia emphatically reassured him.
`We summered on Deneb, you know,' Zara
said, `and even if our
parents
and aunts and uncles and cousins had already found most of the
Hive
metals from the original two scout ships that got strewn -over the
planet,
we'd occasionally smell out a piece or two.
Kincaid turned to Flavia. `But you were at the base going through
the
Refugee - -` `Not inside it, Kincaid,' she said, smiling. `We've
been
supplied with some protective clothing that's supposed to reduce
the
stingg-pzzt effect on Talents. We'll
tell you how well it works.'
`I
could just kick myself,' Laria was saying, wallowing in remorse
about
such an oversight on her part. `Small
wonder you had such a
miserable
time of it, Kincaid.' Don't overdo it, sis, Zara said on a
thin
line to her older sister. But it's sure
taking the angst out of
him. A deep one is your Kincaid.
He's not my Kincaid, Zara, and never
likely to be.
More's the pity, sis. He's got a real nice aura. But Vanteer,
for all
he's a rover, is more your style.
Vanteer?
Zara Raven-Lyon, you stop therapizing me, right this
instant! D'you understand me?
Before Zara realized how angry she had
made her sister, she found
herself
out in the dawn heat by the multiple carrier.
I can take a hint, she said
apologetically. Laria? I'm sorry.
Really I am. And I'm going to be gone for ages.
&ad, was the unequivocal reply. Oh, all right. Iforgive you but
don't
try that sort of stunt around me again.
Understand?
Yes.
You don't do meekness well. The others are coming.
The complex doors slid apart and the rest
of Zara's team moved
quickly
through the warming air to the capsule, eager to be away before
Clarf's
sun rose to give them a more intense sample of its power.
Zara's natural buoyancy sustained her
during the awkward moment
when
the others joined her inside the capsule.
Good luck - all of you! Keep in touch! said Laria.
Granddad says I'm to put you aboard the
Columbia.
Thanks, Zara, Kincaid added.
Then the capsule was `ported to join the
Second Expeditionary
Force
and Squadron B which hurtled on its way to Talavera, third planet
of the
Tau Ceti VI system.
When the generators wound down from
thrusting the large carrier to
the
point where David of Betelgeuse and his son, Perry, could `port it
the
rest of the way, Kincaid sat up and slid his feet to the floor.
Keenly aware that Zara's revelation about
the stingg-pzzt had been
a
breakthrough point for her Tower partner, Laria pushed herself
upright
and faced him.
`There should have been some sort of
announcement about such a
reaction
to Hiver stuff, shouldn't there, Laria?' he asked in a
reasonable
tone of voice.
Behind that, Laria could almost hear his mind shouting with relief
a
boiling anger that he hadn't been briefed on that one very important
detail
and a roiling of other ancillary regrets and recriminations he
might
never vocalize.
`The stingg-pzzt Mild words to describe
the effect the damned
stuff
has on the unsuspecting! His mental
tone was savage.
Shut up and listen, `Kincaid,' and Laria
ended up speaking aloud
in the
tone of a teacher whose pupil continually interrupts. Kincaid
gritted
his teeth and glared at her. ` has been
until very recently
limited
to Deneb which is the only human planet to have received Hiver
attentions. Probably the only one that ever fought back
successfully.
True, all the Primes involved were aware
of it when my
grandparents
focused the two merges that destroyed the Hive ship.
But over the ensuing decades, no-one has,
thankfully, had much
contact
with Hivers.
`You,' and she pointed her finger at him,
`were by way of being an
experiment
in FT&T communication possibilities when your squadron was
diverted
to follow one of the outbound spheres.
It wasn't anticipated
that
you would be asked to probe Hiver-occupied planets and the Fleet
still
doesn't half-believe stingg-pzzt is valid.
Then there was so
much
going on what with the Great Sphere being found, then the queen
pod -
when, it is true . . .` She held up her
hand when he had a
cogent
interruption to make. ` more people
became aware of this
reaction
but not anyone directly in touch with Squadron C. Granted?' He
nodded,
his anger slowly subsiding, but not, Laria noticed, some of his
other
conflised and roiling emotions. `Then
the Xh-33
happened and the focus was off Squadron C
until Earth Prime
reassigned
you here.
`When you arrived, you were in no condition for any debriefing, so
it
never occurred to me you didn't know, hadn't taken into
consideration,
the good al' stingg-pzzt that gives every Talent the
willies.'
`I thought I was going crazy as well as everything else,' he
said,
holding their eye contact.
`I'm not just your Tower chirr,
Kincaid. I'm your friend. So are
Lionasha
and Vanteer because we're already a team.
Much more so than
we were
with those two misfits my grandfather thought I'd be able to
work
with.' Laria give an indignant hufE `I'm not a misfit?' Kincaid
asked
drolly.
`You can be as gay as Dick's hat-band in
your private life, but
you fit
so much better with me, Lio and Van that we've done everything
we can
to ease you in `Even to taking me to Aurigae?' Laria caught the
thread
of indignant suspicion and made a face at him.
`You needed a change and were well enough
to enjoy a vacation. It
was
Granddad's idea, not mine. And he was
trying not to be too obvious
with
his matchmaking.' Kincaid sat straight up in protest. `He knows
I'm
homo?' Laria laughed. `Sure he
does. We all do, but he wanted
Flavia
paired with Thian and I could have told him she was far more
interested
in Jesper Ornigo.
Wry humour caught the edges of Kincaid's
thin lips.
`I figured she already had calculated on
someone other than
Thian.'
`Flavia's calculating?' Kincaid grinned at her surprise. `In a
nice
quiet way, Flavia Bastianmajani knows exactly what she wants and
she'll
find the best way to achieve it. But
you'd want that in a `I
need it
in my T-2, Kincaid dano. Do I have it?
Will you give me the friendly support I
need to do my job on this
stinking
hot planet amid aliens I mostly admire and sometimes fear,
because
sometimes their alienness overwhelms the human in me? Will you
grab me
and shake me out of doing something stupid?
Will you be my
good
friend?' Kincaid rose to his feet, held out his hands to her and
lifted
her to her feet. As he looked down at
her, Laria saw flickering
emotions,
incredulity, surprise, gratitude and something less definable
but
which made her feel grateful and quite humble.
`I can be your friend, Laria,' he said,
oddly sad, `and I could
wish
there was more to share with you.' Surprising her even fiarther on
a day
of many unusual events, he embraced her, one hand pulling her
head to
rest against his cheek. Then she knew
the fiall story of what
had
happened to him during the voyage, how he had been emotionally
abused
in a contest of two very strong-willed men who had thought more
of
denying the other of his company than how their passion battle was
wracking
him who admired them both.
She tightened one arm about his shoulders
and, with the other,
pressed
his head into her cheek. She doubted
even Elizara, for all her
skill,
could completely heal Kincaid's wounded and tormented psyche.
But she was here and he was wide open so
she could try! And did.
They released each other by degrees for
the rapport had been a
complete
sharing.
`Vanteer may be a rover, Laria, and love
many women fervently, but
not for
ever. But he would come back to you
time and again because you
would
never hold him. Now, if humans could do
a `Dini split and
produce
a male you, it would be the best of all conclusions,' Kincaid
went
on, finally slipping his fingers out of hers, `but we haven't even
figured
out how to clone so I will continue to admire, respect, and
love
you as my very good friend.
The generators began to spin, recalling
them to the day's duties.
`Damned stingg-pzzt!' Kincaid muttered as
he stretched out again
on the
couch.
`It really is the most appalling
nuisance,' Laria idly agreed,
aware
of the new tranquillity in her partner and much relieved to know
that he
was finding balance.
One Constellation, two Galaxy and two
speedy destroyers now
comprised
Squadron B for Backtrack.
Captain Vestapia Soligen was squadron
commander and captained the
Columbia;
Hyner Steverice, the Va lpara iso; Ll Hsiang, the destroyer
Valiant;
while Captain Hptrnl had the KMTM and an unusual
bronzecoloured
Mrdini, KimI, the `Dini destroyer-equivalent, the KVS.
Captain Soligen, her science officer and
two more of the
specialists
welcomed the Talent contingent aboard with proper ceremony.
The Columbia's captain was not what
Flavia had half-expected,
considering
her request for female Primes. Flavia
told herself to find
out why
at some convenient moment. Now she found
herself instantly
liking
the woman: Soligen's face was unlined and pleasant though
certainly
not a pretty one. She had wide-spaced
light eyes which
seemed
to alter between blue or green, under sharply arched dark brows.
Her figure in the ubiquitous shipsuit was
trim and athletic
without
losing essential femininity. Flavia
recognized behind the
`pleasant'
expression a strong personality and a shrewd mind. She
grinned,
without showing her teeth, as she acknowledged the
introductions
to Asia and Zara, Rhodri Eagles, Mallen Bastianmajani and
Jesper
Ornigo.
`Glad to have you aboard, ladies,
gentlemen, Lieutenant. Let me
introduce
my science officer, Mr Wayla Gegarian: she's also my official
`Dini
interpreter. I've never been able to
advance from garble to
greeting
- `Captain,' Zara said instantly, her hands on the sloping
shoulders
of Pal and Dis, `my `Dinis are topnotch tutors. There's
nothing
they like better than a real challenge to their abilities.' `We
teach
you - Pal began.
`You understand all you need to hear - -
-, Dis put in.
`More important, all you need to say,'
Pal finished.
Her science officer smothered a cough and
the captain raised her
eyebrows,
her light eyes sparkling bluely.
`I like . . - personages who accept challenges,' she replied.
`And,' she pointed a finger at Dis and
Pal who wiggled with
pleasure,
`I warn you, I'll be a challenge.
But I'm determined to try. There's' Flavia caught her about to
say
something else and veto it.
There's plenty of time, despite the
almighty push we got out this
far,
for me to learn a few phrases and understand more.' Then the tall
lean
man who had been rocking Iimpatiently from side to side shoved a
hand at
Flavia, which she gracefully ignored by dropping her carisak
which
he graciously retrieved from the deck and handed to a yeoman,
obviously
on hand to manage impedimenta.
`I'm Dr Tru Blairik, team biologist. This is my assistant who's
the
team archivist as well, Mialla Evshenk.' I keep telling Tru that
Talents
don't make casual physical contacts, Mialla said as she smiled
and
bowed slightly from the waist to acknowledge the introduction.
`There are more of us, but you'll have
plenty of time to get to
know
which is who. We're delighted to have
Talents to help. `Not that
I'm
likely to be much but I thought I'd see :f you can hear me. I'm
not
strong.
Strong enough, and greetings, Mialla,
Flavia responded.
`Nice to meet you, Evshenk.
`There'll be drinks in my quarters this evening at 1930, Primes,
gentlemen,'
the captain was announcing.
`Wayla'll take you to your quarters.' `We
could . - .` Blairik
offered.
`Anyone but you, Tru,' Mialla said in a
gentle tease.
`Be advised,' the captain said
ruefully. `My electronics
officer's
designing a special locator for Dr Blairik.' `You won't need
that,'
Zara said, `with us aboard. I could
find Dr Blairik anywhere.'
He gave
Zara such a blank stare that it bordered on the hostile.
`Absolutely discreet, I assure you.
But Zara's assurances were no more
welcome than her original
suggestion.
Leave it, Zara, Flavia said. `In any case, locators should be
available
for use on any planetary excursions.
`Indeed they will, considering the number
of experts and guards
needed
to do any significant exploration,' Captain Soligen said
briskly,
`the distances to be covered and the fact that your Talents,'
and she
smiled to show she was making a play on the word, `cannot be
spread
too thin.' There was a brief silence, while Zara coped with the
embarrassment
of her gaffe, which Asia broke.
`I'm a qualified engineer,' she said in
such a timorous voice that
Dr
Blairik regarded her with surprise, `and, if it wouldn't upset
anything,
I might be able to help with the fabrication.' `Your help
would
be very welcome, Prime .
`I'm not Prime, only a 4,' Asia corrected
Wayla Gegarian in her
apologetic
way.
`Four, three, five or six, the chief will
welcome a qualified
engineer,'
Gegarian replied heartily.
`So I'll leave you in Mr Gegarian's
capable hands then,' the
captain
said and departed in a brisk fashion.
`Sakers, Perley,' Wayla said, gesturing
towards the luggage which
was
quickly gathered up even as Wayla led the party from the hangar
bay.
`We'll see you again at dinner,' Blairik
said.
`We're all rather pleased,' Wayla said as
they made their way to a
lift,
`with the way the Columbia's been refitted.
Done up in jig time,
I'll
tell you. Mmost didn't recognize the
old tub,' she went on with
the
affectionate insults of a fond and long-term association.
`We heard there was trouble . . ` Flavia began tentatively.
It wouldn't have taken much Talent to
`hear' the fiary and
indignation
that came out as a blast from the science officer. The
emotions
were quickly controlled before Wayla Gegarian answered calmly
enough.
`Whole thing was stupid and badly handled
- by the shore police,
too. Good thing we have marines. We'd only minor injuries and the
families
who had come to see us off got the worst of it. Despicable,
useless
sort of violence. Didn't change our
leaving, though I devoutly
hope
they'll be gladder to see us return!
Here we are.
Just down this corridor.' The odours of
fresh paint and the dyes
of new
carpeting were unmistakable.
`Is blue the captain's favorite colour?'
Zara asked, her
ebullience
returned.
`Actually, green, Wayla said with a grin,
`but blue's traditional
for
officer territory. Here we are,' and
she had all of them register
their
handprints on the door pad.
`We haven't taken someone else's place,
have we?' asked Asia
uneasily.
`Not at all,' Wayla said so promptly that
Asia's uncertainty was
set to
rest. `Like I said, the ship was
refitted, with this expedition
in
mind, so shielded quarters were arranged.
Maybe not as roomy as
those
on the Washington but not shabby, and definitely suitable for
Talents.'
Remembering her brief tour on the Genessee, Flavia was quite
certain
of that: a generous lounge with workstations that could be
recessed
into the walls or the tables, and six private sleeping rooms.
One end of the room was panelled off into
screens: a central large
one
with three smaller on either side. A
semi-circle of six reclinable
chairs
faced this.
`I think everything in here is
self-explanatory but you do have a
meal
dispenser behind this panel,' Wayla said, indicating the opaque
dark
brown panel. `Just settle in and use
the door call panel if you
need
any assistance.' She glanced at Rhodri who grinned back.
`What they don't know, I'll teach `em,'
he said and her smile
lingered
on him as she took one final backward look as the door panel
closed
behind her.
`Made a conquest already, have you,
Rhodri?' Rhodri shrugged and
winked
atJes and Mallen. `Hell, we've just got
aboard, coz. And
there're
two other human ships we haven't even cased.
If no-one minds,
I'll
take this one,' he said and, grabbing his duffle from those the
yeomen
had stacked inside, mumbled a cheerful tune as he settled in.
Flavia realized quickly enough that her
sojourn on the Genessee
had
been no prelude to this voyage. Not
only did the Talents have
message
and courier services to perform, they had to sit in on long
briefings
and lectures with the expedition teams, satisfied' the marine
commander,
Kwan Keiser-Tau, that they were physically fit and were
knowledgeable
about handweapons. He'd been a trifle
put out when all
six
Talents showed arms proficiency in the Master class.
`You guys using Talent?' he said, jutting
out his head and jaw in
a
suspicious pose.
Zara laughed. `I come from Aurigae, Major, I've been hunting
small
game all my life. Easier to use
reflexes than Talent to hit
those
stationary targets.' He turned from Zara to Flavia, his mistrust
still
plain.
`I hail from Altair, also a pioneer
planet, Major.' `None of us
are
city bred, Major,' Mallen said, shifting his position so he was
nearer
Asia. He had already adroitly
intercepted criticism of the shy
girl on
several occasions.
`And I come from Deneb,' Asia said,
enough aware of the discreet
support
to take advantage of it from time to time.
`Let me reassure you, Major, you need not
concern yourselves with
our
safety,' Mallen continued with a slightly conciliatory smile. `The
dedicated
scientists aboard, however, are seldom aware of externals and
can be
quite focused on their enthusiams. Feel
free to call on our
support
to maintain their safety whenever necessary `My orders are to
guard
the lot of you,1 and Major Keiser-Tau did not much relish these
orders.
`Well, then, now that you've checked us
out,' Zara said, `work the
others
and let us get on Watch your manners, Zara, Flavia said.
with our duties,' she finished with no
perceptible pause. `I must
meet
with my `Dinis who are tutoring Captain Soligen,' she added and,
making
a careful show of snapping the safety on the weapon she was
holding,
stowed it in the correct rack. Frankly,
I think she's
language
deaf When Squadron B was close enough to the beacon left by
Squadron
C, Flavia suggested to the captain that they could speed the
voyage
up by several weeks if they tried a merge.
`I'd remain on the Columbia, put Rhodri
on the KMTM, Mallen on the
Valparniso,
Asia on the Valiant and Zara and her `Dinis on the KVS, and
with a
merge of all available Talents of lesser ratings, we can reach
the
Talavera beacon, cutting off two weeks.' `That won't cause you
undue
strain?' Soligen asked, though she clearly liked the notion.
`Not with the generator gestalt available
to us, Flavia said, her
expression
confident and reassuring.
Vestapia Soligen fingered her lower lip
for a long thoughtful
moment. `Why put Zara on the KVS?
Wouldn't she be needed on one of the
larger vessels?' `I think it
is
wiser to place Zara and her `Dinis on a ship that is so ready and
eager -
to meet opposition,' Flavia said. `Zara
could stop Kimi's ship
cold. Asia's told her how.
Soligen chuckled. `So KimI's . . . attitude hadn't escaped you?'
`Captain
KimI's attitude was noted by Lieutenant Eagles on his first
meeting. He's reasonably sure that the Imoment the
system is in range,
the KVS
will detour.
He thinks it's had private orders to that
effect. There hasn't
been a
real Mrdini strike against a live Hiver in far too long to
promote
any colour to prominence.' `Run that last statement past me
again,
Flavia?' `You will have noted that `Dini hides are many
different
shades. The colour denotes a clan
relationship.
