"Anderson, Poul - 1966 Flandry 07 - Ensign Flandry" - читать интересную книгу автора (Anderson Poul)ENSIGN FLANDRY Poul Anderson —To Frank and Beverly
Herbert Excerpts (with some
expansion of symbols) from Pilot's Manual and Ephemeris, Cis-Betelgeusean
Orionis Sector, 53rd ed., Reel III, frame 28: IGC S-52,727,061. Saxo. F5, mass
1.75 Sol, luminosity 5.4 Sol, photosphere diameter 1.2
Sol … Estimated remaining time on main sequence, 0.9
begayear … Planetary system: Eleven major
bodies … V, Starkad. Mean orbital radius, 3.28 a.u., period 4.48
years … Mass, 1.81 Terra. Equatorial diameter, 15,077 Km. Mean
surface gravity, 1.30 g. Rotation period, 16h 31m 2.75s. Axial inclination, 25°
50'4.9" … Surface atmospheric pressure, ca. 7000 mm. Percentage
composition, N2 77.92, O2 21.01, A 0.87, CO2 0.03 … Remarks: Though 254 light-years from
Sol, the system was discovered early, in the course of the first Grand Survey.
Thus the contemporary practice of bestowing literary-mythological names on
humanly interesting objects was followed. Only marginally man-habitable,
Starkad attracted a few xenological expeditions by its unusual
autochthons … These studies were not followed up, since funds went to
still more rewarding projects and, later, the Polesotechnic League saw no
profit potential. After the Time of Troubles, it lay outside the Imperial
sphere and remained virtually unvisited until now, when a mission has been sent
for political reasons. The 54th edition had
quite a different entry. 1 Evening on Terra— His Imperial Majesty,
High Emperor Georgios Manuel Krishna Murasaki, of the Wang dynasty the fourth,
Supreme Guardian of the Pax, Grand Director of the Stellar Council,
Commander-in-Chief, Final Arbiter, acknowledged supreme on more worlds and
honorary head of more organizations than any one man could remember, had a
birthday. On planets so remote that the unaided eye could not see their suns
among those twinkling to life above Oceania, men turned dark and leathery, or
thick and weary, by strange weathers lifted glasses in salute. The light waves
carrying their pledge would lap on his tomb. Terra herself was less
solemn. Except for the court, which still felt bound to follow daylight around
the globe for one exhausting ceremony after another, Birthday had become simply
an occasion to hold carnival. As his aircar hummed over great dusking waters,
Lord Markus Hauksberg saw the east blaze with sky luminosity, multi-colored
moving curtains where fireworks exploded meteoric. Tonight, while the planet
turned, its dark side was so radiant as to drown the very metro-centers seen
from Luna. Had he tuned his vid to almost any station, he could have watched
crowds filling pleasure houses and coming near riot among festively decorated
towers. His lady broke the
silence between them with a murmur that made him start. "I wish it were a
hundred years ago." "Eh?"
Sometimes she could still astonish him. "Birthday meant
something then." "Well … yes.
S'pose so." Hauksberg cast his mind back over history. She was right.
Fathers had taken their sons outdoors when twilight ended parades and feasts;
they had pointed to the early stars and said, Look yonder. Those are ours. We
believe that as many as four million lie within the Imperial domain. Certainly
a hundred thousand know us daily, obey us, pay tribute to us, and get peace and
the wealth of peace in return. Our ancestors did that. Keep the faith. Hauksberg shrugged. You
can't prevent later generations from outgrowing naпvetй. In time they must
realize, bone deep, that this one dustmote of a galaxy holds more than a hundred
billion suns; that we have not even explored the whole of our one spiral arm,
and it does not appear we ever will; that you need no telescope to see giants
like Betelgeuse and Polaris which do not belong to us. From there, one
proceeded easily to: Everybody knows the Empire was won and is maintained by
naked power, the central government is corrupt and the frontier is brutal and
the last organization with high morale, the Navy, lives for war and oppression
and anti-intellectualism. So get yours, have fun, ease your conscience with a
bit of discreet scoffing, and never, never make a fool of yourself by taking
the Empire seriously. Could be I'll change
that, Hauksberg thought. Alicia interrupted him.
"We might at least have gone to a decent party! But no, you have to drag
us to the Crown Prince's. Are you hoping he'll share one of his
prettyboys?" Hauksberg tried to ease
matters with a grin. "Come, come, m'love, you do me an injustice. You know
I still hunt women. Preferably beautiful women, such as you." "Or Persis
d'Io." She sagged back. "Never mind," she said tiredly. "I
just don't like orgies. Especially vulgar ones." "Nor I, much."
He patted her hand. "But you'll manage. Among the many things I admire
about you is your ability to carry off any situation with aplomb." True enough, he thought.
For a moment, regarding those perfect features under the diademed hair, he felt
regret. So his marriage had been political; why couldn't they nonetheless have
worked out a comradeship? Even love—No, he was confusing his love for ancient
literature with flesh-and-blood reality. He was not Pellйas nor she Mйlisande.