All `Dinis in a colour, therefore, gain
prestige if one of their
colour
achieves merit.' `In this instance, blowing up a Hiver sphere
even if
they go with it?' `That's about it.' `I guess we should be glad
that
the ethnic groups in human history that considered suicide for
whatever
cause they espoused an honourable end have now been thoroughly
integrated,'
the captain said in a tart voice, `or isolated on worlds
where
that kind of prejudice is limited to that population.' Flavia
nodded
agreement. `The `Dinis do find our
insistence on caution and
safety
as odd as we find their willingness to self-destruct.' `I wonder
how
much of a chance the KVS'd have to take out that sphere?'
`Captain?'
Flavia was astonished at such speculation.
The captain chuckled. `The Fleet's been a passive force a long
time,
Flavia. I suppose you've also noticed
the average mean age of my
crew,
rating and officer, is younger than on most ships of this class?'
`I
had.' As much because Asia was suddenly developing poise and the
self-confidence
that comes from being popular with her peers.
`No matter how we conduct this Hiver
campaign, Prime, we're going
to have
to learn new techniques and some will prove fatal. Maybe not
as
suicidal as what the KVS might have in mind, but certainly more
daring
than the usual tactics.
`Maybe the Columbia's in the wrong
squadron if that's your
thinking,
ma'am.' The captain's eyes were ice-green as she gave the
Talent
a long look.
`Where do you - personally - stand on
that ground?' `I come from a
planet
that is barely settled. I'm used to
hunting to feed my family.
There are times when aggression is
required, but certainly not
courted.
However, I would feel privileged to serve
with you on one that
might
test my theories, too.
`Theories?' The captain leaned forward
with obvious interest.
Flavia smiled and dismissed the
question. `Right now, let us pass
the
immediate danger point, keeping the KVS with the squadron. I am
obliged
to inform you that this sort of manoeuvre is not specifically
mentioned
in the parameters of my assignment to Squadron B.' `I didn't
think
it was. I'd call it "bending"
to exigencies, myself and it will
be
noted in my log as a means to the end of saving a planet. I'll hope
we can
do without too much such "bending" but `I would consider any
reasonable
request, Captain.' `I appreciate that, Prime.
So let this
`portation
be duly authorized and executed. I'd
rather explain this
than
how a valuable Alliance ship defected.
How soon before you can
effect
this - - by-pass?' `Within the hour.' Vestapia Soligen regarded
Flavia
with open admiration and a genuine relief dominated her- public
mind.
So, the captain had entertained the same
notions Rhodri had
voiced.
`The sooner the better!
Transferring the Talents to their
designated ships, revving
generators
to their highest effective performance level and alerting
every
Talent on the human ships was all done within the specified hour.
First, Flavia sent her mind ahead to
locate the identifiable
pulsations
and small mass of the beacon.
Then she called for each of her Talents
to gather the lesser ones
into
the individual merges before she integrated first Rhodri, then
Jesper,
Mallen, Asia and finally the fine strong blaze of Talent that
was
Zara.
Let's get there! Flavia said, seizing the exact peak of the
generated
power for the gestalt.
We've got here! was Zara's exultant response a second later.
When Zara was `ported back on the
Columbia, she made straight for
Vestapia's
ready room and requested an interview `Ma'am, Captain Kinal
definitely
would've defected.
It's a bit upset at being where it never expected to arrive in
the
first
place, and in the second place isn't too to have been denied
"honourable
action". KimI s words. My `Dinis say that it's raging
that it
has been assigned to such a - well, there isn't really a Basic
equivalent
but ` Zara shrugged her inadequacy.
`Bunch of spineless slugs?' Vestapia
suggested.
`That's close,' she replied though there
was little levity in her
tone. `So I took the liberty of reminding Kimi
that this planet had
the
priority. I get the distinct impression
its orders differ from
yours.
`In that, Prime, you demonstrate an
astute understanding of a
classified
situation. Do I make myself clear?'
`You do, Captain.' `See
that it
remains classified. And, by the way,
Flavia has seen the
matter
clearly but I would rather the others do not.' `They already may
but
they won't talk about it.
`We should make an appropriate orbit in
three days max. I shall
require
Captain Kimi to make the initial landing, hopefully deflising a
lot of
pent-up resentment. I don't think
there's a chance there're any
Hivers
left alive down there but you never know.
And since Kimi is so
eager
to meet the enemy, let us give him first go.
Zara hesitated, then grinned. `You did know that your marines
would
prefer to claim that distinction?' `They can gain ancestral merit
by
guarding the scientists everywhere they need to go.
`Yes, ma'am. Did you wish me to convey your orders to Captain
KimI?'
`Please, since I can barely manage "good morning and do you
require
supplies" but even that much is progress for me.
`Dis and Pal remark most favourably on
your progress.
`Well, they're the only ones. You know.
I'd've sworn Mrdinis
were
pessimists.' `Only those raised on Clarf Can I leave now?' `Yes,
but if
your `Dinis can, keep in touch with our wily Captain Kinil.'
`You
just bet they will.' By dint of careful compliments and skilful
innuendo
not easy in the straightforward `Dini language - Rhodri
managed
to infer that KimI would be the first Mrdini captain ever to
set
foot on a Hive colony planet. That fact
alone helped soothe
Kinil's
wounded pride and damaged honour.
`Smart thinking, Rhodri,' Flavia as well
as Vestapia Soligen told
him
when he reported on that successful interview.
`I hope Major
Keiser-Tau
will not feel his prerogative has been usurped.' The captain
smiled. `Keiser-Tau will keep his thoughts to
himself - fortunately.
He is not looking forward to keeping tabs
on scientists.' `Oh, I'm
supposed
to be down testing those locator buttons with Asia and
Lieutenant
Ismail,' Flavia said. `If you'll excuse
me - -` and she
departed
without waiting for penflisslon.
`Talking `Dini makes my throat very dry,
the captain said, rising
from
her desk and going to the dispenser.
`Mine, too,' Rhodri said, in the
circumstances not above
confirming
the reason behind her hospitality.
Zara reported hearing the major swear by
several god figures she
didn't
know existed in Alliance space but he desisted the moment he was
aware
of her presence in the repairs shop.
`He's been briefing his men with every
single tape available in
the
Columbia's library on what they might expect, landing on a Hiver
planet,'
she went on.
Rhodri grinned. `That was predictable,' was all he said.
`Captain said he doesn't like escorting
scientists about. They
tend to
get themselves lost or in dangerous situations which "sensible"
people
would avoid.' `We'll have locator buttons,' Asia said with quiet
pride.
`Sadler . . . I mean, Lieutenant Ismail .
. . has set up a very
efficient
assembly line of off-duty personnel.' `Like you?' Rhodri
grinned
affectionately. `No wonder we never see
much of you, sis,' he
added
kindly, rufiling her hair.
`I do wish you'd stop that, Roddie,' she
said with far more
exasperation
than she had ever displayed.
`Sure, sure!' Rhodri snatched his hand
away as if it burned.
`Don't get your knickers in a twist!' `Mine
aren't!' she retorted
with
such a sly look that Rhodri unaccountably flushed, causing Zara to
demand
whom he fancied.
`None of your damned business,1 he said
and, going into his room,
slammed
the automatic door forcefully across the opening.
No
speculations at this time, Flavia told Zara firmly.
`When will we get these locator buttons,
Asia?' `They're being
distributed
now to everyone who's to be landed,' Asia said, having
retreated
to her customary unassuming behaviour.
`Well, it'll be a relief to get on with
what we were sent here
for.'
Flavia said and no-one in the lounge disagreed.
The actual landing was something of an
anti-climax, although the
state
of the planet caused immediate uproar in the scientific corps.
Sensor readings had indicated that the
ozone layer was undamaged,
which
had been a major concern to the ecologists and added to the
puzzle
of its barrenness. Rivers and lakes, as
well as several large
seas,
seemed to be in good order, life-forms visible if unidentifiable.
There was still top soil but, unless
plants could be coaxed to
grow,
it would sift away in the winds. On the
higher ground, erosion
was
already obvious.
Avidly watched on remote relays, the
`Dinis landed in smart array
and
`secured' the main Hive installation.
Its huge expanse, covering over three
acres, was found to be empty
of
everything save wind-blown debris. KimI
had its crew mapping the
site
and measuring both interior and exterior, plotting the different
levels
and sections and sending the results up to the waiting teams.
When the tunnels were discovered, KimI
itself led the exploratory
team. Flavia was asked to `port down more supplies
and was very glad
that
she would not be included in this Operation Illuminati6n. All but
one
tunnel dead-ended and the completed one was connected with the
smaller
building ten kilometres from the original, and probably
headquarters,
building.
Between the two there were signs of
attempts to cultivate the
land:
even plastic-lined reservoirs for water and several hundred
metres
of irrigation channel.
When Captain Kimi was satisfied that no
living enemy was apparent,
it
allowed `others', meaning the humans, to come down. Despite
Flavia's
offers of teleportation, multi-purpose shuttles were used as
these
would provide ground transport, not best accomplished by
`portation
which tended to go from Point A to any designated Point B.
The Talents were asked to `port down
sensitive instrumentation
once
the base camp was established.
Where the Talents were undeniably
indispensable was to see if the
panels
in the queens' quarters which Kimi had located were still
operational. Flavia, Rhodri and Zara slid down the
connecting links in
the
main building while Asia, assiduously accompanied by Lieutenant
Ismail
and a detachment of marines, went off to the second building.
Mallen and Jesper Ornigo went with
whichever group thought they
might
require Talented help.
enough for the power source to be found,
and the `They really
don't
alter their structures much,' Flavia said when the three Talents
picked
themselves up off the dusty floor of chambers that so closely
resembled
the queens' quarters on Refugee. Dust
had filtered in a thin
film
over the "foot' panels but the upper ones had been installed high
enough
to be covered by only a light layer.
Rhodri and Flavia were
tall
enough to brush this off `First left-hand panel's exactly the
same,'
Rhodri said, peering at what his hand light revealed. `But
these -
are different.' `You'd expect that, wouldn't you?' Zara asked
with
some asperity. `This is a ground
operation. So what do we do
noW?'
`Try to start it up: that panel's the same and I brought
mock-ups,'
Rhodri said, removing from his thigh pocket a handful of
triangular-tipped
wands which approximated the shape of a queen's
palps. He handed some to Flavia and Zara.
`I'm not damned tall enough,' Zara
muttered.
`Nor am I,' Flavia said with some
disgust.
`There're plenty of boxes the right size
` and Rhodri pilfered
rigid
crates from the supply depot for the two women.
`D'you remember the sequence that started
the ship, Flavia?'
`Engraved
on my retina,1 Flavia said, arranging three wands in her
fingers
on each hand in a triangular pattern.
When she got them right,
by
using a light application for telekinesis, she inserted them in the
apertures
in the sequence she remembered.
A flickering illumination started - and
also a near riot from the
unprepared
`Dini crewmen still exploring the facility.
The light, if
one
could call it that, lasted long desiccated remains of one queen and
nine
attendants.
When the corpses had been examined - such
pieces as permitted
examination
of any kind because most disintegrated into dust at the
lightest
touch - the generally accepted opinion was that death was
caused
by starvation. Then the arguments
began: had only one queen
been
installed on the planet? That wasn't
the usual procedure. Or had
only
this one been left by others which had escaped to a more
hospitable
planet?
Had she died before or after their
leaving? But fields had been
ploughed
and seeds sown; a second building had been prepared and a
tunnel
connecting it: a tunnel large enough for a queen to traverse.
The enigmas quite outweighed the matters
confirmed.
Only the queens seemed to have special
quarters, though tubes and
tunnels
connected with what appeared to be large spaces where harvests
were
processed and stored. Egg tubes opened
into each of the queens
quarters.
`Work, work, work, work, Zara muttered
under her breath when the
xeno
Yakamasura went into a long explanation of the possible societal
structure
of the Hivers. `No other ethic but work.
`And conquest, Rhodri murmured back. `Don't forget conquest!' `A
change
is as good as a rest!
Continuing an orderly investigation, the
scientists sampled and
examined
everything from the dust, to the underlying layers of clay and
stone,
to the desiccated fragments of vegetation that were found and
brought
in. Then they moved fiarther away from
the now sizeable base
camp,
inspecting the dying vegetation, tree-like as well as
ground-cover. Bushes, shrubs, hedges, plants, large vines,
grassoids:
all
were dead or dying right up to the snow level on the mountain
ranges
of the continental mass. It was on the
higher slopes that
scattered
piles of skeletals, the remains of various species, were
found,
as if the creatures - whatever they had been - had sought
sanctuary
in the highest place away from the predators, and whatever
means
was used to destroy the planet's indigenous lifeforms.
The large preliminary Reformation dome
was constructed over what
Ecologist
Rovenery Mordmann considered to be a suitable site for an
ecological
jumpstart. When both human and `Dini
airborne
investigations
returned from the borders of the continental mass, he
could
be heard bewailing the fact that no life-forms, not so much as
ground-burrowing
insects, beetles or worms, however insignificant,
could
be found. His wails took on the form of
constant cursings of the
Hivers
for the murder of this world.
`All right, so the land's dead, but what
about the seas?' Captain
Soligen
asked during an evening session which had consisted of too many
Mordmann
dirges and nothing of a positive nature whatsoever.
`The seas?' Mordmann regarded her with
utter astonishment. `It's
the
land that the Hivers infest, ma am.
`And it's the seas they never bother
with,' Zara reminded him.
`Nor any water. We're drinking river water although there's a
rather
noxious sulphuric aftertaste `The seas - - .
the waters `
Without
a single backward glance at the meeting he was precipitously
leaving,
Mordmann departed and very shortly all heard an airsled taking
off `I
kept trying to tell him,' the xeno, Yakamasura, said
sorrowfully,
`but he said it was the land that mattered.' `It is so
possible
to miss the obvious,' Flavia said soothingly.
Hope for the revivification of Talavera
improved considerably when
it was
found that the waters - seas, rivers, lakes, streams - were by
no
means as ecologically reduced as the land, though poor in quantity
and
quality. Mordmann pronounced that the
planet's balance could be
restored
and they would immediately initiate several combinations that
might
suit. Whatever creatures had lived here
before had had different
requirements
for there were significant basic elements lacking in the
soil:
chitin, selenium, most of the rare earths, and a paucity of
calcium,
though quantities of that would have been available from sea
creatures. Lack of chitin alone would have been a
problem for Hivers
since
the captive queen ate substances rich with that compound.
Mordmann delayed departure from Talavera
as long as he could, to
be sure
at least one of the - domes showed some signs that seeds were
prospering
in the revived soil.
`One undeniable fact we have learned,'
Mordmann said at his most
pontifical
as his group settled into the shuttle, carrying them back to
the
ship.
`And what is that?' Captain Vestapia
asked, knowing what she might
be
letting them all in for.
`That the Hiver policy of fumigation of
all life-forms -from the
planets
they wish to colonize often results in more short-term benefits
than
they anticipate. I suspect they lose
half the planets they find
to just
such a pyrrhic programme.' Then, looking excessively pleased
with
himself he folded his hands on his incipient paunch and said
nothing
more on the short voyage back to the
Columbia.
The installations on the second former
colony, Marengo, were more
numerous,
extending in all directions towards the mountain ranges. The
fields
had been assiduously cultivated for a substantial number of
decades. Analysis of the dirt once again showed the
lack of certain
rare
earths, minerals: chitin, Vitamin A and E, most of the rare earths
and
selenium, although sulphur was present in quantity. Whatever
indigenous
life-forms had lived on Marengo had disappeared without
trace,
though its vegetation, lush and vigorous on the highlands the
Hivers
had not yet tamed, suggested that perhaps no land creatures had
as yet
evolved in this almost pleistocene era.
Rhodri reported to Captain Soligen that
the Mrdini ship was
unlikely
tamely to follow the rest of the squadron to the next M-5.
`There's a Hive ship orbiting Waterloo
and I shan't want it
attacking
ours,' Vestapia said, frowning.
`Ma'am?' and when she gestured for Flavia
to continue, `I think we
might
be able to pull the same trick here as we did with Xh-33.'
`Trick? Blow the orbiting ship up?' The captain
snorted.
`No, steal it,' Flavia said. `We don't, of course, know if the
ship is
occupied. The one at Xh-33 certainly
wasn't. If it is, we can
also
use Hiver tactics and gas the maintenance crew.
`As I remember the report,' Vestapia said
in what Rhodri now
privately
termed her `captain's tone', `the gas was so corrosive, it
took
the entire voyage back to Phobos Moon Base to clear the stuff.'
`There
are other gases available `You know that Kimi's out for Hiver
blood
-` `What would be on the ship would be the specialist types,
maintaining
cables and conduits and such like.
Only queens control the ship. It's a queen KimI wants to fight,
not her
workers.' `I doubt we can supply KimI a queen,' Vestapia said
sourly,
`but I sure wish we could and end that problem.
I didn't realize - No matter,' and she
broke off what she'd
started
to say with a dismissive wave.
Rhodri `heard' what she didn't say
because her mind had been vivid
with it
- `how bloodthirsty Mrdinis really are'.
Quick contact with
Flavia
told him she'd caught that, too.
`KimI,' Vestapia continued, `will get
another first, the chance to
invade
a Hiver ship, and that ought to give its colour some sort of
glory,
shouldn't it?' `It'll help,' Rhodri agreed.
He was seated on
the
edge of her desk, hoping to get this planning session over with so
he
could enjoy another sort of planning.
He caught Flavia's look at
his
informal position and decided discretion should reign. He took to
a
meditative pacing.
`Certainly,' Flavia said, `we know the
inside of the sphere well
enough
to know where to `port Captain KimI's crew aboard to secure the
ship. Kimi can do whatever it likes to what might
be on board and
that'd
be another coup. Then we steal it. The Waterloo Hivers will be
stuck
on that planet and we can take care of them when when it's been
decided
what's to be done with Hiver colonies.' Vestapia spent one more
moment
looking at Flavia 5
elegant features before she started to
laugh.