She was clever, gracious, and reasonably honest with him; she had given him an
heir; more had never been implied in the contract. For his part, he had given
her position and nearly unlimited money. As for more of his
time … how could he? Somebody had to be the repairman, when the
universe was falling to pieces. Most women understood. To entropy with it.
Alicia's looks came from an expensive biosculp job. He had seen too many slight
variations on that fashionable face. "I've explained to
you often enough," he said. " "So you say." He reached a decision.
Tonight had not seemed to him to represent any large sacrifice on her part.
During the months of his absence, she'd find ample consolation with her lovers.
(How else can a high-born lady who has no special talents pass her time on
Terra?) But if she did grow embittered she could destroy him. It is vital to
keep closed that faceplate which is pretense. Never mind what lies behind. But
in front of the faceplate waits open ridicule, as dangerous to a man in power
as emptiness and radiation to a spacefarer. Odd, reflected the
detached part of him, for all our millennia of recorded history, for all our
sociodynamic theory and data, how the basis of power remains essentially
magical. If I am laughed at, I may as well retire to my estates. And Terra
needs me. "Darlin'," he
said, "I couldn't tell you anything before. Too many ears, live and
electronic, don't y' know. If the opposition got wind of what I'm about, they'd
head me off. Not because they necessarily disagree, but because they don't want
me to bring home a jumpin' success. That'd put me in line for the Policy Board,
and everybody hopes to sit there. By arrangin' a fait accompli, though—d' you
see?" She rested a hard gaze
on him. He was a tall, slender, blond man. His features were a little too
sharp; but in green tunic and decorations, gauze cloak, gold breeches and
beefleather halfboots, he was more handsome than was right. "Your
career," she gibed. "Indeed," he
nodded. "But also peace. Would you like to see Terra under attack? Could
happen." "Mark!"
Abruptly she was changed. Her fingers, closing on his wrist beneath the lace,
felt cold. "It can't be that serious?" "Nuclear," he
said. "This thing out on Starkad isn't any common frontier squabble. Been
touted as such, and quite a few people honestly believe it is. But they've only
seen reports filtered through a hundred offices, each one bound to gloss over
facts that don't make its own job look so fiery important. I've collected raw
data and had my own computations run. Conservative extrapolation gives a forty
per cent chance of war with Merseia inside five years. And I mean war, the kind
which could get total. You don't bet those odds, do you, now?" "No," she
whispered. "I'm s'posed to go
there on a fact-findin' mission and report back to the Emperor. Then the bureaucracy
may start grindin' through the preliminaries to negotiation. Or it may not;
some powerful interests'd like to see the conflict go on. But at best,
things'll escalate meanwhile. A settlement'll get harder and harder to reach,
maybe impossible. "What I want to do
is bypass the whole wretched process. I want plenipotentiary authority to go
direct from Starkad to Merseia and try negotiatin' the protocol of an
agreement. I think it can be done. They're rational bein's too, y' know. S'pose
many of 'em're lookin' for some way out of the quicksand. I can offer
one." He straightened. "At least I can try." She sat quiet. "I
understand," she said at length. "Of course I'll cooperate." "Good girl." She leaned a little
toward him. "Mark—" "What?" His goal
stood silhouetted against a crimson sheet. "Oh, never
mind." She sat back, smoothed her gown, and stared out at the ocean. The "Lord Markus
Hauksberg, Viscount of Ny Kalmar, Second Minister of Extra-Imperial Affairs,
and Lady Hauksberg!" cried the stentor. The ballroom was open to
the sky, beneath a clear dome. Its sole interior lighting was ultraviolet.
Floor, furnishings, orchestral instruments, tableware, food shone with the deep
pure colors of fluorescence. So did the clothing of the guests, their
protective skinpaint and eyelenses. The spectacle was intense, rippling ruby,
topaz, emerald, sapphire, surmounted by glowing masks and tresses, against
night. Music lilted through the air with the scent of roses. Crown Prince Josip was
receiving. He had chosen to come in dead black. His hands and the sagging face
floated green, weirdly disembodied; his lenses smoldered red. Hauksberg bowed
and Alicia bent her knee. "Your Highness." "Ah. Pleased to see
you. Don't see you often." "Press of business,
your Highness. The loss is ours." "Yes. Understand
you're going away." "The Starkad affair,
your Highness." "What? … Oh,
yes. That. How dreadfully serious and constructive. I do hope you can relax
with us here." "We look forward to
doin' so, your Highness, though I'm 'fraid we'll have to leave early." "Hmph." Josip
half turned. He mustn't be offended.
"Goes without sayin' we both regret it the worst," Hauksberg purred.
"Might I beg for another invitation on my return?" "Well,
really!" "I'll be even more
bold. My nephew's comin' to Terra. Frontier lad, y' know, but as far as I can tell
from stereos and letters, quite a delightful boy. If he could actually meet the
heir apparent of the Empire—why, better'n a private audience with God." "Well. Well, you
don't say. Of course. Of course." Josip beamed as he greeted the next
arrival. "Isn't that
risky?" Alicia asked when they were out of earshot. "Not for my
nephew," Hauksberg chuckled. "Haven't got one. And dear Josip's
memory is rather notoriously short." He often wondered what
would become of the Empire when that creature mounted the throne. But at least
Josip was weak. If, by then, the Policy Board was headed by a man who
understood the galactic situation … He bent and kissed his lady's
hand. "Got to drift off, m'dear. Enjoy yourself. With luck, things'll
still be fairly decorous when we dare scoot off." A new dance was called
and Alicia was swept away by an admiral. He was not so old, and his decorations
showed that he had seen outplanet service. Hauksberg wondered if she would
return home tonight. He maneuvered to the
wall, where the crowd was thinner, and worked his way along. There was scant
time to admire the view above the dome's rim, though it was fantastic. The sea
marched ashimmer beneath a low moon. Long waves broke intricately, virginally
white on the outer ramparts; he thought he could hear them growl. The darkness
enclosed by the Lunar crescent was pinpointed with city lights. The sky
illumination had now formed a gigantic banner overhead, the Sunburst alive in a
field of royal blue as if stratospheric winds bugled salute. Not many stars
shone through so much radiance. But Hauksberg identified
Regulus, beyond which his mission lay, and Rigel, which burned in the heart of
the Merseian dominions. He shivered. When he reached the champagne table, a
glass was very welcome. "Good evening," said a voice. Hauksberg exchanged bows
with a portly man wearing a particolored face. Lord Advisor Petroff was not
exactly in his element at a festival like this. He jerked his head slightly.
Hauksberg nodded. They gossipped a little and drifted apart. Hauksberg was
detained by a couple of bores and so didn't manage to slip out the rear and
catch a gravshaft downward for some while. The others sat in a
small, sealed office. They were seven, the critical ones on the Policy Board:
gray men who bore the consciousness of power like added flesh. Hauksberg made
the humility salute. "My sincere apologies for keepin' my lords
waitin'," he said. "No matter,"
Petroff said. "I've been explaining the situation." "We haven't seen
any data or computations, though," da Fonseca said. "Did you bring
them, Lord Hauksberg?" "No, sir. How could
I? Every microreader in the palace is probably bugged." Hauksberg drew a
breath. "My lords, you can examine the summation at leisure, once I'm
gone. The question is, will you take my word and Lord Petroff's for the moment?
If matters are as potentially serious as I believe, then you must agree a
secret negotiator should be dispatched. If, on t'other hand, Starkad has no
special significance, what have we lost by settlin' the dispute on reasonable
terms?" "Prestige,"
Chardon said. "Morale. Credibility, the next time we have to counter a
Merseian move. I might even be so archaic as to mention honor." "I don't propose to
compromise any vital interest," Hauksberg pleaded, "and in all
events, whatever concord I may reach'll have to be ratified here. My lords, we
can't be gone long without someone noticin'. But if you'll listen—" He launched his speech.
It had been carefully prepared. It had better be. These six men, with Petroff,
controlled enough votes to swing a decision his way. Were they prevailed on to
call a privy meeting tomorrow, with a loaded quorum, Hauksberg would depart with
the authority he needed. Otherwise … No,
he mustn't take himself too seriously. Not at the present stage of his career.
But men were dying on Starkad. In the end, he won.
Shaking, sweat running down his ribs, he leaned on the table and scarcely heard
Petroff say, "Congratulations. Also, good luck. You'll need plenty of
that." 2 Night on Starkad— Tallest in the central
spine of His cigar had gone out
again. He mouthed the stub until he finished reading the report on his desk,
then leaned back and touched a lighter to it. Smoke puffed up toward a blue
cloud which already hung under the ceiling of the bleak little room. The whole
place stank. He didn't notice. "Damn!" he
said. And deliberately, for he was a religious man in his fashion, "God
damn!" Seeking calmness, he
looked at the picture of his wife and children. But they were home, on Dayan,
in the Vega region of the Empire, more parsecs distant than he liked to think.