`Think of the honour KimI's colour would
gain by bringing back a
Hiver
ship under its own power.
`Could they do that?' `If there's enough
ftiel on board and with a
little
instruction on how to manipulate the instrument panel from us,
yes,'
Rhodri said, beaming because he found Flavia's idea as outrageous
as the
captain did. `Only we'd better have a
chance to splash `Dini
insignia
all over the ship, if we don't want it fired on during its way
back. If you wish, ma'am, I'll explain all this to
Captain Hptm on the
KMTM. It's most anxious that the KVS does not go
off half-cocked.
It'd have to rescue it if it could. And the captain's mortally
afraid
of putting us, as well as its colour, in jeopardy over KimI's
dreams
of bravura.
`So, we take a page out of the Genessee's
log?' `It worked.' The
captain
considered again. `Only this time, I
think we permit the KVS
to use
its speed and skill and bombard the planet's defences. That is,
of
course,' and she held up her hand, `if we find they have the same
capabilities
discovered at Xh-33.' `Why should the Hivers alter their
time-soldered
habits?' Rhodri asked.
`This time,' Flavia said, `we will clear
our actions with Earth
Prime.'
`Of course,1 Vestapia Soligen agreed suavely, her light eyes as
green
as Rhodri'd ever seen them.
`That'll be great,' he remarked later in
their quarters, rubbing
his
hands together in anticipation.
`I'll get Jeff Raven's permission,'
Flavia said and left the two
together. Which was exactly what both Rhodri and the
captain wanted at
that
moment. Impending action had the fringe
benefit of arousing other
basic
instincts as well.
* * * Flavia's contact with Jeff received
the necessary permission
to
duplicate - with the exercise of all due caution as far as the
Talents
were concerned - the successful tactics of the Genessee.
`That's no flan,' Zara complained. `We'll be observers - as
always.
`Yes, but I'll beat cousin Clancy into
action,' Rhodri said,
delighted
with that fact.
`Action?' `All right, close encounter
because, brat, we're much
closer
to our objective - `We're weeks away,' she corrected him.
`But mere weeks instead of more months
like the main attack
units.'
`We may have received permission,' Flavia said, `but who knows
if
Kiml'll buy the plan? It's one
frustrated Mrdini and all of us
remember
what happened to Rojer.
`That's exactly why nothing remotely
similar will be allowed to
happen
this time,' said Zara in a hard, icy, vindictive tone that
startled
those who heard it.
Jes broke the silence with his question. `Is the main Fleet
closing
on the Hiver at all?' `Earth Prime wouldn't say, precisely,'
Flavia
answered him, a slight frown creasing her usually smooth brow,
`but I
sensed something - - -, `Then Grandfather wanted you to,' Zara
said
quickly.
`So what did you sense?' Flavia considered this for a long
moment.
`Triumph, I think.' `Damn!' Rhodri
said. `They may be moving in
for the
kill before we can get to Waterloo.' `Unlikely, because I've
already
located the Waterloo beacon Kincaid so kindly set in place.'
She
smiled as her team reacted with jubilation.
Except for Asia.
`I don't see why everyone is so happy to
be pulling primary school
tricks
on the Hivers. Especially you, Zara.
Zara flushed. `I'll never live that moment down, will I? But you
saw
what Hivers did t9 Talavera ruined a perfectly good planet. And
damned
near ruined Marengo the same way. They
don't deserve to
colonize
their backyards.' `Which went nova!' Asia said but her
expression
was less vehement. `They must be good
for something.
Everyone and everything I know is.
`Try as I will,' Flavia said after a long
pause, `I cannot find
"good"
in a life-form that deliberately annihilates all other
life-forms
so that it can dominate a world for the sole purpose of
multiplying
itself to the point where it must find yet another world to
fumigate
and repeat the process.' Asia was so quiet and exuded such a
depression
that Zara approached her, delicately smoothing the fine hair
back
from her face.
`They're great farmers, she said softly.
`If that ability could be directed into
proper channels -, Flavia
began.
`No-one else would ever have to
crop-farm, Jesper finished.
`If only there was a way to get that
across to them `Mallen added.
`However, we have other plans to make
now,' Flavia said, `based on
the
information we have managed to gather about this enigmatic species
and
their modus operandi. It does seem a
pity, though, that we can't
communicate
and form a collaborative effort.' `That'll be the day!'
Zara
managed the last words.
The weeks had moved into months as the
main Fleet continued to
follow
the increasingly strong ion trail of the Hiver 2. Squadron D
plodded
along after Hiver 3
which had diverted spatially down and
towards the `arm of the
Milky
Way.
Clancy Sparrow proved to have many
inventive ways to keep boredom
at bay,
such as a lottery to guess the particle strength of the trail
at the
end of each week. It also gave him and Rojer
the chance to meet
most of
the other Talents, covert and open, on the Washington.
`We've got quite a few T-3s on board,'
they told Thian and ran
down
their mental lists, with descriptions.
`All'll answer to the code word now' said
Rojer who had done most
of the
implanting.
`One way or another,' Clancy said and
grinned.
Another notion was to give names to the
G-type systems which the
Hiver
ignored. An official name was `drawn'
later from those that had
been
sent in from the squadronwide competition.
Kioo joined Clancy and
Rojer
`porting over to other ships to explain the `procedure' and, in
that
way, managed to meet more Talents, and pick up a few new ones.
`I don't know how much help I'd be to
you,' a T-4
chef said to Rojer in the captain's
galley of the Genessee.
`To my knowledge, the only things I have
any control over are
professional
problems.' `What, for instance?' Rojer had asked, propping
one hip
on the corner of a worktop and eyeing cakes the chef was icing
with
deft movements of his spatula.
`I never cut myself' and he paused to
regard his handiwork, `fat
never
spatters on me. I've never dropped a
hot pan or baking tray and
I've
handled plenty without so much as a bum blister. That's why they
call me
Lucky Louie.
Amused and intrigued, Rojer leaned back
against the counter behind
him. `Anything else?' `Well, I've never broken a
bone,' and the
roundfaced
man grinned, `lost a fight or a card game.
I don't play
them no
more. Didn't think it was fair if I
always won.
Rojer took that opportunity to grip the
man's shoulder in an
expression
of approval for such probity, and caught the unmistakable
touch
of Lucky Louie's mind so that he could bring him to a merge
should
that be necessary.
`His souffls and cakes never fall either,
muttered another galley
crewman
as Rojer left, but the tone was good-naturedly envious.
On the destroyer Athene, Semirame Kloo
`discovered' an unexpected
-Talent
in one of the electricians who had an extraordinary record of
avoiding
accidents in a somewhat dangerous job.
Chief Petty Officer
Lea Day
had always chalked that up to the fact that she was careful and
never
attempted a repair unless she'd thoroughly looked over any
schematics. She was vastly surprised to test out as a
T-4 kinetic.
`But I've never heard anything in my
skull,' CPO Day told KIoo,
her
expression perplexed.
Thian, KIoo said, I've justfrund us
another T-4 kinetic.
CPO Lea Day says she's never heard
anything in her skull.
Chief Day? Thian promptly said. Just
nod your head to Commander
Kloo ri
you're hearing me?
Chief Day's brown eyes protruded from her
skull as Ishe obediently
nodded. Then she leaned towards Rome Kioo and whispered. `Who was
that?'
`Prime Thian Raven-Lyon.' `But he's on the Washington!' `He's
also a
T-1 and made me hear him, too. Now,
Chief, with a kinetic
Talent
like yours, we may need to contact you for help real soon.
`What kind of help?' The chief was
dubious as well as anxious.
`Nothing beyond your abilities, Chief,
but if Prime Thian calls
you,
put down whatever you're doing and just let yourself go.' `Go?
How?' Kioo relaxed her entire body, hands
draped on her thighs,
shoulders
and chest collapsed.
`That's all I gotta do?' `That's
right. Your being relaxed helps
Thian
tap your kinetic energy.
`That's what I got? Kinetic energy?' `Which is why you've been
able to
turn aside electrical jolts that would have injured you.
`But how'd I know how to do it?' Kioo was
getting very good at
proving
her next point.
She sprang at Lea Day who immediately
assumed a defensive stance.
`Like that, basically,' Kioo said,
stepping back. `A basic
survival
instinct. Only your brain clicks in
with its kinetic whammy.'
She
rose and shook hands with the chief who had a good strong grip with
fingers
calloused from work. That was the next
to the last step of
preparation. `If you hear the word Saki in your head,
stop what you're
doing
and relax.' `Saki!' The chief nodded.
`What if I'm not near a
chair?'
KIoo laughed. `Don't tell me, Chief,
you can't relax any
damned
time you have the chance!' `Aye, sir.
The science officers had other puzzles,
concerning why the Hivers
rejected
so many systems. Were they already
inhabited by Hivers? Or
inhabitable? Had any of them, by any remote chance, once
held off a
Hiver
advance, too? The sceptics thought this
area of space far too
remote
to have received much Hiver attention.
Others argued that the very fact the Hive
ship was going so far
from
its original home world proved it had investigated all the
intervening
systems and either occupied them or found them useless.
To settle some of these arguments - which
often proved agitated
Captain
Ashiant initiated a programme for the fast scout ships which
the
Washington carried. Whenever an M-5
system was observed, the
scouts
- using a different crew each time - left their mother ship for
quick
discreet surveys.
For these, Ashiant asked the assistance
of the Talents who were as
glad to
have some excitement as any other crew member.
Thian always
took
LieutenantCommander Alison Greevy with him; Rojer favoured a T-3
ensign from Engineering, Cyra Charteris;
while Clancy needed to
have
two to augment his T-2 abilities.
Invariably he chose Semirame Kioo and the
only other T-3, one of
the
gunnery officers, Targia Upland. An
attractive girl, her nickname
of
`Target' was respect for her professional competenceee and a
knowledge
of antique and archaic weapons.
When the scout was close enough for the
Talents to deploy the
undetectable
plastic units, the relevant planet within the system was
probed. Four Hiver colonies were discovered out of
twenty worlds
surveyed,
two with sphere ships in orbit and the usual debris. Once
Hiver
Ipossession was noted, the scout ship was under the strictest
orders
to leave the system immediately.
Detection had to be avoided.
Hivers often worked moons and other
planets for mineral deposits.
An argument arose: how would the Hivers
know a system of theirs
had
been invaded, when they had no intersystem communications and their
planet-based
sensors had, as shown by the Xh-33, limited range?
`Let us not assume what has not been
established beyond doubt,'
Captain
Ashiant reminded those captains and first officers who attended
his
weekly updates.
`There are still panels on the Refugee
whose function is unknown.'
That
was the standard warning every scout captain impressed on his or
her
crew before the scout departed on an exploratory nussion.
Every week the star charts were upgraded
by such side-trips and
new
primaries, including an unusual binary-sun system that fascinated
all the
astronomy buffs.
After the second Hiver occupation was
discovered, the Vadim's new
captain,
Pat Shepherd, brought up the suggestion that a multi-tasked
beacon
be set up near the heliopause of Hiver systems: to warn any
passing
Alliance ship of Hivers; to record any outgoings in which case
a
message capsule would be released to speed back to Alliance space
where
any Prime would soon `hear' its shriek and retrieve it. After
the
Denebian penetration, every Alliance system had installed a device
that
could identi the Hiver stingg-pzzt and emit a warning.
A contest to design such a device was
circulated through the Fleet
and
small, mechanically oriented groups vied with each other to come up
with
the successful design. The winning design
group came from the
Washington,
because Rojer and Commander Tikele worked all the hours of
the
week to win the competition. Then the
design was distributed among
the
machine shops of all the ships to ensure a sufficient supply.
Uninhabited M-5 planets were examined in
more detail: one had an
indigenous
life-form which was abe;idy using primitive tools and had
controlled
fires.
That system was duly put off-limits. Several planets, despite
appropriate
atmospheres and distribution of land mass to sea, did not
appear
viable for human or Mrdini occupation, showing high levels of
radiation,
too much seismic activity or other anomalies.
`Well, such conditions would account for
some of the by-passes,'
Captain
Ashiant said at one of the weekly `brass' meetings which
included
the Talents. `One thing puzzles
me. How did the Hivers know
which
to by-pass? If we have probes, what do
the Hivers use to obtain
the
same information, because they surely must?
Did anyone ever
discover
if Deneb had been probed by a Hiver mechanism?' He turned to
Clancy.
`Sir, the Denebian penetration happened
long before my birth. My
uncle
who lived through those days never mentioned a probe but then
Deneb
was pretty primitive in those days. And
who was expecting
visitors
from outer space?' `But did you not as a youngling on Deneb
recover
quantities of Hiver materials?' asked Captain Spktm.
`Yes sir, indeed, we all did,' and Clancy
indicated Thian and
Rojer,
`and the navy installation on Deneb is still trying to fit the
pieces
together.' He grinned.
`Probes usually return to the sender to
deliver the information
they've
acquired,' Rojer added.
`True, true,' Ashiant said, fingering his
jawline as he often did.
`Flavia Bastianmajani recently sent us a
message, Thian went on,
that
the first of the occupied Hive systems showed a total breakdown
which
hasn't yet been fully analysed. The
xenos and biologists have an
unconfirmed
opinion that the planet was deficient in some element or
elements
which are vital to Hive survival. So,
if they do use a probe,
it
doesn't tell them all they need to know.
`So there are discrepancies in their
colonial programme,' Captain
Germys
of the Genessee remarked in his dry fashion.
`That's
encouraging.'
`And they avoid some planets that are fine for us.' `But
if that
colony failed, what sort of information do the Hiver probes
seek?'
asked Germys' first officer, Beckin Watusa, a very tall and very
dark-skinned
man.
`Well, one we saw was mainly islands,
some good sized, but no
large
land masses,' said Selig Derynic of the destroyer, Comanche. `So
perhaps
that's one of their criteria-large continents.' `They probe for
suitable
atmospheres as well, since two they've by-passed showed
hydrogen-nitrogen
imbalances,' Vandermeer said.
`No,' Captain Prim of the KLTL said
emphatically, its usually
smooth
fur ruffling, a sign of agitation, `the probe finds out how much
and
what kind of life had to be "fumigated" `Then let us be thankful
for
whatever limitations their probes, if they use them, report,'
Ashiant
said briskly.
`We can at least propose a few colonial
sites for the `So far
nothing
we have discovered explains why they have ranged so far,
especially
now,' Spktm said in an almost lugubrious tone, echoing some
of the
pessimism Prim displayed.
`I would have thought that obvious, sir,'
Ashiant replied
courteously. `Their homeworld was lost to the nova. They must be
seeking
an alternate.' `That must not happen!' Spktm said, bringing
both
upper hands hard down on the table, the percussion felt by
everyone
touching it.
`That is the purpose of this squadron,
Captain, Ashiant said as
resolutely. `And, especially, the reason the Washington
was conceived
and
built!' `And the Hivers built their Great Sphere to establish a new
homeworld,'
Thian said. `Could it be in all the
volume of space they,
and we,
have explored, they have not yet found a similar one? And
that's
why they have ranged so far, and looked in as many directions as
they
have?' `You give the Hivers credit for emotions which they do not
have,'
Spktm said, its poll eye swivelling to give Thian the full
glare.
`Now, a moment, Spktm,' Ashiant said,
raising one hand, `the Prime
has a
valid point. Wouldn't Mrdinis, deprived
of Clarf, search for one
as near
to what they'd lost as could be found?' Spktm's flir ruffled
firther,
and so did Prim's and the other two `Dini captains seated
around
the table. Thian inwardly groaned at
his tactless remark.
Exuding as much pacifying empathy as he
could, he followed
Ashiant's
lead.
MRDINIS HAVE LONG HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE
THAT HIVERS FOLLOW INSTINCT
WHICH
HAS NOT CHANGED, HONOURED SIR, AND THAT IS, ABOVE ALL, SURVIVAL
OF THEIR
KIND. THEIR SPECIES MUST HAVE HAD A
VERY UWSUAL HOMEWORLD TO
HAVE
ALLOWED THEM TO BECOME DOMINANT THAT WORLD IS GONE. SURVIVAL OF
THEIR
SPECIES REQUIRES THEM TO FIND ITS LIKE.
THAT IS WHAT THIS ONE
MEANT. PARDON THE OFFENCE THIS ONE HAS UNWITTINGLY
CAUSED THE HONOURED
SPKTM.
The `Dini captain's fur began to settle,
and so did PrIm's. Thian
felt
the wave of relief from his fellow humans that the Mrdinis were
molified
by his explanation.
`So they haven't found it. And, by my honour, I hope they don't,'
Cheseman
of the Solidarity said, `but, give us a little hope, Captain
Spktm,
do we even know what their primary's spectrum was like before it
went
nova?' Spktm and Thian, who had reached the area where the dead
star
was still cooling, shook their heads.
`Bluntly, no,' Thian said.
`We've got a helluva lot of space to
check out, Cheseman said,
made
gloomy by the sheer magnitude of the task facing them. `Five
years
won't be long enough!' `But a lustrum makes a start, gentlemen,'
Ashiant
said, adopting a firmly positive tone, `and let us not discount
what we
have managed to accomplish in the past two years. We may have
been
forced by circumstances to explore firther than any previous
programme
for either of our species but we have already discovered
enough
new worlds to support members of the Alliance for thousands of
generations
to come.
`Let me come back to the point that there
may be a more specific
goal
for these Hive spheres - finding a new homeworld under a sun
similar
to the original one.
I certainly don't know what
spectra-analytical means the Hivers
possess,'
and Ashiant attempted to inject some humour, `but I'd like
our
astrogation officers to start checking the spectrums of all G-type
stars,
however far away they are, on the off chance that it's a certain
type
they're hunting, not just any G-type system with M-5 planets.
Even the Mrdinis saw the merit of that
suggestion and the meeting
ended
with considerably more enthusiasm and purpose than it initially
had. Ashiant later confided to Thian that there'd
been some very
tricky
moments but he was positive they were on to a line of
investigation
that was going to prove invaluable.
`Certainly it's giving us another purpose
while we're tracking
that
damned sphere to wherever it's going.
What odds would you take that it has a
definite primary
objective?'
Thian regarded Ashiant for a moment before letting out a
startled
guffaw. For one moment, Ashiant glared
at him and then,
realizing
what he had said, joined Thian in a much-needed laugh.
`In line with that, sir,' Thian said,
still shaking with laughter,
`maybe
I ought to contact Flavia. Squadron B's
been to quite a few
systems
now, too. Maybe they can throw some
light on the matter.
`Light on the matter?' Ashiant echoed and
enjoyed another chuckle.
`I needed that, Lyon. That was a hairy moment there .
`You mean, of course, when all the `Dini
fiir started to ruffle
up?'
That set them both off again until Ashiant, huffing and coughing,
pulled
himself back to sobriety, but his eyes still twinkled and he
continued
to grin.
`Actually, sir, even a process of
elimination, based on what types
of
G-stars they ignore, might help us establish the criteria they're
looking
for. Even minute differences - the
period of variability,
sun-spot
cycles, size - in a G-type primary can have incalculable
effects
on the satellites in its system. It
certainly has proved so in
species
adaptations.
`On another subject, Captain - which I
didn't have time to pass on
to you
before the meeting - Flavia's message this morning contains some
interesting
items.
The first being that they, too, have
devised a beacon to be set
outside
any Hive suspect M-5 system: to warn vessels off and to send a
message
back to the nearest Prime to warn of any outgoing sphere.'
`Great
minds, huh?' `I've received specs, sir.
Captain Soligen thought
you
might like to glance over them in case they have modifications we
could
use.' Thian handed over the hard copy and the software. `Or the
other
way round,' he added tactfully.
`Indeed and we will,' Ashiant replied as
he glanced through the
material. `Though the one your brother and Tikele
designed seems to be
similar.'
`Flavia also informed me that, with Earth Prime's express
permission,
they are going to approach the Hive-occupied planet.'
Ashiant
gave him a hard stare.
`There are good reasons to take the
chance,' and Thian grinned,
`the
main of them being to give the KVS under Captain KimI the
opportunity
to puif the Genessee ploy.' `Steal another Hiver ship?'
Ashiant
said, almost exploding. `Whatever do we
need with another
one?'
do so under the ship's power. We were
able to establish Thian
chuckled,
as much at the captain's reaction, as the one which would
surely
await the triumphantly returning crew aboard it.
`Captain KimI is of the new Mrdini
generation which hasn't seen
much
direct contact, of the kind that allows a colour to gain prestige
`Damned
untried young scuts, Ashiant murmured, shifting restlessly in
his
chair, `they could precipitate more trouble .
` Then he cleared
his
throat as he remembered all too vividly the morning's near breach
between
human and `Dini. `Ah well, I suppose
it's more recent in their
culture
than . . . Is "counting coup"
the action I mean . . ?` `I've
heard
the phrase,' Thian replied, not remembering where or in what
connection.
`Go on.
Tell me how this `Dini plans to gain prestige so I'll
know
how to prevent it in this squadron.' `First, Flavia got Earth
Prime's
permission. And I assure you, as Flavia
did me, that Captain
Soligen
would not contemplate such a move unless she was very sure of
success.'
`Well,' and Ashiant simmered down, `Vesta's one helluva fine
captain,
even if she does have some odd ideas of opting for young and
virtually
untried crew. I assume all you Primes
are restricted by the
same
rules?' `Yes, sir!' `Then let me know the outcome of the... what
did you
call it. `The Genessee ploy.'
`Osullivan must be pleased by
that. Too bad he's stuck at a desk now. And how is Captain KimI
intending
to get its prize back to our occupied space?' `Flavia seemed
to feel
the captain would be able to the disposition of certain
controls
on the panel. She's known them. And we know what file! is
used
`That's fine until the damned thing gets in more travelled space
Thian
nodded, grinning. `I believe the plan
is to decorate the sphere
with
`Dini designs to let all and sundry know who is bringing this one
in.'
`Do ask your Prime to send out an all-ship warning.
Wouldn't do to have a trigger-happy
missile crew trying out the
new
weaponry on a "friendly" hostile vessel!
And can you get on to the proper authorities
to forward all
documentation
on known G-star variations, whether the planetary systems
have
been explored or not. It may well be
that the tedious process of
elimination
will provide the information we need.' When Thian, who had
always
prided himself on his eidetic memory, found himself confusing
figures
of the very complicated spectra-analyses of G-type stars within
an
hour, he traded off with Rojer. Clancy
was about to have to take a
turn
when Jeff Raven decided his T1 and T-2 staff had better things to
do with
their time than mentally transfer such complex data. So the
rest of
the material from human astronomical files was `ported out.
Laria `ported even more from the Mrdini
libraries.
Everyone's pretty excited about the
theory here, she told her
brother. You sound in good form, Thi. Things going wellwellfare you,
Roj and
Clancy?
why?
D'you miss us? he asked
teasingly.
Oddly enough, I think I do, she said.
How's Kincaid?
Kincaid is in fine form, also,
brother! Then there was a ripple
in her
mental tone that signified a giggle.
Vanteu, too. Then she
signed
off, leaving him to digest that information just as the cargo
officer
announced the arival of a small pod from Clarf Tower.
The comparative analysis of G-type stars
continued until a special
board
had to be set up for that information alone.
Each ship in the
Fleet
wanted to access files to support their own theories and
constant,
lengthy shipto-ship conversations were interfering with
necessary
operational messages.
Over the next few weeks, although neither
Thian nor Ashiant had
mentioned
the Genessee ploy, most of the Fleet knew that it either was
about
to happen or had happened. The news
that the manoeuvre had been
successful,
that the KVS had destroyed the space field of the Hivers at
Waterloo
as well as the three scout ships that had tried to launch from
the
planet was anticlimactic but gave an excuse for considerable
celebration
on all eleven ships.
Barely had they recovered from that than
the Washington's sensors
picked
up readings that suggested the Hiver they were pursuing had sent
out its
scouts.
The target was a G-type sun which the
Alliance had first thought
the
Hiver would, once more, pass by since its spectra-analysis didn't
seem
that promising.
Instantly, crews were scrambled to the
Washington's fast scouts
and,
Thian ordered Rojer to accompany the Revere, commanded by
Lieutenant
Vergoin.
You'll get yourself in a pod the moment
there's trouble, Thian
told
his brother.
Aw, Thi.
. . Rojer began and then, remembering his grandfather's
stern
warnings, subsided. Yeah, I will but
what about the destroyers?
who's going to keep PrI and Ktpl in check
when they get close to
the
Hiver?
Captain Spktm. It's transferred its command to its first officer
and is
on board the KLTS.
Spktm does mean business.
We all mean business!
Thian sent Clancy, with a similar
reminder about saving his
Talented
skin, to one of the two humancrewed destroyers. All four
larger
ships were ordered to shift themselves at top speed after the
lighter,
faster vessels. The Nebula, the two
Constellations and the
four
Galaxy class would need more time to attain the requisite speed to
catch
up and support any action.
We're ahead of the Hiver smuts, Rojer
told his brother several
days
later, and they didn `t even see us coming in on the ecliptic.
His tone was one of high good
spirits. Are those Hiver queens so
utfrdy oblivious
to anything but their goals? Are they
so arrogant
they
think they're totally invulnerable?
Until they came to Deneb, they were,
Thian remarked drolly. Have
the
astronomers come up with any more data on the primary?
Checking sun-spot activity and mnning
another one on uvl and irl
emissions,
and naturally probes have been released on orbital sweeps.
Lots of lush vegetation is reported and
some clearly visible
seismic
activity, g9ad blue seas and a chain of large lakes across the
main
continental mass we've already identified on the night side.
Smallish ice-covered polar regions but
that's normal - so's the
ozone
layer.
Can't find any signs of civilization, no
large habitations, no
fires
apart from a forest fire raging in the midwest. Ah, but
indigenous
critters, running straight for the nearest body of water.
Least that's what the science officer
says such a cloud of dust
could
mean.
Could the fire have been set by the
Hivers? Thian asked.
Doubt it! Their scouts are just about inside the orbit of the
fifth
planet, your typical ringed giant.
`Your brother's reporting in?' Ashiant
asked from the seat he had
taken
behind Thian's couch.
Thian gestured for the captain to come
around. He hated reporting
to thin
air and repeated verbatim what Rojer had said.
`Too much potential to leave to the
Hivers for any reason,'
Ashiant
said, which was Thian's opinion as well.
The captain opened
communications
with the bridge. `Primary's spectrum
matches to within
.0356
of Sol?' Thian pondered that as well as Ashiant. `Hivers never
came
near Earth, sir. They did try to
colonize Sel, though, and Sefs
primary
is very much like Sol.' `Enough to make it the sun system
they're
searching for as a new homeworld?' Ashiant shook his head.
`I'd hazard the guess that they might
just need to replenish
supplies.
They haven't stopped anywhere He bent
over the comunit. `Ailsah,
based
on the examination of the supplies stored on Refugee and the
estimated
size of those Hiver crews that the `Dinis extrapolated, tell
me if
they'd be running close to empty?' `You suspect this might be
only a
supply run?' `It's a possibility but I'll need the figures
first.'
Ashiant grinned, rubbing his hands together in anticipation.
`How long before the main Fleet can
intercept the sphere?' `Seven
hours,
sir, but she appears to be slowing down.
That would be consonant with a resupply
action. We know Hiver
scout
ships have plenty of range but they may also want to conserve
fuel -
if they're still in search mode. The
KSTS just confirmed that
speed
reduction and has asked for battle dispositions of the
destroyers.
Thian could hear just the minute pulse of
excitement in the First
Officer's
calm voice.
`First, order all ships to be alert for
any sign that the Hiver
has
detected our approach. I've never quite
believed the `Dini report
on
Hiver sensor range. Anyway, Prime, ask
your brother to pass my
order
on to Captain Vergoin to release low-level probes. We might as
well
establish if it's just animals or potential sentients we're about
to save
from Hive attentions.' The bridge rang through again. `The
KLTL,
the Vadim, the Solidarity and the Genessee are asking for you.
`I'll be with them momentarily, First.'
When the channel was
closed,
Ashiant inhaled a deep breath. `I
almost look forward to
discovering
if those new missiles will be effective against a Hiver.'
He gave
Thian a wry grin. `Do I let the `Dinis
do the honours, Thian?'
Sensing
in that rare moment of Ashiant's candour more than the simple
question,
Thian smiled reassuringly.
`I don't think "let" is
operational, sir, but it'll be a triumph
for us
all. We'll have reduced by one more
ship their chance of
finding
that new homeworld they're desperate to have: that new base
from
which they can multiply the problems we ve already got in
containing
them. Then there's only the one ship
Squadron D's following
and
then we really will have reduced Hiver threat to manageable
proportions.
Ashiant gave a short bark of a
laugh. `Manageable, Prime?' He
laughed
sardonically again. `When we're
discovering that one in five
of the
M-5 planets on our way out here has a Hiver colony on it?'
Ashiant
threw out his hands in exasperation.
`Even that's a good deal more than we
knew before `Dinis ran
across
those three Hivers.' `Damn!' And Ashiant rammed one fist into
the
other palm. `I'd feel it more of an
accomplishment if this system
was the
one the Hivers have been so desperately searching for.' `Put it
this
way, sir, it's one more they won't occupy, even briefly!'
`Goodoint,
Prime. I could almost feel sorry for
our prey.
`I won't tell anyone I heard you say
that, Captain,' Thian said
with a
grin as he prepared to `path the new orders to his brother as
well as
a warning of the Hiver's slowing.
The Hiver scouts never got closer to the
lush planet than its
outer
moon. Nor were they quite so unaware of
an opposing force as
their
directness suggested. As the
Washington's scouts moved out of a
planetary
orbit to intercept them, the Hivers split in a
well-calculated
distraction even as they initiated a terrific barrage
at the
scouts before the larger destroyers could move into firing range
to
shield them.
Thian, film not loud, listen harder. I'm in a pod. Vergoin had
two
yeomen stuffing me and my `Dinis in here as soon as we began
closing
with the Hivers. Rojer sounded far more
indignant than scared.
Main screen's magnified to show the
blasts. Any damage?
Minor's all I can tell. I've got the pod's comunit on but I'm not
catching
all the . . . Wait a minute Rojer? ROJER?
Don't bother me now, brother. I've work to do!
Thian kept bothering Rojer with constant
demands for answers. In
between
those, he `pathed Clancy who was no more available to his
requests
for information than Rojer. Infliriated
with a disobedience
that
amounted to downright mutiny, he charged on to the Washington's
bridge
where the intense atmosphere reminded him that he might be
intruding
and he had half-turned to leave. Then
he saw that the main
screen
of the bridge gave far larger, clearer details of the battle
than
the one above his couch. What he saw
also made him realize
exactly
what essential work Rojer and Clancy were doing in deflecting a
virtual
onslaught of Hiver missiles. Definitely
he could tell Earth
Prime
that this was self-defence: if the Revere took a mortal blow, the
Hiver
scouts could pick off the pods one by one before the evacuees
could
get out of range. Rojer had shown good
sense with his deflection
policy!
The main batteries of the sphere began to
open up on the seven
Alliance
ships which had deployed themselves to prevent the Hiver
scouts
from escaping while the Nebula and the two Constellations were
converging
on the sphere. One advantage of the
round design was that
batteries
could be fired in any direction. Thian
knew from the Refugee
just
how much fire-power the Hiver had.
`Look, sir,' Vandermeer said, `the
Hiver's wasting ammunition as
usual. She isn't within range of our ships.' `The
scouts are.' `But
her
missiles are missing although - - .
Sir, Ensign Upland is of the
opinion
that the detonation of those missiles could cause shockwaves
almost
as dangerous to scout-ship hulls as a direct hit.' `My
compliments
to Ensign Upland, Ashiant said, nodding his head briefly in
acknowledgement
of the information. Then, under his
breath, he
muttered:
`When I get those two Talents, I'll skin `em, I'll keelhaul
them.'
Thian and the nearer bridge officers heard him.
`But they are managing to deflect
incoming rockets.
Tikele, how soon before we are in range
of the sphere?'
`Twenty-two
minutes.
`Why doesn't Spktm use the ones it's got
on the KLTS?' `I believe
the
captain's manoeuvring her into position now, sir,' Tikele
responded. `And two of our scouts are protecting
her. She's got to be
on
target, on those fuel tanks, and in range.
. she's. . she's fired
both,
sir.
Unbelievably one of the Hiver's scouts
managed to get between the
sphere
and the missiles, which penetrated it, sticking out port and
starboard.
`Like a scurrier skewered on arrows,
Thian murmured.
Then the blast occurred, an orange-red
eruption of force which
hurtled
the KLTS backward like a leaf in a storm.
Somehow the flanking
scouts
had peeled away and, although they were scudded further from
their
original positions, they did not appear to have taken much
damage. The KLTS patently had. As `Dini ships still did not carry
pods,
it was impossible to estimate how many of its crew survived.
ROJER!
CLANCY! FOR THE LOVE OF HEAVEN,
ANSWER ME, Thian roared,
catching
the gestalt of the Washington's generators to reachhis
targets.
I'm OK, Thian. But I had to bounce missiles.
Just like Granddad
did
when the Hiver attacked Deneb.
Not the same at all, Rojer! CLANCY?
I can hear you, I can hear you. Over the ringing in my ears.
Were we ever lucky?
Kloo's a damned fine pilot.
`Thian?' Ashiant called urgently. `Can you get in touch with
either
of your Talents and ask them to check the status of the KLTS?
The other destroyers must hold their
positions to contain the
sphere.'
`Yes, sir.' Rojer, you've `Dinis.
Ashiant's ordering Veigoin
and the
You do the Clancy's ship bette are moving in for the more That
that
was what the two doing was obvious while the three medium-sized
missiles
on the two remain scouts, all the time inching closer to the
sphere. - `We've just reached the maximum range of
the new missiles,
Captain,'
Vandermeer announced.
`Signal the Galaxy class ships to assume
Formation C and begin
firing
as soon as they are in maximum range.
The sphere must be distracted from the
destroyers.' She's some
mother
this one, Thian distinctly heard someone say.
It could have
been
anyone on the bridge, even Ashiant, dropping his mind shields in
the
excitement of battle.
The first of the new missiles the
Washington launched was not that
far off
its target but exploded on contact with a large fragment of the
Hiver's
scout. The next three, one from the
Washington and the others
from
the Solidarity and the Athene, penetrated the sphere as easily as
a sharp
knife cut through soft fruit.
`One, two,' began Ashiant under his
breath, `three, and he was led
by
Vandermeer, `FOUR' and it was practically a chorus. No-one got to
five'. The Hiver disintigrated by quadrants, like
skin being peeled
off a
round from top to bottom. Then the
fireball blossomed and its
lurnace
expanded, melting all in its white-hot circle.
The KLTL peeled off to follow one Hiver
scout and the Franklin
went
after the other.
With ordinary communications opened again
now the enemy was
routed,
Captain Spktm was able to send its regards to the Washington.
Its voice was shaky but proud of being
aboard the ship that had
fired
the first missile against the enemy.
The KLTS had taken a lot of
damage
from the blast concussion: many Dinis were dead and injured.
Some compartments had had to be closed
against the vacuum without
knowing
if they had been occupied.
Thian did not have time to find either
Rojer or Clancy to give
them
the dressing-down they so richly deserved for disobeying orders in
spite
of the life-saving success of that violation.
By the time he
spotted
them, some of his anger had dissipated.
They were across the
Washington
cargo hold which had been turned into an auxiliary `Dini
sick-bay,
doing much the same sort of emergency use of telekinesis he
was:
`lifting' the injured into beds, onto gurneys.
Rojer was helping
Medic
Sblipk among the injured `Dinis, with Gil and Kat rushing about
on
errands. Clancy was working among the
human wounded.