And remote in time as well. He hadn't been with them for over a year. Little
Miriam was changing so he'd never recognize her, Marta wrote, and David become
a lanky hobbledehoy and Yael seeing such a lot of Abba Perlmutter, though of
course he was a nice boy … There was only the picture, separated from
him by a clutter of papers and a barricade of desk machines. He didn't dare
animate it. Nor feel sorry for
yourself, you clotbrain. The chair creaked beneath his shifted weight. He was a
stocky man, hair grizzled, face big and hooknosed. His uniform was rumpled,
tunic collar open, twin planets of his rank tarnished on the wide shoulders, blaster
at belt. He hauled his mind back to work. Wasn't just that a
flitter was missing, nor even that the pilot was probably dead. Vehicles got
shot down and men got killed more and more often. Too bad about this kid, who
was he, yes, Ensign Dominic Flandry. Glad I never met him. Glad I don't have to
write his parents. But the area where he vanished, that was troubling. His
assignment had been a routine reconnaissance over the Were they responsible,
though? Nobody knew, which was why the report had been bucked on to the Terran
mission's Chief of Intelligence. A burst of static had been picked up at
Highport from that general direction. A search flight had revealed nothing
except the usual Tigery merchant ships and fishing boats. Well, engines did
conk out occasionally; matйriel was in such short supply that the ground crews
couldn't detect every sign of mechanical overwork. (When in hell's flaming name
was GHQ going to get off its numb butt and realize this was no "assistance
operation to a friendly people" but a war?) And given a brilliant sun like
Saxo, currently at a peak of its energy cycle, no tricks of modulation could
invariably get a message through from high altitudes. On the other hand, a
scout flitter was supposed to be fail safe and contain several backup systems. And the Merseians were
expanding their effort. We don't do a mucking thing but expand ours in
response. How about making them respond to us for a change? The territory they
commanded grew steadily bigger. It was still distant from Kursoviki by a
quarter of the planet's circumference. But might it be reaching a tentacle this
way? Let's ask. Can't lose
much. Abrams thumbed a button
on his vidiphone. An operator looked out of the screen. "Get me the
greenskin cine," Abrams ordered. "Yes, sir. If
possible." "Better be
possible. What're you paid for? Tell his cohorts all gleaming in purple and
gold to tell him I'm about to make my next move." "What, sir?"
The operator was new here. "You heard me, son.
Snarch!" Time must pass while the
word seeped through channels. Abrams opened a drawer, got out his magnetic
chessboard, and pondered. He hadn't actually been ready to play. However, Runei
the Wanderer was too fascinated by their match to refuse an offer if he had a
spare moment lying around; and damn if any Merseian son of a mother was going
to win at a Terran game. Hm … promising
development here, with the white bishop … no, wait, then the queen
might come under attack … tempting to sic a computer onto the problem … betcha
the opposition did … maybe not … ah, so. "Commandant Runei,
sir." An image jumped to view.
Abrams could spot individual differences between nonhumans as easily as with
his own species. That was part of his business. An untrained eye saw merely the
alienness. Not that the Merseians were so odd, compared to some. Runei was a
true mammal from a terrestroid planet. He showed reptile ancestry a little more
than Homo Sapiens does, in hairless pale-green skin, faintly scaled, and short
triangular spines running from the top of his head, down his back to the end of
a long heavy tail. That tail counterbalanced a forward-leaning posture, and he
sat on the tripod which it made with his legs. But otherwise he rather
resembled a tall, broad man. Except for complex bony convolutions in place of
external ears, and brow ridges over-hanging the jet eyes, his head and face
might almost have been Terran. He wore the form-fitting black and silver
uniform of his service. Behind him could be seen on the wall a bell-mouthed
gun, a ship model, a curious statuette: souvenirs of far stars. "Greeting,
Commander." He spoke fluent Anglic, with a musical accent. "You work
late." "And you've dragged
yourself off the rack early," Abrams grunted. "Must be about sunrise
where you are." Runei's glance flickered
toward a chrono. "Yes, I believe so. But we pay scant attention
here." "You can ignore the
sun easier'n us, all right, squatted down in the ooze. But your native friends
still live by this cheap two-thirds day they got. Don't you keep office hours
for them?" Abrams' mind ranged
across the planet, to the enemy base. Starkad was a big world, whose gravity
and atmosphere gnawed land masses away between tectonic epochs. Thus, a world
of shallow ocean, made turbulent by wind and the moons; a world of many islands
large and small, but no real continents. The Merseians had established
themselves in the region they called the One of these years,
Abrams thought, somebody will break the tacit agreement and put up a few spy
satellites. Why not us?—'Course, then the other side'll bring space warships,
instead of just transports, and go potshooting. And then the first side will
bring bigger warships. "I am glad you
called," Runei said. "I have thanked Admiral Enriques for the
conversion unit, but pleasure is to express obligation to a friend." "Huh?" "You did not know?
One of our main desalinators broke down. Your commandant was good enough to
furnish us with a replacement part we lacked." "Oh, yeh.
That." Abrams rolled his cigar between his teeth. The matter was
ridiculous, he thought. Terrans and Merseians were at war on Starkad. They
killed each other's people. But nonetheless, Runei had sent a message of
congratulations when Birthday rolled around. (Twice ridiculous! Even if a
spaceship in hyperdrive has no theoretical limit to her pseudovelocity, the
concept of simultaneity remains meaningless over interstellar distances.) And
Enriques had now saved Runei from depleting his beer supplies. Because this wasn't a
war. Not officially. Not even among the two native races. Tigeries and
Seatrolls had fought since they evolved to intelligence, probably. But that was
like men and wolves in ancient days, nothing systematic, plain natural enemies.