We'll all have a little talk later,
Rojer, Clancy, Thian said in
cold
voice.
Sure thing, bra. when there's a little more free time .
Don't get cocky with me, Rojer
Raven-Lyon!
who?
Me? Cocky? After what I just went through, bra?
That was almost . . . almost worse than the KLTL, Thi.
His brother's words, unrepentant though
they were, cooled Thian
still
further but he'd have to tell Earth Prime about their escapade.
He was responsible for all the Talents on
this expedition and
somehow
he had failed to make them obey orders they knew they mustn't
ignore.
If he'd had to tell his mother and father
that Rojer had - - `Hey,
Thi,
said a soft voice in his ear, and he felt a touch on his shoulder,
`you
need rest, honey.' Gravy looked up at him, her blue eyes anxious,
though
her face was as tired as his. He and
his `Dinis had been
working
with her, using kinesis to help her use her healing skills.
`if I rest, you do, too, Lieutenant
Senior Grade,' he said
sternly.
She glanced over the now orderly ward,
where `Dinis were immersed
in tubs
of restorative fluids, or wrapped in bandages of various
colours,
repairing damaged tissues, wounds, burns, and breaks. `Dinis
endured
discomfort better than humans did, Thian thought, and wondered
if that
was a species differentiation, rather than stoicism.
`Ah, here comes the new watch, Gravy said
with relief that came
out
close to a sob.
Thian leaned back against the nearest
support and `listened' for
his
brother. Rojer was asleep - Thian
couldn't tell where - and so was
Clancy. He'd get them both tomorrow . . when he'd had enough sleep.
`Thian,' and Gravy caught him by the hand
and pulled him around
the
corner. `You got enough energy left to
`port us to my room?' He
put
weary arms around her, his head resting on hers, and `ported them
to her
quarters on the level below. She palmed
the door lock and they
collapsed
in each other's arms onto the bed, asleep almost before they
had
stretched out on the horizontal surface.
`You realize that that Hiver ship, even
with its three scouts,
hadn't
a chance,' Rojer said, blithely tucking into a huge meal in
their
quarters late that next afternoon.
`Operation Overkill, that's
what it
was.' `Need I remind you how many `Dinis died in the KLTS?'
Thian
said, glaring at his brother.
He had read the riot act to both Rojer
and Clancy for
`endangering'
their lives which were far too valuable to be risked. He
could
also point to the minor cuts and contusions which both had
suffered
when their respective ships had manoeuvred abruptly or
suffered
concussive buffeting: those could as easily have been mortal
wounds.
`I'm not that slow, Thian,' Rojer replied
indignantly, even if I
didn't
manage to keep my balance through all the bumps and grinds the
Revere
did. But you should have seen some of
the others. I `ported
when I
could.' `I got most of mine, and Clancy fingered the long
pro-skin
dressing down one side of his face, the splint on his left
arm,
the sealed wound on the right, and managed a benevolent
expression,
`buffering someone else's impact.' `Besides which, big
brother,'
Rojer said, hands on his belt and an intense frown on his
face,
`if either of us had made use of the escape pods, you'd really
have
had bad news to send home. It only
occurred to me when I was
stuck
in it, that the damned pod was the most dangerous place to be! I
was at
Xh-33, remember, and I watched the queens' pods get blown out of
the sky
the way we'd pick off avians! Any one
of the Hiver scouts
could
have made a real killing. - - of pods!'
`We also saved both the
Revere
and the Franklin from being made into sieves,' Clancy reminded
Thian,
`or smashed flat. Shielding the ships
shielded us and it's
really
only a very minor variation of our standing orders from Uncle
Jeff.'
He grinned engagingly. `Just a larger
escape pod.
`I'll have to tell him what you did!'
Thian was not about to let
them
get away without reprimand.
`Go right ahead!' Clancy said, his grin
broader, `but I heard that
both
Spktm and Ashiant are mentioning our defensive action as the main
reason
casualties were minimal. although I do
now appreciate why the
Mrdinis
had to consider suicide attacks! There
can't be much room on
those
scouts with all those heavy missiles they fire off. And that
sphere
wasn't going to give up short of total destruction!' Thian could
never
stay angry long, not in the presence of Clancy, though he
continued
to feel an irritable frustration, especially as the two young
heroes
tossed off their actions as nothing out of the ordinary for
Talents
of their abilities. That almost annoyed
Thian more.
`I think,' Gravy told him when they met
for a quiet meal in the
medics'
mess-room, `that you're a little jealous maybe, Thian, that you
weren't
in on the action?' `Me? Jealous?' He
regarded Alison-Anne,
startled.
He'd never thought of himself as a
jealous person for any reason.
Her blue eyes twinkled up at him. `Jealous of things or people,
no,
Thian. But jealous, a little perhaps,
of prestige. `Are you sure
you're
still T-5?' I`Probably not,' she said airily with a delighted
sigh,
`but I am an empath and very empathic for you.' She reached
across
the small table and stroked the back of his hand lightly, a
contact
that conveyed more than empathy. `I've
picked up as much from
you -
Talentwise - as I have about treating `Dinis from Medic Sblipk.
More perhaps,' and her eyes laughed at
him over the rim of her
cup.
`You had the hard part - watching,
waiting, hoping. Do Talents
pray?'
This was said with such an ingenuous expression that Thian felt
his
aggravation and frustration dissolve.
`Besides which,' she went
on, teasing
him, `you saw action long before they did, on the Great
Sphere.'
Thian made a face at her. "That
little fracas was not against
live
Hivers.' `The difference is immaterial, Thian.
And it was far
more
dangerous than what your brother and cousin did.' Thian faith%lly
forwarded
Captain Ashiant's detailed report of the encounter and
decided,
when he could not help but `feel' Jeff Raven's furious
reaction
to the heroism of Rojer and Clancy, that he could safely leave
any
further discipline to Earth Prime, and Callisto Prime, and possibly
both
Aurigaean Primes. Righteous anger often
ripened with waiting.
Thian was called back by Earth Prime
later to receive the official
commendations
and replies from the Alliance and High Council as well as
new
orders.
The Fleet was now to join Squadron D,
using all available Talent
to make
the `portation, and track down the third sphere with all
possible
speed. There was great weight being
given to the theory that
the
three spheres had been looking for a particular G-type star, as
close a
replica to the one which had turned nova as possible.
The High Council did not care to wait
until the remaining sphere
found
such a star and a new homeworld planet.
Once that Hive sphere had been dealt
with, the Fleet was to
return,
making in-depth surveys of all potentially habitable planets
and
disabling Hiver colonies, using the Genessee ploy whenever possible
to
remove sphere ships from use.
`What's the High Council after, might I
ask?' Ashiant enquired of
Thian
in an agitated fashion. `A fleet of
sphere ships? We've got
more
than we need right now.
We should blow `em up. Save time and effort.' `Use `em as
decoys?'
Thian threw out as a possible solution.
`I think this "know your enemy and
you can defeat him easier" is
going a
bit too far.' `Perhaps I misinterpreted, sir,' Thian said,
running
over the wording in his mind.
`Disabling the Hiver colonies
could
merely mean making certain they had no further space
capabilities. Shall I reconfirm?' `Please do.
I doubt the High Council meant to bring
more spheres back, Jeff
Raven
said but his tone was uncertain. But
with `Dinis you'd never
know,
would you? I'll get back to you.
When he did, he was chuckling. Seems the `dinis would like to
have an
intact sphere for each of their colonial worlds as trophies.
Admiral Mekturian pointed out that the
two operational ones
presently
in our possession could be displayed wherever necessary. I
will
never understand `Dini logic or honour.
The Admiral is more
sensible
and repeats that the Fleet is to destroy Hiver space-travel
capabilities
until other remedies can be effected to prevent their
colonial
aggrandizement.
Other remedies?
That's what's being discussed. There's a poive4\4l lobby that
would
prevent the Alliance, and not just the human element, from doing
unto
the Hivers as they have done to others.
why reduce ourselves to
their
level?
what else could be done, Granddad? Not, Thian added hastily, that
I
believe the annihilation of any spedes could be justified.
Ah, now, Thian, the discussions are
ongoing and heated.
Both Gktmglnt and Admiral Mekturian are
insisting that nothing be
engraved
in granite until both investigatory units, the Main Fleet and
Squadron
B have returned from their voyages, laden, we hope, with
information
enough to suggest a sensible, humane and `Din fled course
of
action.
If we've to stop and investigate every
bloody M-5 system on the
way
back, sir, Thian began By then some form of common sense might have
resulted
from the current shambles. Once more I
am relieved that FT&T
is
involved only in the mechanics, rather than the politics, of this
issue. And, there was definite amusement in Jeff
Raven's tone, as a
messenger,
I am too far removed from those I deliver them to, to ster
the
fate often meted out to the bearers of adverse replies. So,
Grandson,
I say unto you, bring back as much information as you
possibly
can, about the bright new worlds that have not been Hiverized
and can
give the hot-blooded another focus for their energies.
Wouldn't a colonial explosion be
following Hiver tactics?
Really, Thian, your sense of proportion
is slightly skewed by
distance. Humans and `Dinis respect other lifeforms
and any planet
bearing
identifiable sentients is to be scratched off the list.
Oh, but put up one of those warning
beacons that'll inform the
Alliance
of incoming Hive traffic. There're
still a lot of those
damned
spheres loose in this galaxy.
The official segments of that long
exchange were duly reported to
Captain
Ashiant and then repeated to the other captains and first
officers,
in Basic and in `Dini, so that there could be no
misunderstanding
of either directive.
Thian excused himself then, to give the
brass the chance to
discuss
the orders privately.
Outside the Talents' quarters, the
corridors of the Washington
still
echoed muted sounds of celebration, although the Nebula class
ship
was now swinging around the rescued planet on its way out of the
system.
Thian knew that the science officers
would be busy at every
available
station, recording whatever scrap of surface information
could
be learned during the circumnavigation.
Probes had returned with
samples
which would be analysed and essayed. He
watched as the planet
turned
under him even as the Washington turned round the planet to the
original
sight he had had - - - had it only been two days before? The
forest
fire had gone out, doused by a rain system which, unfortunately,
resulted
in smoke obscuring that area so the cause of the conflagration
remained
a mystery. The creatures which had fled
the fire were now
browsing
by the lake which had saved them and, though none appeared to
be more
than a variety of large ruminants, grazers, and several equally
big
predators, none acted with any sentience.
`And not a single creature will ever
know, or care about the fate
we
saved them from,' Gravy said softly from the open door to his room.
When she had come off duty the night
before, they'd done some
private
celebrating. All her patients would
recover and she was no
longer
fearful for the progress of several of the `Dini burn victims.
Thian held out his arm and she came
across on bare feet to stand
in
under it. She liked the fact that she
fitted just there. He closed
his arm
and pulled her against him.
`Are we on our way out of this system,
Thi?' she asked, noticing
the
rotation.
He nodded. `Orders came in. If that
door opens, be prepared to
get
`ported back in.' She started to release him and he pulled her back
against
him.
`All the brass's there and they've a lot
of talking to do, so I
don't
think we need worry. Besides,
MisonAnne,' and he looked down at
her,
`I'd rather stop playing hide-and-seek `Thian, you know perfectly
that
your folks will have someone better in mind for you than a T-5
empath who's - Thian put one finger
across her lips. `Don't you
poor-mouth
yourself in my hearing, Lieutenant Senior Grade, sir, ma'
am!'
`Look, you were a raw kid - - -` I'm no raw kid now, Alison-Anne
Greevy,
Thian said, turning to pull her full against him and pushing
her
head up to catch her lovely blue eyes, and I have far more need of
a
comfortable T-5 empath whom I happen to love, respect and admire for
certain
earthy and caring qualities I haven `t found anywhere else.
If we can still stand each other's
company at the end of this
mission,
I'd say we had a good chance of enjoying a good life together.
And I'll probably opt for full service as
a naval Prime. I'd be
the
first . I can talk Granddad into
creating the position.
Alison could and often did shield her
thoughts from him but not
the
wisfful hope in her eyes.
`If you're thinking of Flavia
Bastianmajani, don't, he said and
kissed
her, loving her with mind, heart and soul.
`She had other ideas
even
when we first met.' `She did?' Thian threw his head back, laughing
at her
indignation. `She's probably as
assiduously pursuing her own
way as
I have been mine!' `A trained T-1 like Flavia?' `Sometimes,
Mison-Anne,
you astound me.
`Well, I like to be able to do just that,
I can tell you, Prime
thian
Lyon, sir.
`Good.
Come, astound me now. I think
I've some free time to
fill.'
When Thian was called, late that evening, to make contact with
Earth
Prime, it was to ask permission to exchange the damaged Mrdini
destroyer
KLTS with the KLLM currently in Squadron D. That was agreed
though
the other two ships comprising the squadron were to be sent back
to be
refitted.
I'm told there's an adequate bng on board
the Valparaiso so you
can
send those dissidents back and rid yourself of unnecessary baggage,
Earth
Prime added.
Thian had not liked that aspect of his
responsibilities but it was
now no
secret that several attempts had been made to tamper with the
Washington's
missiles' guidance systems. Suspects
had been
interrogated
by the NI officers, with Thian watching in a covert
observation
booth. In all but one case his Talent
wasn't needed and,
in that
one, he had felt both distress and pity that the ensign, a
young
woman of otherwise inpeccable record in her duties in the engine
complex
of the Washington, felt it her duty to humankind to destroy the
first
of the Nebula class design because a ship that huge and powerful
was
against the wishes of the God her native planet revered.
How she had slipped through the careful
screening of any candidate
to the
Space Academy became the subject of a dedicated search of both
Naval
Intelligence and the medical board. She
was placed in the brig
under
maximum surveillance. She protested
vehemently about the `paid',
godless
saboteurs that also occupied the accommodation.
They complained because she prayed both
loud and long, trying to
bring
them to see the `light' and save their `souls'. Only bouts of
laryngitis
silenced her. And those, according to
the officer in charge
of the
facility, never lasted long enough.
All the Fleet elements were now making
their majestic way out of
the
system so blithely unaware of its escape from annihilation. One
day a
developing sentient species might wonder about the ring of debris
about
the outer moon.
In their ready room, Thian, Rojer and
Clancy were toting up the
potential
power they could access to `port the Fleet to Squadron D's
present
location.
`Well, it's not that far,' Rojer was
saying in an attempt to
encourage
himself. Gil and Kat were lounging on
the couch beside him,
playing
one of the finger games with a piece of coloured string that
often
absorbed them.
`With ninety T-2s and 3s to spread out,
plus the sixty 4s - and
don't
forget they're mainly kinetics, too strategically placed `There's
none on
any of the `Dini ships,' Clancy reminded them.
`So we haul them over last `That wouldn't
sit well,' Rojer said.
`Look, Thian, you and Clancy haul the
Washington. Give me ten 2s
and
twenty 3s and I'll `port Spktm. It's
the mass of the Washington
that's
going to be the worst to `port. Even
Constellations are easy
after
that.
`Or, I stay here in the Washington and
send to you.' `Who's the
T-2 on
Squadron D?' Clancy asked.
Thian and Rojer gave him a weary look. `Stierlman!' `Oh!' Rojer
lifted
one shoulder in a shrug. `He hasn't
lost anything sent him . .
. yet.
`Well, we sure don't want to aim the
Washington at him all of a
sudden,'
Thian said.
Semirame KIoo and Alison-Anne arrived, off
duty now, and Thian
absently
`ported in more drinks and finger foods for them.
`It's getting the experienced Talents in
the right places to
buffer
the new ones who'll never have had a chance to merge.
`Then why don't you do a drill merge first?'
KIoo said with a
wicked
grin at Thian in memory of a certain mock drill she'd pulled.
`Who?
How? What?' Thian asked although
he mindtouched his
approval
of her suggestion.
She tapped out a sequence on the terminal
and a spatial view of
the
disposition of the Fleet came on screen.
She sniffed and tapped at
the
destroyers in flank positions. `Change
`em over. Switch the
Athene
with the Comanche. Just as an
exercise.' Then she chuckled
mischievously. `See how long it takes the crews to figure
out what
happened. Could be a bit of fun.' `I think,' Thian
said, standing up,
`I'd
better check such a fleet manoeuvre with Captain Ashiant.' He was
grinning
with sheer devilment as he asked Ashiant for an immediate
interview`More
trouble, Thian?' Ashiant demanded, striding into the
Talents'
ready room almost as soon as he had broken off the call.
`No, sir, not trouble, just sorting out
how to make the jump to
join
Squadron D with most efficient use of the Talents we've got. I'd
like to
have a trial merge and, say, switch the Athene with the
Comanche.'
`And see how long it takes them to realize they've been
moved,'
Rojer couldn't resist adding.
Ashiant looked from brother to brother,
his broad face
expressionless,
hands behind his back.
`Might prove salutary at that. Proceed.' Thian waited a moment.
`Oh, I'd like to remain here, Ashiant
added and then grinned, the
cloth
of his shipsuit beginning to wrinkle with his slow chuckle.
Immediately the two Primes swung onto
their couches. `We'll try
it,
merging with just the Talents on each of the destroyers,' Thian
explained. `Me with Athene and Rojer with the
Comanche.' `No prior
warning?'
Ashiant asked.
`Just the code word. Ready when you are, Rojer.
Three, two, one, SAKI, the brothers
broadcast and instantly felt
the
response of Talents: scrambling a little to obey the unexpected and
unusual
summons.
Switch!
Captain Ashiant, Commander KIoo,
Lieutenant SG Greevy, and T-2
Clancy Sparrow stared at the display on the screen.
`Caught it!' Ashiant cried in triumph,
clapping his hands
together. `No more than a ripple. Now, let's see how `Captain
Ashiant,
there's been a fluctuation of some kind around the Athene and
`
Vandermeer's voice broke off. `Sir,
would you come to the bridge,
please?'
`On my way, First.' He turned back to the Talents just as the
bridge
door swooshed open, twisted his thumb upwards in an approving
gesture
and unexpectedly winked.
`Captain, it's very odd, and I don't know
how it could have
happened,'
the Talents heard a perplexed Vandermeer saying, `but I
could
have sworn the Athene was in the starboard flank position . .
`Incoming message from the Athene,
sir. . .` the com officer
announced.
`Full marks to the Athene bridge crew,
First,' Ashiant said in a
calm
voice, rippling with an undertone that the Talents had no problems
identifying
as suppressed amusement.
`Incoming query from the Comanche, sir -
- `Tell them to hold
their
current new positions. A drill has been
in progress. Full
security
was in force. Put the Comanche on
. . . Ah, Captain Derynic,
your
bridge crew needs a bit of sharpening.
The Athene reported the
change
of position a full two minutes before you did.
I want every crew fully alert. We may have defeated one Hive
sphere
but we've another one we know of out there, and we still are not
positive
they have no intercolonial communications of a nature we have
yet to
understand. Yours is the conn, First.'
Ashiant returned to the
Talent
ready room. Once inside and the door
closed, he enjoyed a
hearty
chuckle.
`I think that's a drill that's proved
more efficacious than most
I've
ordered,' he said, coughing a bit into his hand as he finished his
laugh. `Did it prove conclusive for you as well,
Primes?' `Yes,
indeed,'
Rojer and Thian chorused.
`With a little more practice none of `em
will hesitate, Thian
added. `Now, sir, our problem becomes more a matter
of protocol: which
captain's
ship goes first of the bigger ones.
We've just proved we can
swap
destroyers with only their indigenous Talent merging.
`It's the mass that's the problem?' `Not
as much as whose nose'll
be out
of joint by being left to last.
`That's no problem at all, Primes,' Ashiant said. `I'll give the
orders
and they'll be followed. Captain Spktm
on the KSTS goes first,
then
Captain Germys and the Genessee. I'd
want all the destroyers
next,
then the rest of the Galaxies, and the Washington last. How does
that
sound?' `Fine, sir. We'll need to
rearrange some Talents to more
critical
positions `Any way you need `em `And it'll take two days to
complete
the `portation.
`That all?' Ashiant seemed mildly
surprised.
Thian wasn't sure if the surprise was
favourable or not.
`With respect, sir, Commander KIoo said,
`the mass to be `ported
is
considerable.
`I wasn't complaining, KIoo.' Ashiant
turned to Thian. `There is
a
Talent along with Squadron D, isn't there?
To give you an assist?'
`Yes,
sir, we'll be in contact with him as soon as we've rearranged
personnel. That'll take the rest of today.' Ashiant
nodded and
returned
to his bridge, leaving the Talents gazing at each other in
puzzlement.
`I don't think he really understands
what's involved, Alison-Anne
said
thoughtfully.
`I'm not all that sure I do, either,'
Thian said. He gave himself
a shake
and briskly started compiling lists of which key Talents would
have to
be moved and to which ship.
When Thian made contact, the mind of T-2
Stierlman on board
Squadron
D's Galaxy class ship, the Valparaiso, exhibited such surprise
and
consternation for the task to be performed that Thian immediately
deleted
the man from his range of key links.
Stierlman's job at his
end
only required holding a firm mental tone as a beacon. The very
mention
of the proposed merge weakened Stierlman's touch to the
tentativeness
of a Tower novice. Thian's sister,
Petra, would have
been
more use. How had Laria stood the man's
indecisiveness for as
long as
she had?
The distance, Prime, it's the distances
involved, Stierlman
rabbited
on. They keep getting longer and
longer. We've no right to
intrude
so far from our homeworlds. We really
don't.
They're so far away.
Then you'll be relieved to hear that the
Valparaiso is scheduled
to be
returned to Phobos Base for refitting.
She is?
And I can return with her? Hope
strengthened his mental
touch.
Most certainly. I would insist on it, Stierlman.
You've been on
such a
long tour. Thian gritted his teeth as
he `pathed that
reassurance
but he needed Stierlman able to operate for just two more
days.
But how will we get back? We're such a long way out.
Oh, no problem, Stierlman. This fleet's Talent heavy, which
wasn't
accurate even though Thian felt that he'd reassigned the right
people
to the right positions. We'll be with
you tomorrow. what's
your
current time?
Ah oh - - 1635.
Inform Captain Halstead that the
Constellation Class AS KSTS,
Captain
Spktm, will be `ported to join you at 0800 your time tomorrow.
what do I have to do? A thin line of barely contained fear
trembled
in the mental voice.
Nothing, Stierlman, Thian said kindly. You `re already there and
we've
only to join you.
Two days later `we've only' was a choice
of words that Thian with
any of
the `portations but it had been a draining process for the T-is
and
T-2s who bore the brunt of each merge.
The fact that each merge had different
components also added to
the
strain on the merge focus. The second
day, after a hasty
conference,
Thian `ported back specially selected 3s and 4s from those
whose
ships had already joined Squadron D. Rojer had gone to the KSTS
to
strengthen future links since Stierlman was useless.
Thian had reluctantly sent Alison-Anne to
the Genessee with orders
for her
to report to the Valparaiso and find out what was wrong with
Stierlman.
He had occasion to wonder if he shouldn't
perhaps have brought the
Washington
across first and managed from there.
But he had no cogent
reason
why that would have worked better.
Especially once he managed
the
final and major merge that `ported the Nebula class ship.
Now, anyone wakes either Roj or myself
any reason short of a
Hiverfleet
materializing in front of us, I'll kill `im.
So help me, I Thian sighed with immense
relief as his heavy,
hurting
head touched the softness of his pillow and he was immediately
asleep.
Though Alison-Anne swore herself blind
that Thian had slept
fourteen
hours without moving, that his `Dinis had been up and about
and
eaten and were giving their usual tutorials, Thian was positive he
had
only just put his head to the pillow when she shook him awake.
`I am sorry, Thian, honey, but Rojer says
you've got to talk to
Earth
Prime, too. It's real urgent.' She
separated the last two words
to
emphasize them, her face so bad-news blank that he didn't want to
`look'
in his present half-conscious state. He
drank the stimulant
beverage
she handed him, grateful that it was cool enough to drink off
quickly.
He grabbed the clean ship suit she handed
him and, slipping his
feet
into the soft-soled shoes he preferred, strode across the lounge
to the
ready room. He had worked the kinks out
of his shoulders and
his
neck by the time the door opened for him.
Both Rojer and Clancy
were on
their couches; Semirame KIoo leaned against the wall, arms
crossed
on her chest, watching their faces which were blank with
concentration. She glanced briefly away from them as Thian
entered and
jerked
her head for him to take his place fast.
He had already picked up the thread of
mental message which the
two
were receiving.
inform the captains to prepare. I know the missiles are heavy
work
but you `re going to need all you can stuff on board Jeff sounded
as if
he'd let off a long whistle of Thian!
Good morning, said Earth
Prime,
aware of his entry into the discussion.
Briefly, I'll repeat
what
I've detailed to Rojer arid Clancy.
Those warning beacons the
squadrons
have been setting in the heliopause of Hive-occupied worlds
are
going off one after another. Captain
Soligen informs us that
Squadron
B is in pursuit of two and worried about another one or two
coming
up behind them. With only two Galaxy
class and two destroyers,
one of
them minus significant numbers of its ordinary complement, she
is not
really equipped to tackle two or more Hivers and their
complement
of over-armed scouts. Nor does she have
the new Hive-hull
piercing
missiles.
Did that mad `Dini captain set off in the
captured sphere?
Thian thought with a groan. Did Captain Kimi have any armament?
Did Flavia tell it where we figured the
missile controls were?
Easy, Thian. Flavia and the others `ported Klml into CThrf space
a week
ago. Laria says it arrived, scared the
short hairs off half the
`Dini
population, but let's deal with your current situation. Thian
had
never heard quite that tone of voice from his grandfather before
and
concentrated on this briefing. With
alarms going off all over the
Alliance,
the High Council is reluctant to send additional units to
support
you, despite the fact that you'll obviously have a fight on
your
hands even with the two squadrons already in your quadrant. But,
before
you give Captain Ashiant the good news, can you give me any
information
on this totally unexpected mobilization of spheres? High
Council
is rather - upset, you might say. Thian
grinned, reassured by
that
flicker of Earth Prime's usual wry delivery.
what's this Rojer
was
telling me about a new homeworld sun?
That looks a much more valid theory now
that the Hivers have
reacted. I'm also afraid that the theory that Hivers
do not have
communications
just got knocked down a worm-hole.
amazement. The High Council is going to be scared shitless.
Not as badly as I am, sir. This Fleet set beacons, too, you know,
and
Commander Kloo just handed me a note which confirms that those four
beacons
have gone off With the two or three Captain Soligen can account
for, we
can now add another four, AND the one we're chasing.
Seven, possibly eight? And they can communicate with each other?
why now? Jeff sounded exasperated.
I think, sir, we've made the mistake of
tpresuming' too much about
the
Hivers.
Obviously. Let's get back to this homeworld theory.
The Hivers' homeworld sun went nova. They sent out the three Hive
spheres
to find the right sort of primary with an M-5 planet to replace
what
they'd lost. The way we're seeing it
now is that the original
three
spheres the `dinis came across were an advance group, spreading
out to
look for just the right primary which is why they by-passed so
many
likely colonial M-5s. The Great Sphere
was following with
everything
else needed to set up the new base. So
let's operate on the
theory
- because I don't want to presume anything I can't prove about
the
Hivers - that this Sphere Three is the lucky one and has located
the
primary they want with the sort of planet ùthey need. They are
either
inviting others to come see and/or want additional groups to
secure
the world. Or, and I like this
-possibility less, Three knows
it's being
pursued and has broadcast for assistance, it being the last
exploratory
ship left.
ùOr all of them!
Oh!
There was a pause while Jeff Raven assimilated that
information. Well, we - the Alliance - certainly can't
let them
establish
a new home base. look, inform Captain
Ashiant of the
situation
within the Alliance. Assure him that we
will supply whatever
new
missiles and material you can `port out there but he's got to make
do with
the two Fleet elements in that quadrant.
The High Council is
adamant
that all other Fleet units remain deployed within the Alliance
to
counteract any Hive intrusions. I'll do
all I can, personally and
professionally,
to help you, Thian.
Thank you, sir.
Damn it, boy, I didn't think I was letting
you, any of you, in for
a
WAR! Jeff sounded more indignant than
alarmed for their sakes.
Sir, we won't let you down!
Remember this, Primes, and Clancy, and
I've said this to Flavia,
you
Talents are to preserve yourselves!
That we will, you may be sure of it. Thian put a good deal of
strength
in that assurance.
I'd better be, was Jeff Raven's final
word.
Rojer and Clancy regarded Thian with
sardonic expressions as they
all sat
at the end of that `pathing.
`And how are we going to do that, bra,'
Rojer asked, `when we know
the
mortality rate of escape pods in a Hive encounter?' Thian started
to
chuckle, then his amusement so overcame him that he fell to one side
on the
couch while the others regarded him as if he'd lost his wits.
`Rojer you should . know what's so funny. You did it yourself We
use a
variant of the Genessee ploy! It's the
only logical course of
action! Hell, we know the insides of a sphere ship
like we know a
Tower.
All we have to do is get close
enough. And not all that close
either.
Semirame KIoo was actually the first to
perceive what Thian was
thinking
and stared at him with an awed expression.
`That's no way to
fight a
war, Thian Raven-Lyon!' `Who was it said that all's fair in
love
and war! Hell's bells, Rome, why should
more than the enemy die
in a
war they started?' `The `Dini won't look at it quite the same way,
Clancy
reminded him. `They achieve honour
destroying Hiver ships.
Thian dismissed that. `They still have the scouts to take out.
That'll give them glory enough. If I knew the insides of a scout
as well
as I do a sphere, we might be able to work out something inside
`em,
too.
`D'you think Ashiant will go along with
this bright plan of
yours?'
KIoo asked sceptically.
`Well, I think it'd be best if we let
them all steam a bit. It
wouldn't
be for me to act, as Grandmother says, like a cocky kid. But
didn't
the `Dinis approach us to form a mutual protection Alliance
because
we managed to defeat the sphere with no casualties on our
side?'
`What was it you said to Granddad, Thi?' Rojer asked, cocking
his
head at his brother. `About presuming
something we don't know for
sure?'
`For one thing, Thian,' Clancy put in, `using our kinesis to
shield
against Hiver missiles has a finite limit - our individual
strengths. I'll be frank. I'd about run out of the energy to keep up
the
necessary gestalt on the Franklin before the engagement ended.'
Rojer
nodded.
`Shielding ought not to be so great a
problem. Look, let's inform
Captain
Ashiant. Even my solution's going to
need more naval tactics
than I
know.' `Glad to hear you admit it, Thi,' said KIoo with
approval. `But if I grasped your plan properly, it'd
save a halacious
amount
of lives!' Ashiant heard the report with a blank expression but
the way
his eyes blinked rapidly from time to time and the way they
moved
over items on his desk told Thian, who knew him the best, that he
was
already mulling over available options.
At the point where Thian
said
that the High Council was keeping all additional units in Alliance
space,
he grimaced and `hmmmd' deep in his throat.
`I can understand that,' he said,
allowing the words to emerge on
a long
expelled breath. `We shall first take
Earth Prime up on his
offer
to send us more missiles and whatever other supplies the Fleet
needs
topping up.' He tapped the connection to the bridge. `Mr Wasiq,
please
call a red emergency session of all captains, first officers,
gunnery
and commissary personnel. The Primes
will be standing by to
`port
carriers to the Washington. Mr
Vandermeer, clear the landing bay
and be
ready to receive human and `Dini visitors appropriately.' Having
given
the necessary preliminary orders, Ashiant sat very still, not
even
steepling his fingers as he sometimes did, his eyes unfocused but,
if
Thian couldn't read the thoughts, he was aware of intense mental
activity
ùAbruptly Ashiant rose and, with an odd explosion of breath
from
his slightly opened mouth, pulled the blouse of his shipsuit down.
`We have quite a job of work ahead of us,
don't we?' Thian nodded.
Rojer, Clancy and KIoo shot Thian curious
glances but he ignored
them.
`Rojer, would you be kind enough to discover
from Captain
Soligen's
Primes, what course setting she's currently on in her pursuit
of the
two spheres? If she knows which systems
they emerged from, and
where
the third one might come from?' Then he looked at Thian. `Has
Squadron
B been informed of the total picture?' `Earth Prime was not
specific
on that point, sir.
Ashiant nodded. `Theri tell her, Rojer, and, as tacffully as
possible,
ask her to refrain from taking direct action.
I think we
have
presumed too much from too little substantiated information -`
Ashiant
missed the look Thian received from the others, `. . . but from
all the
`Dinis know, a sphere does not initiate space attacks.
Let us hope they are, as has been their
custom, singleminded in
their
current mission.
Ashiant began to pace then, hands behind
his back.
`We don't yet know if their comparable
primary has been
discovered,
do we? How far ahead could you `port a
scout, Prime?'
`Using
the mass of Sphere Three as one reference point, we could
possibly
send it that much further beyond as the distance between our
current
position and the sphere's.' We've never done anything like
that,
Thian, Rojer said, his mind tone aghast with consternation.
I think we may have to do a lot of things
that haven't been done
before,
Roj. But I know we could manage that.
The exchange was so brief that Thian did
not miss Ashiant's reply.
`We might be in a tactically superior
position if we could
establish
exactly where the sphere is headed.
I
know I would feel a considerable relief if that could be
ascertained.
`Excuse me, sir,' Kloo said, `but we
don't even know what they're
looking
for. How would we be able to find what
they haven't?' `Since
we now
have a sizeable file on what they haven't wanted, perhaps any
G-star
registering odd fluctuations or variations or sun-spot activity,
or
aberrations not listed, would be worth staking out. This third
sphere
- and for the first time since receiving news of the
unfavourable
developments, Captain Ashiant vented agitation. `Bells!
Gentlemen, this is Operation Number
Three. So, Number Three will
undoubtedly
have to make a course correction at some point. If advance
scouts
- we d best deploy all we have `and he paused to look queryingly
at
Thian who nodded with more energy than he felt for such a project.
`We will be in a better position to cover
possible objectives.
KIoo, you'll command the Revere and, when
you assemble your crew,
include
Lieutenant-Commander Langio. She's the
best astrogator, and
whatever
other personnel might be useful in that aspect. I'll have to
let
other captains have their byte on selections but you're mine.
KIoo looked briefly towards Clancy but
caught Thian's quick head
shake and,
saluting, retired from the room.
The comunit buzzed then. `Sir,' said the com officer, Eki Wasiq,
`we've
replies from everyone and most are ready to lift on the "go"
from
the Primes.' Ashiant nodded to the three Talents. `I'll want all
three
of you at this strategy conference, too.' Do we know what we `re
getting
ourselves in for, bra? Rojer asked,
echoing the sentiments
Clancy
held clear to be seen as the three jogged back to their ready
room.
No, but we've done pretty well so far,
handling matters as they
come,
haven't we? Thian said with a grin as
he swung his feet up on
the
couch and began to lean into the generators for gestalt. He would
use as
much artificial help as he could, to spare his energies for what
he was
undoubtedly to be saddled with all too soon.
And I'm Just as
scared
as you are.
Neither Prime was at all surprised when
their `Dinis entered the
room
and settled beside them as if on guard.
`Who're we to pick up first, Mr Wasiq?'
Thian asked.
`Give them to us in batches of threes, please.
`Ah, well, Spktm, Prim and Ktpl sound
awful eager `Is there a
`Dini
officer available to greet them properly?' `Aye, sir.' Take `em
in
order, Thian said to Rojer and Clancy and reached out to grasp the
`Dini
carrier from the Constellation KSTS.
`All in neatly, Thian,' Wasiq said, a
note of relief in his voice.
`Next are Captains Shepherd, Cheseman and
Germys.' All were on
board
within fifteen minutes and, as the Talents rose from their
couches,
Alison-Anne appeared with a tray of high-protein bars and more
stimulants.