Until the Merseians began giving the Seatrolls equipment and advice and the
landfolk were driven back. When Terra heard about that, it was sheer reflex to
do likewise for the Tigeries, preserve the balance lest Starkad be unified as a
Merseian puppet. As a result, the Merseians upped their help a bit, and Terrans
replied in kind, and— And the two empires
remained at peace. These were simple missions of assistance, weren't they?
Terra had The Covenant of Alfzar
held. You were bound to assist civilized outworlders on request. Abrams toyed
with the notion of inventing some requests from his side. In fact, that wasn't
a bad gambit right now. "Maybe you can
return the favor," he said. "We've lost a flitter in the Zletovar.
I'm not so rude as to hint that one of your lads was cruising along and
eyeballed ours and got a wee bit overexcited. But supposing the crash was
accidental, how about a joint investigation?" Abrams liked seeing
startlement on that hard green face. "You joke, Commander!" "Oh, naturally my
boss'd have to approach you officially, but I'll suggest it to him. You've got
better facilities than us for finding a sunken wreck." "But why?" Abrams shrugged. "Mutual
interest in preventing accidents. Cultivation of friendship between peoples and
individual beings. I think that's what the catchword is back home." Runei scowled.
"Quite impossible. I advise you not to make any such proposal on the
record." "Nu? Wouldn't look
so good if you turn us down?" "Tension would only
be increased. Must I repeat my government's position to you? The oceans of
Starkad belong to the seafolk. They evolved there, it is their environment, it
is not essential to the landfolk. Nevertheless the landfolk have consistently
encroached. Their fisheries, their seabeast hunts, their weed harvests, their
drag nets, everything disturbs an ecology vital to the other race. I will not
speak of those they have killed, the underwater cities they have bombed with
stones, the bays and straits they have barred. I will say that when Merseia
offered her good offices to negotiate a modus vivendi, no land culture showed
the slightest interest. My task is to help the seafolk resist aggression until
the various landfolk societies agree to establish a just and stable
peace." "Come off that
parrot act," Abrams snorted. "You haven't got the beak for it. Why
are you really here?" "I have told
you—" "No. Think. You've
got your orders and you obey 'em like a good little soldier. But don't you
sometimes wonder what the profit is for Merseia? I sure do. What the black and
red deuce is your government's reason? It's not as if Saxo sun had a decent
strategic location. Here we are, spang in the middle of a hundred light-year
strip of no man's land between our realms. Hardly been explored; hell, I'll bet
half the stars around us aren't so much as noted in a catalogue. The nearest
civilization is Betelgeuse, and the Betelgeuseans are neutrals who wish emerods
on both our houses. You're too old to believe in elves, gnomes, little men, or
the disinterested altruism of great empires. So why?" "I may not question
the decisions of the Roidhun and his Grand Council. Still less may you."
Runei's stiffness dissolved in a grin. "If Starkad is so useless, why are
you here?" " "Let us hope your
envoy manages to settle the dispute," Runei said, relaxing. "I do not
precisely enjoy myself on this hellball either." "What envoy?" "You have not
heard? Our latest courier informed us that
a … khraich … yes, a Lord Hauksberg is hitherbound." "I know."
Abrams winced. "Another big red wheel to roll around the base." "But he is to
proceed to Merseia. The Grand Council has agreed to receive him." "Huh?" Abrams
shook his head. "Damn, I wish our mails were as good as
yours … Well. How about this downed flitter? Why won't you help us
look for the pieces?" "In essence,
informally," Runei said, "because we hold it had no right, as a
foreign naval vessel, to fly over the waters. Any consequences must be on the
pilot's own head." Ho-ho! Abrams tautened.
That was something new. Implied, of course, by the Merseian position; but this
was the first time he had heard the claim in plain language. So could the
green-skins be preparing a major push? Very possible, especially if Terra had
offered to negotiate. Military operations exert pressure at bargaining tables,
too. Runei sat like a
crocodile, smiling the least amount. Had he guessed what was in Abrams' mind?
Maybe not. In spite of what the brotherhood-of-beings sentimentalists kept
bleating, Merseians did not really think in human style. Abrams made an
elaborate stretch and yawn. " 'Bout time I knocked off," he said.
"Nice talking to you, old bastard." He did not entirely lie. Runei
was a pretty decent carnivore. Abrams would have loved to hear him reminisce
about the planets where he had ranged. "Your move,"
the Merseian reminded him. "Why … yes.
Clean forgot. Knight to king's bishop four." Runei got out his own
board and shifted the piece. He sat quiet a while, studying.
"Curious," he murmured. "It'll get
curiouser. Call me back when you're ready." Abrams switched off. His cigar was dead
again. He dropped the stub down the disposal, lit a fresh one, and rose.
Weariness dragged at him. Gravity on Starkad wasn't high enough that man needed
drugs or a counterfield. But one point three gees meant twenty-five extra kilos
loaded on middle-aged bones … No, he was thinking in standard terms.