`I told Commander Exeter that you'd need
watching, she said,
glaring
at the three, `and you will! Even your
`Dinis know something
big's
up.' They don't know the half of it, do they?
Thian said
grinning
as he grabbed up some of the bars and deposited them in his
thigh
pockets and drained the beverage. Rojer
and Clancy followed his
example.
`Gravy,' he added, grasping her elbow, so
she'd at least get an
empathic
reading of the urgency of the day, `get in touch with all T-2s
and
T-3s and have them alert and ready for unexpected duties.' Do I use
the
code?
Not yet.
We've got the strategy meeting to get through first But
if any
2s and 3s are slated for one of the scouts Rome can have her
choice,
but I'll want to clear on anyone else first.
I'll need the
best of
kinetics here.
Alison-Anne nodded in response and, while
Thian would have liked a
quick
embrace from her to sustain him, he approved of her moving
immediately
to carry out his orders.
Rojer, make that `path to Flavia and find
out what the captain
wanted
to know from Captain Soligen.
Right.
It won't take long. I don't want
to miss a moment of this
meeting.
Rojer arrived with that information and
gave it to Captain Ashiant
just as
Thian began repeating the message pathed to him by Earth Prime,
along
with Captain Soligen's situation. The
three Primes setfied back
then,
to wait until the initial reaction was over and Captain Ashiant
called
for comments on appropriate tactics. As
Thian listened to
opinions,
options and, more importantly, the almost over-confident
optimism
of humans, he was half sorry that the recent skirmish with the
second
sphere and its scouts had ended so successfully. Everyone had
recovered
from the original scare.
Confidence was useful - in
moderation. Presumption, and the
Mrdini
commanders were the worst in that area, could lead to disaster.
`Prime Thian!' His name jolted him out of
his contemplation.
`Sir?' and he swivelled in his chair to
face Captain Shepherd of
the
Vadim.
`Did you identify any communications
facility on the control board
of the
Refugee?' `No, sir, but there was a lot of sort of
end-of-the-row
positions whose function had not been identified at the
conclusion
of our assignment.
`Can you find out if such a function has
now been recognized?' `I
will
query Earth Prime on that point, sir.
And when Captain Shepherd
looked
as if he expected Thian to perform his contact then and there,
he
added, `With respect, Captain, Prime's time is at a premium within
the
Alliance so I was asked to collect all pertinent data for one
sending.
`Oh!
Yes, I quite understand though that should be a priority
question,'
the older man said, his prominent eyebrows nearly touching
over
the bridge of his nose as he fumed quietly over a delay.
I`Indeed it is, sir, and I'm certain High
Council has the Phobos
Base
working all the hours of a day to discover what and how.' `What
good
would that do, Shepherd?' Cheseman Iaskedlunfly. `We wouldn't
have
the foggiest what they were saying even if we did access their
communications
frequency?' Shepherd considered that but refused to
concede.
`We'd at least know when they were
contacting each other, and, if
we
could determine the direction, be warned from what other quadrants
we
might expect additional units to join Number Three. I'll be candid,
Cheseman,
Ashiant, one sphere posed enough problems.
We may have the
state-of-the-art
missiles which have now proven effective, but the
possibility
of eight - or more such ships, plus twenty-four of those
over-kill
scouts makes a formidable adversary.' `We have reinforcements
`Germys
began, pausing to frown at the ensign who entered as discreetly
as
possible to give Ashiant a note.
Shepherd took advantage of that pause and
sprang in with: ` Who
are
themselves not in a favourable situation with a possible third
sphere
coming up their ass. And what's this,
Ashiant, about sending
the
scouts out ahead of Number Three, to try to find the one G-star in
I don't
know how many astronomical lengths ahead of us that these
spheres
could be homing in on? If that is what
they're doing? And
what is
their sudden mass mobilization all about?
Frankly, I think
they're
assembling a punitive force to despatch this Fleet and end its
threat
to their colonial expansionism!' `Captain,' and Spktm rose to
its
full height, `what the Hivers do now has never been seen in the two
hundreds
of years that we have been opposing them.
We Mrdini find
ourselves
in accord with the theory that the three spheres and the
Great
Sphere went in search of a homeworld to replace the one that was
burned
up. It is regrettable that the specific
nature of that primary
is
unknown - Ashiant rose, bowing apologies to Spktm for an
interruption
in its peroration. `As to that,
honoured Captain, the
specific
nature of the Hive primary is known.' He smiled as everyone
eagerly
awaited his next words and waved the note in his hand. `As you
know,
we've been examining the systems which the Hivers have by-passed,
but one
of our bright young astronomically inclined ensigns, Cyra
Charteris,
hit on the notion of examining tapes from the astronomical
files
of the Hive quadrant and comparing them with those taken by your
good
seW Spktm, while at the nova site. We
now know that primary's
spectrum
signature!' His ringing voice echoed in the brief silence.
Then everyone began to talk at once.
`Then I see no bar at all to sending the
scouts out to home in on
that
star before Number Three can,' Shepherd said, almost shouting to
be
heard.
`We approve,' Spktm said, raising its
voice above the second spate
of
excitement. `But,' and it raised its
flipper-like arm, its digits
displaying
in a fan-like motion, `there are still eight spheres to be
disabled,
preferably before any reach this star.
They would fight more
fiercely
than ever before to protect it. And to
deny us the way to
such a
reverent destination.' `They will fight with madness never
seen,'
Prim said.
`Even the new missiles might not work.'
`They'll work, all right,'
Thian
said, suddenly rising to attract everyone's attention, `-if
they're
put where they will do the most damage and that is a Talent we
possess!'
That momentary silence was broken by a burst of laughter from
Commander
Yngocelen of the Vadim.
`Thian Lyon, you have made my day!' And
he gave a triumphant whoop
of
delight, jumping to his feet.
`Don't you all see what the Prime
proposes? I mean, with that
technique,
it doesn't matter a hoot in hell how many spheres come after
us,
they get a missile where it'll do the most good and booom!' He
clapped
his hands together and then extended his arms outward.
`This is the Genessee ploy in a new
guise. And it means we don't
even
have to get in range of any sphere to destroy it. We'll only need
to know
where it is! Thian, Rojer and Clancy
here plant the missile
hey, it
doesn't even have to be a missile `Which actually wouldn't fit
in a
sphere engine room - Rojer remarked, grinning at Yngocelen's
enthusiasm.
- Whatever,' and Yngie flicked that minor
detail away with one
long-fingered
hand. `The package can be delivered and
the sphere is
history!'
`BUT THAT IS NOT THE WAY MRDINIS FIGHT HIVE SHIPS, said
Captain
Ktpl of the Galaxy class KLTS. Its fur
ruffled in agitation
and it
looked across to Spktm who was still on its feet, glancing from
one
human speaker to another.
MOST RESPECTED SIR,' Thian said first to
Spktm and, bowing to
Ktpl,
`MRDINIS SOUGHT HUMAN AID BECAUSE WE DESTROYED A HIVE SPHERE WITH
NO LOSS
OF LIFE AMONG US. NO HUMAN BLOOD WAS
SPILT. TOO MUCH MRDINI
BLOOD
HAS BEEN SPILT IN TWO HUNDREDS OF YEARS.
NOW IS THE TIME TO END
THAT
WASTE OF COLOUR'S BLOOD AND SPEND YOUR TIME FINDING NEW WORLDS ON
WHICH
TO LIVE AT PEACE. YOU SOMETIMES FIND
OUR CAUTION COWARDLY - . A
rumble
of protest from as many human throats as Mrdini briefly
interrupted
him. `BUT WE HUMANS DO NOT RE-CREATE AS
MRDINIS MAY SO WE
ARE
CAREFUL OF THE ONE LIFE WE HAVE.' Thian wondered whether he had
overstepped
the bounds to inteiject that fact but he had to assume all
Mrdinis
of Spktm's, and probably Prim's, status would know of the
re-creation
of Kat and Gil. `THERE WILL BE FIGHTING
ENOUGH TO SATISFY
HONOUR
BUT FEWER DEATHS TO CAUSE GRIEF. LET US
HUMANS DO WHAT YOU
SOUGHT
US OUT TO DO - DESTROY THE HIVER THREAT WITH THE LEAST POSSIBLE
LOSS OF
ALLIANCE MEMBERS.
The few human captains and commanders who had not followed all his
impassioned
speech were quickly given its gist.
Even Shepherd looked
approving. Spktm bowed to Thian from its mid-section
with great
dignity
and resumed its chair, thus acknowledging Thian's points.
Hey, bra, good points!
Thian, you're marvellous, came
Alison-Anne's comment.
I'm with you, Lyon, was KIoo's
enthusiastic acknowledgement.
This is supposed to be a high-level
top-secret strategy meeting
but,
Kloo, kiss that ensign of yours who had the wits to compare
astronomical
tapes!
Not quite. I'll leave that for you or Rojer!
Ashiant rose and banged the gavel to
restore order.
`I observe that most of us here are in
accord with Prime Lyon's
excellent
suggestions, although I'm sure he'll be the first to admit
that we
haven't solved all the tactical problems facing us. But our
priorities
are now clearly defined. Yngocelen,
figure out what sort of
payload
would be needed to destroy a sphere if `ported into the engine
room.
`I'd need a few details but, considering
the fuel Hive ships use,
a
rather compact package of the right stuff would set off a fuel
reaction
nothing could stop.' The gunnery officer was unable to stop
grinning
at such a satisfactory prospect.
`Do we have the requisite components on
board?' `Sir, I believe we
do.'
`That's all well. Our Talents need to
reserve their energies for
exportation
rather than importations.
Ashiant's little witticism took a moment
to sink in but Rojer
caught
it and gave a laugh which he tried to smother behind both hands.
A few more chuckles allowed Ashiant to
grin in response. `So,
I've
preempted the Revere for my scout crew, you gentlemen had best
decide
on how to man the other five scouts the Washington carries so we
can
implement the next task on our list - finding the damned star now
we know
what its spectrum is.' Thian took that opportunity to lean
towards
Ashiant.
`Sir, if I may excuse myself briefly to inform
Captain Soligen of
the diy
`The diy, Prime?' `Yes, sir, the destroy-it-yourself. . .
Captain Soligen
it's missing here. So what's this variant on the Genessee
will be very anxious to deal with those
three spheres as soon as
possible
and she should. Who knows how many more
we'll have to deal
with! She's got the Talent to get the ah
exportations A flicker of a
smile
crossed Ashiant's face. `By all means,
inform her of the
strategy,
Prime. And also inform Earth
Prime. Some of those anxious
boots
back in Alliance territory can take the byte and use it
themselves
to good advantage.' `I'll ask about communications, too,
sir.
Ashiant flicked his hand to speed Thian
on his message round.
Stay, Rojer, Clancy, and keep our end up!
Thian made contact with Flavia on the
Columbia.
Didn't Rojer give you the course
headings? We'll let you know the
moment
they alter, Flavia began, somewhat startled to have two contacts
in such
a brief time.
No, we got that and the ones you're
chasing are on the same
heading
Number Three is. However, I've got good
news.
Can you get Captain Soligen in with you
so you can voice to her
what
I'm about to say? She can think up her
questions as we go along.
She happens to be in here right now,
Thian, so go ahead.
Flavia, you know how a Genessee ploy
works? Well, we've got a
variant
to try on the spheres fore and aft of you.
Are the ones you're
pursuing
very far ahead?
No, and Vesta's closing the gap
daily. I once thought Klml was
rngger-happy,
but sight of two strong ion trails have altered not only
Hptml
until its poll eye's gonefuchsia, but Captains Steverice and
Hsiang
are nearly as bloodthirsty. They want
those spheres worse than
Klml wanted
the one it got. And I'll bet that's one
bad-tempered `Dini
in Cia
thinking of what gambit?
When Thian had explained, he could hear
her startled exclamation
and
possibly an echo from Captain Soligen.
And the relief that flooded
her
mind. She'd been trying to sound so
cool and composed. Now he
realized
that she'd been as scared as he had been until he figured out
the
advantage Talent was giving both elements of the Fleet. Indeed,
the
entire Alliance.
what did you just say to Flavia,
Thian? Zara demanded.
She's sounding like she's in pain but
she's grinning as if you
proposed
or something.
I didn't propose marriage, little sister,
but listen.
By the time he had explained the
stratagem, her mind was focusing
tight
on his words.
Thian, that's marvellous news, Flavia
said. You can't hear how
everyone
is cheering.
Now, let's not celebrate
prematurely. I don't want anyone
presuming
we've got the upper hand what else would you call it, Thian?
Flavia demanded.
We've skills they don't have and never
will have, given their mind
set.
There's still the scouts to contend with,
and who knows how many
other
sphere ships will come on course. And
the Hivers do communicate
together
on some level what good would that do us, Thian? Flavia
replied.
None of us know what medium they use for
communication.
The queen made sounds, Zara said, an odd
note in her mental tone.
There were tapes and tapes made of her
clicks and stutters and
glottal
stops. I know I'm in a minority, but I
still feel sorry for
that
one and I'm not ashamed of myself for it.
Nor should you be ashamed of a genuine
act of empathic kindness,
Thian
replied firmly, sensing Zara's curious ambivalence. She had,
after
all, saved the queen once without ever understanding how she knew
why she
felt so compelled to act. Did anyone
ever make any sense out
of
those sounds, Zara? Thian asked kindly.
Noooo, Zara admitted in a melancholic
tone, then more briskly,
Have
any of you bright boys figured out the frequency on which they
communicate?
Thian chuckled. I'll bet they're swarming the Refugee right now
trying
to figure that out. Probably going over
the one Klml brought
back to
Clarf. Look, I've got to tell Granddad
all this, and get him
off the
hook, with the Alliance in a state of utter panic. One of us
will
get back to you as soon as Commander Yngocelen's figured out the
specifications
of the surprise package.
You know, it's so strange how things work
out, Thian, Flavia said.
If we hadn't worked on the Refugee, we'd
never be able to do what
we are
about to do.
Though Thian felt the same reverent awe
that she expressed, he
could
never have stated it. He was glad that she
could.
And if you hadn't been forced to action
at Xh-33, we'd not have
had a
useful strategy, Thian added.
Oh, someone would have thought of
something else.
Well, there're more minds to merge this
time round.
By the Cluster, Thian, against how many
spheres? Flavia sounded
aghast
at that prospect. It's just as well
there re more sensible
alternatives
available!
She broke off contact then and her final
indignant remark left him
chuckling. He wasn't chuckling by the time his
grandfather, very much
Earth
Prime throughout the lengthy interview, had winkled every scrap
of all
the conversations Thian had overheard in the Washington's ready
room,
and had Thian repeat his reply to Spktm - a rhetoric which made
Thian
squirm on the couch as he recited it.
Verbatim it sounded more
pompous
and impassioned than it had when the phrases and ideas had just
formed
in his mind and issued from his mouth.
Then there was that long pause before
Jeff spoke again, more
Granddad
than Prime.
I concur with Flavia, Thian lad. There has been a remarkable
inevitability,
starting at Deneb years ago, that leads inexorably to
this
confrontation. Perhaps the Hivers had
had warning as far back as
Deneb
that their sun would turn nova.
You may be sure the High Council will be
relieved to hear of this
turn of
events. Not to mention every other
fnghfrned citizen of this
Alliance. And grateful to you and that young
astronomer ù ù ù what was
his
name? You didn't mention it.
Her name is Cyra Charteris.
Thank you. ffAshiant doesn't give her afield promotion, she'll
get
official word of one very soon. So get
on with the workings and
keep me
up to speed. Or let Clancy make the
contact if it's just
information. Spare yourself as much as possible. You're in the
catbird
seat out there, boy. How do you like
it?
No more than you ever did, sir. But I'm here.
And I - ù ù am here for you, Thian.
Thian never knew until much later who
decided the deployment of
the
Washington's scouts, but the three Talents, with a little help from
three
T-2s brought in to the ready room for this mass `portation, got
the six
scouts into their assigned positions.
None of the Talents liked using Number
Three as the reference
point -
they all caught the heavy stinggpzzt - but they got the scouts
safely
past that obstacle without alerting the sphere to their passage.
Yngocelen had the help of every other
munitions expert in the
Fleet. Late that night, when he came to the Tower
ready room so he
could
be present while Thian passed the requisite instructions to
Captain
Soligen, he told the Talents that it took more time to hear
everyone
5 theories than it did to make up sufficient `surprise
packages'
`We made a lot more than I hope we'll ever need,' Yngocelen
said,
shrugging his bony shoulders and grinning.
`But hell, once we
got
started, we kinda just continued.
They're compact, handy little
mothers!'
He grinned again and then yawned.
`Don't do that,' Thian said, answering
yawn with yawn as he
slipped
onto the couch.
Oh I'm so glad to hear from you, Thian,
Flavia said. We've got
three
behind us unless our sensors are seeing triple Don't fret. Is
Captain
Soligen near by? your gunnery officer?
I called Rhodri. He can take down the information and save
you
more
effort. You're tired.
Never mind. Link with Rhodri so he can ask any relevant
questions. Here's the way Yngocelen's made the surprise
package.
Hey, coz came the unmistakable tones of
Rhodri Eagles, that is one
neat
little dealie. We've got everything on
board, too. Ah, Captain
just
arrived. I'll see f' she has any
queries.
Oh, Thian, will this work? Flavia was trying very hard to
maintain
her usual composure.
These men know what they're doing with
explosives. And we know
how to
deliver. Remember where there're all
those connecting pipes in
Refugee's
engine room, Flavia?
Yes, yes, I do.
That's where you plant it. Detonation can be set just before you
`port
it. Yngie suggests no more than five
seconds because it just
might
be noticed. They see better in the dark
than we do.
I've got that. Captain Sohgen sends you her most profound thanks
and
Lieutenant-Commander Searles says it's neat, easily assembled and
he's
just left to do it. Vesta says she's
going to do the ones behind
us
first. She says it makes her nervous
having those things rolling up
our
backs ides.
I'd agree. Clancy's taking the first watch so let him know what
happens.