Dayan pulled ten per cent harder than Terra … Dayan, dear gaunt hills
and wind-scoured plains, homes nestled in warm orange sunlight, low trees and
salt marshes and the pride of a people who had bent desolation to their
needs … Where had young Flandry been from, and what memories did he
carry to darkness? On a sudden impulse
Abrams put down his cigar, bent his head, and inwardly recited the Kaddish. Get to bed, old man.
Maybe you've stumbled on a clue, maybe not, but it'll keep. Go to your rest. He put on cap and cloak,
thrust the cigar back between his jaws, and walked out. Cold smote him. A breeze
blew thinly under strange constellations and auroral flimmer. The nearer moon,
Egrima, was up, almost full, twice the apparent size of Luna seen from Terra.
It flooded distant snowpeaks with icy bluish light. Buruz was a Luna-sized
crescent barely above the rooftops. Walls bulked black on
either side of the unpaved street, which scrunched with frost as his boots
struck. Here and there glowed a lighted window, but they and the scattered
lamps did little to relieve the murk. On his left, unrestful radiance from
smelters picked out the two spaceships now in port, steel cenotaphs rearing
athwart the Milky Way. Thence, too, came the clangor of night-shift work. The
field was being enlarged, new sheds and barracks were going up, for Terra's
commitment was growing. On his right the sky was tinted by feverish glowsigns,
and he caught snatches of drumbeat, trumpets, perhaps laughter. Madame Cepheid
had patriotically dispatched a shipful of girls and croupiers to Starkad. And
why not? They were so young and lonely, those boys. Maria, I miss you. Abrams was almost at his
quarters when he remembered he hadn't stashed the papers on his desk. He
stopped dead. Great Emperor's elegant epiglottis! He was indeed due for an
overhaul. Briefly he was tempted
to say, "Urinate on regulations." The office was built of
ferroconcrete, with an armorplate door and an automatic recognition lock. But
no. Lieutenant Novak might report for duty before his chief, may his pink
cheeks fry in hell. Wouldn't do to set a bad security example. Not that
espionage was any problem here, but what a man didn't see, he couldn't tell if
the Merseians caught and hypnoprobed him. Abrams wheeled and
strode back, trailing bad words. At the end, he slammed to a halt. His cigar
hit the deck and he ground down a heel on it. The door was properly
closed, the windows dark. But he could see footprints in the churned, not yet
congealed mud before the entrance, and they weren't his own. And no alarm had gone
off. Somebody was inside with a truckload of roboticist's gear. Abrams' blaster snaked
into his hand. Call the guard on his wristcom? No, whoever could burgle his
office could surely detect a transmission and was surely prepared for escape
before help could arrive. By suicide if nothing else. Abrams adjusted his gun to
needle beam. Given luck, he might disable rather than kill. Unless he bought it
first. The heart slugged in his breast. Night closed thickly inward. He catfooted to the door
and touched the lock switch. Metal burned his fingers with chill. Identified,
he swung the door open and leaned around the edge. Light trickled over his
shoulder and through the windows. A thing whirled from his safe. His eyes were
adapted and he made out some details. It must have looked like any workman in
radiation armor as it passed through the base. But now one arm had sprouted
tools; and the helmet was thrown back to reveal a face with electronic eyes,
set in a head of alloy. A Merseian face. Blue lightning spat from
the tool-hand. Abrams had yanked himself back. The energy bolt sparked and
sizzled on the door. He spun his own blaster to medium beam, not stopping to
give himself reasons, and snapped a shot. The other weapon went
dead, ruined. The armored shape used its normal hand to snatch for a gun taken
forth in advance and laid on top of the safe. Abrams charged through the
doorway while he reset for needle fire. So intense a ray, at such close range,
slashed legs across. In a rattle and clash, the intruder fell. Abrams activated his
transmitter. "Guard! Intelligence office—on the double!" His blaster threatened
while he waved the lights to go on. The being stirred. No blood flowed from
those limb stumps; powerpacks, piezoelectric cascades, room-temperature
superconductors lay revealed. Abrams realized what he had caught, and whistled.
Less than half a Merseian: no tail, no breast or lower body, not much natural
skull, one arm and the fragment of another. The rest was machinery. It was the
best prosthetic job he'd ever heard of. Not that he knew of
many. Only among races which didn't know how to make tissues regenerate, or
which didn't have that kind of tissues. Surely the Merseians—But what a lovely
all-purpose plug-in they had here! The green face writhed.
Wrath and anguish spewed from the lips. The hand fumbled at the chest. To turn
off the heart? Abrams kicked that wrist aside and planted a foot on it.
"Easy, friend," he said. 3 Morning on Merseia— Brechdan Ironrede, the
Hand of the Vach Ynvory, walked forth on a terrace of Castle Dhangodhan. A
sentry slapped boots with tail and laid blaster to breastplate. A gardener,
pruning the dwarfed koir trees planted among the flagstones, folded his arms
and bent in his brown smock. To both, Brechdan touched his forehead. For they
were not slaves; their families had been clients of the Ynvorys from ages
before the nations merged into one; how could they take pride in it if the clan
chief did not accord them their own dignity? He walked unspeaking,
though, between the rows of yellow blooms, until he reached the parapet. There
he stopped and looked across his homeland. Behind him, the castle
lifted gray stone turrets. Banners snapped in a cool wind, against an
infinitely blue sky. Before him, the walls tumbled down toward gardens, and
beyond them the forested slopes of Bedh-Ivrich went on down, and down, and
down, to be lost in mists and shadows which still cloaked the valley. Thus he
could not see the farms and villages which Dhangodhan dominated: nothing but
the peaks on the other side. Those climbed until their green flanks gave way to
crags and cliffs of granite, to snowfields and the far blink of glaciers. The
sun Korych had now cleared the eastern heights and cast dazzling spears over
the world. Brechdan saluted it, as was his hereditary right. High overhead wheeled
a fangryf, hunting, and the light burned gold off its feathers. There was a buzz in the
air as the castle stirred to wakefulness, a clatter, a bugle call, a hail and a
bit of song. The wind smelled of woodsmoke. From this terrace the River Oiss
was not visible, but its cataracts rang loud. Hard to imagine how, a bare two
hundred kilometers west, that stream began to flow through lands which had
become one huge city, from foothills to the Yet they were his
too—no, not his; the Vach Ynvory's, himself no more than the Hand for a few
decades before he gave back this flesh to the soil and this mind to the God.
Dhangodhan they had preserved little changed, because here was the country from
which they sprang, long ago. But their real work today was in Ardaig and
Tridaig, the capitals, where Brechdan presided over the Grand Council. And
beyond this planet, beyond Korych itself, out to the stars. Brechdan drew a deep
breath. The sense of power coursed in his veins. But that was a familiar wine;
today he awaited a joy more gentle. It did not show upon
him. He was too long schooled in chieftainship. Big, austere in a black robe,
brow seamed with an old battle scar which he disdained to have biosculped away,
he turned to the world only the face of Brechdan Ironrede, who stood second to
none but the Roidhun. A footfall sounded.
Brechdan turned. Chwioch, his bailiff, approached, in red tunic and green
trousers and modishly highcollared cape. He wasn't called "the Dandy"
for nothing. But he was loyal and able and an Ynvory born. Brechdan exchanged
kin-salutes, right hand to left shoulder. "Word from Shwylt
Shipsbane, Protector," Chwioch reported. "His business in the
Gwelloch will not detain him after all and he will come here this afternoon as
you desired." "Good."
Brechdan was, in fact, elated. Shwylt's counsel would be most helpful,
balancing Lifrith's impatience and Priadwyr's over-reliance on computer
technology. Though they were fine males, each in his own way, those three Hands
of their respective Vachs. Brechdan depended on them for ideas as much as for
the support they gave to help him control the Council. He would need them more
and more in the next few years, as events on Starkad were maneuvered toward
their climax. A thunderclap cut the
sky. Looking up, Brechdan saw a flitter descend with reckless haste. Scalloped
fins identified it as Ynvory common-property. "Your son, Protector!"
Chwioch cried with jubilation. "No doubt."
Brechdan must not unbend, not even when Elwych returned after three years. "Ah … shall
I cancel your morning audience, Protector?" "Certainly
not," Brechdan said. "Our client folk have their right to be heard. I
am too much absent from them." But we can have an hour
for our own. "I shall meet Heir
Elwych and tell him where you are, Protector." Chwioch hurried off. Brechdan waited. The sun
began to warm him through his robe. He wished Elwych's mother were still alive.
The wives remaining to him were good females, of course, thrifty, trustworthy,
cultivated, as females should be. But Nodhia had been—well, yes, he might as
well use a Terran concept—she had been fun. Elwych was Brechdan's dearest
child, not because he was the oldest now when two others lay dead on remote
planets, but because he was Nodhia's. May the earth lie light upon her. The gardener's shears
clattered to the flagstones. "Heir! Welcome home!" It was not
ceremonial for the old fellow to kneel and embrace the newcomer's tail, but
Brechdan didn't feel that any reproof was called for. Elwych the Swift strode
toward his father in the black and silver of the Navy. A captain's dragon was
sewn to his sleeve, the banners of Dhangodhan flamed over his head. He stopped
four paces off and gave a service salute. "Greeting, Protector." "Greeting,
swordarm." Brechdan wanted to hug that body to him. Their eyes met. The
youngster winked and grinned. And that was nigh as good. "Are the kindred
well?" Elwych asked: superfluously, as he had called from the inner moon
the moment his ship arrived for furlough. "Indeed,"
Brechdan said. They might then have
gone to the gynaeceum for family reunion. But the guard watched. Hand and Heir
could set him an example by talking first of things which concerned the race.