There was a brief pause when Thian knew
that Flavia had not yet
broken
the contact.
Good luck, Thian Lyon!
Good luck right back at you, Flavia
Bastianmajani! And give
Rhodri
a chance to help `port. He'll never
stop bragging but that'd be
better
than his complaining he was left out.
I had actually decided to bring him in on
it. Flavia's mental
tone
held a ripple of amusement.
While Thian slept, curled around
Alison-Anne, with Mur and Dip
snuggled
against his back, he had good dreams.
And while he slept,
Flavia,
with assists from Rhodri and her brother - Zara flatly refused
to have
anything to do with the `portations - delivered the packages.
`She said,' Clancy reported to Thian over
breakfast, `that
everyone
joined the countdowns and saw the distant bursts that marked
the
destruction. Captain Soligen reports
all four spheres removed and
she's
running at top speed to join us. Flavia
said that Earth Prime
was
delighted.' He waited a beat, ducking his head, his expression full
of
chagrin. `I thought we should have
waited until you were awake and
could
do the honours. Rojer spoke out, too,
but once Yngie had
assembled
the bombs, Spktm couldn't wait to see if they'd work so
Captain
Ashiant ordered us to despatch em.
`What're you looking like that for, then,
coz? You didn't muff
the
job, did you?' `Hell, no!' Clancy said on a nervous laugh, but I
really
think it was totally unfair for you not to be able to plant one.
Thian gave Clancy an affectionate clout on the shoulder. `So long
as you
left Number Three for me - and he fixed his cousin with a stern
stare.
Clancy raised his hands and recoiled
slightly at the thought of
such
perfidy.
`OK, then! Relax. So long as Number
Three's mine!' `Only because
Captain
Ashiant wants to be sure, said Rojer, joining them then, `it
leads
us to the right star.
`Twinkle, twinkle, little star. Tell me, please, which one you
are!'
Clancy said, grinning with devilment.
The two Primes groaned in unison.
Any word on which?' Thian asked.
`Not yet, but we've got six scouts doing
broad sweeps and it can't
take
for ever - - - If Number Two had to stop to resupply, Number Three
must be
running low, too.
`Maybe she did,' Clancy said. `Wasiq had been running through D's
log
tapes and found that they had lost the trail for about three weeks
and had
to trawl ù around to pick it up again.' `Stierlman never
mentioned
that.' `Well, it's in the official log.' `Bet Ashiant was
furious,'
Thian said, cursing Stierlman.
`With Captain Halstead, not
Stierlman. At least they found the
ion
trail again.
Thian sighed. `How far behind Number Three are we hanging?' `Far
enough
so there's no chance of any known sensors picking us up on
Number
Three.
`But, if they do have communications
`Look, bra, the spheres that
got
blown up wouldn't have had time to send a click, clack or clatter!'
`A lack
of communications from ships known to have been operable and
following
Number Three would make the rest of them suspicious,' Thian
said,
running an impatient hand through his hair, and hauling back into
place
the white lock that was always falling in his eyes.
`Ashiant feels the same way,' Clancy said
and then shrugged. `But
they
won't know what took `em out. I'd say
Great-Uncle is making sure
none
leave Alliance space. Ashiant ordered
the KLTR and the Comanche
to hang
back and sweep for any late arrivals.' `So, it's a waiting game
again,
is it?' Thian said.
`Looks that way,' Clancy replied.
`We can always pass the time making up a
few more packages, Thi,'
Rojer
suggested. `We don't know how many
Hiver colonies there are, or
how
many spheres lurk on our way to Paradise Regained.' The Franklin,
crewed
by a mixture from the Vadim and the Galaxy KLTS, discovered
Number
Three's destination: a youngish G-type star, matching the
original
Hiver primary within .0378 disparity in its spectrum which the
astrogators
considered close enough. It had eleven
planets, two of
them
with the suitable atmospheres and the correct proportion of land
mass to
sea that Hivers preferred, in the M-5 and M-6 positions.
The sphere would shortly have to make a
course alteration if this
were,
indeed, the primary it sought.
Tension mounted in the Fleet while
reports from Captain Soligen
that
she had `surprised' another sphere coming up behind her added to
the
dismay of those wanting to reach confrontation.
Captain Ashiant broadcast ship-wide that
as soon as Number Three
made
that course correction to approach the heliopause of that system,
they
would intercept it.
As a precaution, he asked Thian to
arrange the `portation of
Captain
Spktm and the KSTS and two Galaxy class, the KLTL and the
Vadim,
and the destroyers KLTS and the Comanche, in case Number Three
sent
her three scouts out ahead of her to confirm the suitability of
the
system. He recalled the furthest
ranging scouts but let the
Franklin
and the Revere remain with the task force.
Jeff Raven reported phenomenal success
with the Genessee ploy and
Captain
Osullivan was reassigned to one of the newly commissioned
Constellation
class ships to play an active part in the defence of the
Alliance. His old crew toasted their former captain
with considerable
enthusiasm,
with Captain Germys springing for the beverages served. If
Rojer
looked a little smug, since it was he who had actually originated
the
Genessee ploy, no-one who knew that denied him that right.
Since Zara remained `unavailable' for the
offensive manoeuvre,
Captain
Soligen redeployed her squadron to cover a larger area of
space. Asia and Mallen Bastianmajani were
transferred to the KMTM and
Rhodri
and Jes to the Valparaiso: the two Galaxy class ships hung
slightly
back of the Columbia's centre and she was guarded by the two
destroyers
as she maintained her course following the ion trail of
Number
Three, the main Fleet ahead of her.
Only one more sphere ship met its end by
their method but, to the
chagrin
of the main Fleet, it gave Squadron B an impressive total
without
a single casualty.
`Number Three's slowed,' Ashiant said
over the comunit to the
Talents. `She's hanging outside the heliopause. Ah, now she's
deploying
her scouts. Could she have sensor
readings of our forward
elements?'
`Whether she has or not, sir, will it make any difference
now
when she receives the package?' Thian asked, striding towards his
couch. This one's mine, remember!
Gee, can't we watdi? Rojer asked in a pesky kidbrother voice.
`Commander Yngocelen, here, Prime Thian,
package is ready to go.
`Thank you, Commander.' Thian settled
himself', caught the gestalt
of the
generators, `found' the explosive package where it sat on the
floor
of the landing bay, sent his mind ahead to the darkness of Number
Three's
engine room, the macaroni junction of tubes and pipes and
`ported
the package there.
One .
. . and Rojer had jumped to the terminal to activate the
forward-view
screen.
`Two,' Thian said, racing on long legs to
the bridge door. When
he got
there, Ashiant was saying `Three' The bridge crew, eyes on the
main
view screen, chorused `Four!' Rojer, Clancy, four `Dinis and
Alison-Anne
crowded at the entrance as everyone said `Five!' The screen
showed
the vivid blossoming of the distant explosion, tiny though it
was at
this distance.
The screen cleared more rapidly than
perhaps the watchers could
wish at
this moment of ultimate triumph, but the after-image of that
dramatic
climax to a long search would be remembered often in the
mind's
eye. No-one felt like cheering, but
there were sighs of relief
to be
heard around the bridge and thoughtful expressions on every face.
`Mr Wasiq, check with the KSTS to see if
the scouts got away,'
Ashiant
said, breaking the silence. Other muted
sounds on the bridge
indicated
the resumption of normal duties.
`Sir, Captain Spktm and the other ships
have engaged two of the
scouts,
the third was caught in the blast destroying Number Three. The
captain
believes that the scouts received some damage `With no Minds to
guide
them, of course they have, Thian murmured.
and the Vadim and the KLTS have launched
a barrage. Sir, Captain
Spktm
reports the demolition of both remaining scouts.
`Operation Number Three completed,
Ashiant said quietly.
As Thian lay on the couch, readying
himself to report Captain
Ashiant's
words to Earth Prime, he felt none of the sense of triumph he
had
anticipated. Relief was the dominant
emotion, relief from tension,
strain,
apprehension, uncertainty. This phase
of the centurieslong
struggle
against Hiver aggrandizement no longer threatened the
Alliance. But there were all those other Hive planets,
and who knew
how
many spheres waiting until their populations had swelled to the
point
where yet another planet would have to be `prepared' to receive
the
Hive species. That could be his job for
the rest of his life:
finding
all those myriad colonies.
Not necessarily, Thian, came his grandfather's voice softly in
his
mind. Though I'm sure you could pick whatever
Prime opportunity you
choose.
You know Number Three's gone?
I read that. I also perceived your state of mind and on that you
have my
most sincere compliments. You are a
credit to our calling and
to your
family. A war where only the enemy
dies!
Thian was startled to hear his own phrase
repeated, though the
thought
would have occurred to more than one person who disliked
unnecessary
violence.
We have won this part of the war, Thian
lad, but only this part.
if it gives your mind any ease, a great
many people, wise and
simple,
are trying to find out how to control the population pressure
on Hive
worlds, in that way reducing the species' need to colonize,
eliminating
their aggressiveness.
Either is preforable to their solution
for hfr on other planets,
Thian
said.
War-weary, are you?
Weary, yes, sir.
How about finding new worlds humans and
`Dinis can live on, either
together
or by the species?
There are a couple of hot-sun worlds the
`dinis can have all to
themselves,
sir. I gather that we are to explore
all possible colonial
systems
on our way back?
Yes, those are the official orders to
relay to Captain Ashiant,
plus
his promotion to Admiral of the Fleet.
Thian grinned, feeling pleasure at such a
task pushing back the
various
types of relief that had dominated his present mood.
meanwhile, the sociologists and bios and
xenobs and all the rest
of that
strata of reparational specialists will be using the data the
Fleet
has amassed to see if we can't come up with a solution to
containing,
but not necessarily restricting, Hivers to their current
colonies.
Zara would like that part especially.
There was a beat of a pause. Yes, I suspect with her ambivalence,
she
would and she may join them in that research, especially if she's a
burden
on Captain Sohgen and Flavia.
You might, sir, transfer Rojer to the
Columbia !if' you reassign
Zara to
a research situation.
The little Asia enters into that
suggestion?
She does.
Well, the degree of ousinship is not a
detriment, and Thian
thought
his grandfather sounded mildly pleased and surprised. Hmmm.
Both squadrons will now be assigned
colonial explorations but I
see no
reason to put the boy through any more emotional stress than
he's
already had. He likes Asia that much?
Sir, he's very protective of her. Either a steady dose will cure
him or
consolidate his current interest.
You don't like Asia? This was definitely Grandfather talking.
She's sweet and engaging and, when she's
out of shy mode, she can
be fun
but She's not your type.
In a word, yes. And, Grandfather, I've got my own plans.
So I understand, Thian. And we approve.
Abruptly, although a chuckle echoed
distantly, Jeff Raven had
broken
the contact.
ROjER!
CLANCY! Thian shouted. Did either of you mention - ?
YOU THINK WE'RE CRAZY! The two Talents answered in unison and
Rojer
burst through the door to the Tower room, glaring at Thian that
he'd
believe him guilty of such an indiscretion.
Then how the hell does Grandfather know
about AlisonAnne?
Rojer shrugged. `How the hell does Grandfather know half of what
he
does? He just does and what did he just
tell you? Thanks, maybe?'
Don't
be cocky, boy, Thian said, with a grin and a punch on his
brother's
arm as he passed him on his way to Captain Ashiant's ready
room
down the hall.
Well, give us a clue, wontcha? Clancy added his complaint to
Rojer's.
Thian heaved a sigh as he knocked
politely on the captain's door.
just listen in. I get so tired of having to repeat things - ù
`Captain
Ashiant, the compliments of Earth Prime who forwards the deep
thanks
and appreciation of the High Council and all Alliance citizens
for the
speedy settlement of this threat to our civilizations.' Ashiant
regarded
Thian for a long moment.
`Is that really what he said they said?'
`Well, sir, if not,
that's
how it should have been phrased. Earth
Prime is deeply relieved
that,
as he did say, this is a war where only the enemy died.' `Not
quite,
but near enough to make it a valid comment,' Ashiant said,
nodding
acceptance.
Then Thian grinned broadly. `I've also the happy duty to inform
you
that you have just been promoted to the rank of Admiral of the
Fleet
in recognition of your services.
`Prime, I don't take kindly to practical
jokes.' `No joke, sir,
not to
you, Captain Ashiant.' `Admiral, hmmm?' and Ashiant swung his
chair
around so that, when Thian next saw his face, it was as composed
as
ever, save for a brief upward slant of the corner of his mouth. He
tugged
at the blouse of his shipsuit. `That's
rather good news and
certainly
an honour.' `Aye, aye, Admiral, sir, an honour to your
family,
your colour and everyone serving under you.
`If you don't mind, Prime, I think we had
best wait until this has
been
officially confirmed, but I thank you for apprising me of it.'
There
was another polite tap on the door but First Officer Vandermeer
did not
even wait for Ashiant's response before she entered, holding
out the
usual documents corner.
`This just `ported in, sir, and it's
addressed to "Admiral
Ashiant"! Sir!' Face wreathed with a broad and happy
smile, she handed
him the
narrow carrier with her left hand while snapping him one
definitely
high-class salute.
`Well,' Ashiant said, uncapping the cylinder
and taking out the
tightly
rolled official document, `well,' and he unrolled it, `well,
and so
it says.' `May I be the first to congratulate you, Admiral
Ashiant?'
Vandermeer said, tears of pride in the corners of her eyes.
`Why, that's splendid news, Admiral
Ashiant,' Thian said quickly,
stepping
forward and holding out his hand.
`I'm honoured to be present on such a
felicitous occasion. My
sincerest
congratulations, Admiral Ashiant, for a well-deserved
promotion!'
Ashiant cocked a sardonic eyebrow at the Prime but there
was no
way Thian would have deflated Vandermeer's moment.
The news was -all over the ship before
Thian finished the further
report
and the orders he was to relay from Earth Prime. It didn't
matter
that Rojer and Clancy had been instrumental in its
dissemination. The promotion was official and everyone went
about
their
duties grinning: Ashiant was a popular man.
`So, our orders are to make our quadrants
of this great galaxy
safe
for us harmless human and `Dini colonists,' Rojer said when they
were
all back in their quarters.
Thian was grooming Mur and Dip, a
pleasant task he enjoyed but had
had
little time to do.
`We signed up for a five-year mission,'
Thian reminded him.
`That could have some dangerous moments,
too, Clancy said in a
hopeful
tone. `But Cousin Raven's correct. There's a lot more to be
done to
see if we can't alter the Hivers sufficiently to reduce the
threat
they pose.
`Did those boffins at Phobos Base discover
how to communicate with
the
spheres?' Rojer asked, remembering that unresolved line of
endeavour.
`Who knows? We destroyed all the spheres they could have talked
to. But there's got to be some way to establish
contact.
Communication might even explain to them
- in a much nicer way
that
what they're doing isn't currently acceptable social behaviour,'
Clancy
said facetiously. `That would settle
the problem and we'll
divvy
the available M-5 worlds equally among us.
`Only the Hivers would want to be more
equal than the rest of us,'
Rojer
said. `They breed faster.' By evening,
everyone knew of
Ashiant's
promotion and he had to tour the messes on all the nearby
ships
to take the toasts due his new rank.
When Alison-Anne got off
duty,
Rojer insisted that he could as easily `port the Admiral wherever
he
needed to go so Thian should go enjoy dinner with Gravy and Clancy.
`You know, don't you,' Alison said, a
certain remonstrating tone
in her
voice as she fixed Thian with what she called her `nurse glare',
`that
you should have had the promotion?
You're the one that thought
of the
idea that got Ashiant his promotion.' `Come on, now, honey,'
Thian
said, putting his fingers on her mouth and trying to make it
curve
up into a smile. `Ashiant deserves his
admiral stars. Don't
deny
him.
`But does he realize that without you
Primes,' and she included
Clancy
in her gaze and rattled her fingers at Rojer in the ready room,
he'd be
in deep kimchee right now with spheres doing billiard balls,
with
him the 8 ball.' `Honey,' and Thian's voice raised above her
unexpected
championship of Talents. He patted the
chair beside him for
her to
take. `We're all in the same boat, win
or lose. We did win, if
that's
what killing all your enemy is about.' With a deft snake of his
arm, he
pulled her to his lap though her body resisted him, tense and
unrepentant. He kissed the nape of her neck and felt her
give just a
little. `Look at it from my point of view, han. I'm just not supposed
to be a
combatant at all. I'm supposed to `port
and `path and that's
all I
did.' `Yes, but that's what won the war for Ashiant and all of
us,
love. And that's the only time in my
life I hope I'll have to do
that! Don't you?' He tried to turn her head
towards him so he could
look
her in the eye. And then, those tactics
unsuccessful, he tried
another
one.
I've asked Grandfather to send Rojer to
the Columbia and Asia.
He's really missing her ù `Oh, did you,
Thian darling!' She was
suddenly
supple in his arms again and twisted to put hers around his
neck.
Neither noticed Clancy's discreet
withdrawal, with Mur and Dip,
through
the ready room.
`Oh, what a marvellous idea. I mean, we've still got years of
this
mission and I think Rojer's really and truly in love with her
Thian
was more interested in cuddling Alison's pliable form than her
opinions
about his brother's love.
I know it hasn't come up between us
recently, he said kissing her
lovingly
to end the unprofitable conversation, but isn't it nice to be
able to
talk together the way we are and still be able to kiss?
Hmmmm, was her response as he picked her
up in his arms and,
deftly
managing to maintain firm contact on her mouth, carried her
towards
their room.
grandfather also approves of us, you
know, he said.
She broke the kiss and stared at him,
wide blue eyes incredulous.
`The Prime of Earth approves of meeee?'
With reference to your
complaint
about who should get the credit for all this, as long as I
have
you, Alison-Anne Greevy, I won't complain.
I guess, she said in a dreamy
contemplative voice as he laid her
gently
on the bed, maybe I did have just the tiniest bit of precog when
I first
met you Did you now? And what did your
precognitive Talent
tell
you?
That I'd be doing this with you a long
time!
THE END