They need not be too solemn, however. "Had you a good
trip home?" Brechdan inquired. "Not exactly,"
Elwych replied. "Our main fire-control computer developed some kind of
bellyache. I thought best we put in at Vorida for repairs. The interimperial
situation, you know; it just might have exploded, and then a Terran unit just
might have chanced near us." "Vorida? I don't
recall—" "No reason why you
should. Too hooting many planets in the universe. A rogue in the Betelguese
sector. We keep a base—What's wrong?" Elwych alone noticed the
signs of his father being taken aback. "Nothing," Brechdan said.
"I assume the Terrans don't know about this orb." Elwych laughed.
"How could they?" How, in truth? There are
so many rogues, they are so little and dark, space is so vast. Consider: To an
approximation, the size of bodies which condensed out of the primordial gas is
inversely proportional to the frequency of their occurrence. At one end of the
scale, hydrogen atoms fill the galaxy, about one per cubic centimeter. At the
other end, you can count the monstrous O-type suns by yourself. (You may extend
the scale in both directions, from quanta to quasars; but no matter.) There are
about ten times as many M-type red dwarfs as there are G-type stars like Korych
or Sol. Your spaceship is a thousand times more likely to be struck by a
one-gram pebble than by a one-kilogram rock. And so, sunless planets are more
common than suns. They usually travel in clusters; nevertheless they are for
most practical purposes unobservable before you are nearly on top of them. They
pose no special hazard—whatever their number, the odds against one of them
passing through any particular point in space are literally astronomical—and
those whose paths are known can make useful harbors. Brechdan felt he must
correct an incomplete answer. "The instantaneous vibrations of a ship
under hyperdrive are detectable within a light-year," he said. "A
Terran or Betelgeusean could happen that close to your Vorida." Elwych flushed.
"And supposing one of our ships happened to be in the vicinity, what would
detection prove except that there was another ship?" He had been given the
wristslap of being told what any cub knew; he had responded with the slap of
telling what any cub should be able to reason out for himself. Brechdan could
not but smile. Elwych responded. A blow can also be an act of love. "I
capitulate," Brechdan said. "Tell me somewhat of your tour of duty.
We got far too few letters, especially in the last months." "Where I was then,
writing was a little difficult," Elwych said. "I can tell you now,
though. Saxo V." "Starkad?" Brechdan
exclaimed. "You, a line officer?" "Was this way. My
ship was making a courtesy call on the Betelgeuseans—or showing them the flag,
whichever way they chose to take it—when a courier from Fodaich Runei arrived.
Somehow the Terrans had learned about a submarine base he was having built off
an archipelago. The whole thing was simple, primitive, so the seafolk could
operate the units themselves, but it would have served to wreck landfolk
commerce in that area. Nobody knows how the Terrans got the information, but
Runei says they have a fiendishly good Intelligence chief. At any rate, they
gave some landfolk chemical depth bombs and told them where to sail and drop
them. And by evil luck, the explosions killed several key technicians of ours
who were supervising construction. Which threw everything into chaos. Our
mission there is scandalously short-handed. Runei sent to Betelgeuse as well as
Merseia, in the hope of finding someone like us who could substitute until
proper replacements arrived. So I put my engineers in a civilian boat. And
since that immobilized our ship as a fighting unit, I must go too." Brechdan nodded. An
Ynvory did not send personnel into danger and himself stay behind without
higher duties. He knew about the
disaster already, of course. Best not tell Elwych that. Time was unripe for the
galaxy to know how serious an interest Merseia had in Starkad. His son was
discreet. But what he did not know, he could not tell if the Terrans caught and
hypnoprobed him. "You must have had
an adventurous time," Brechdan said. "Well … yes.
Occasional sport. And an interesting planet." The anger still in Elwych
flared: "I tell you, though, our people are being betrayed." "How?" "Not enough of
them. Not enough equipment. Not a single armed spaceship. Why don't we support
them properly?" "Then the Terrans
will support their mission properly," Brechdan said. Elwych gazed long at his
father. The waterfall noise seemed to louder behind Dhangodhan's ramparts.
"Are we going to make a real fight for Starkad?" he murmured.
"Or do we scuttle away?" The scar throbbed on
Brechdan's forehead. "Who serve the Roidhun do not scuttle. But they may
strike bargains, when such appears good for the race." "So." Elwych
stared past him, across the valley mists. Scorn freighted his voice. "I
see. The whole operation is a bargaining counter, to win something from Terra.
Runei told me they'll send a negotiator here." "Yes, he is
expected soon." Because the matter was great, touching as it did on honor,
Brechdan allowed himself to grasp the shoulders of his son. Their eyes met.
"Elwych," Brechdan said gently, "you are young and perhaps do
not understand. But you must. Service to the race calls for more than courage,
more even than intelligence. It calls for wisdom. "Because we
Merseians have such instincts that most of us actively enjoy combat, we tend to
look on combat as an end in itself. And such is not true. That way lies
destruction. Combat is a means to an end—the hegemony of our race. And that in
turn is but a means to the highest end of all-absolute freedom for our race, to
make of the galaxy what they will. "But we cannot
merely fight for our goal. We must work. We must have patience. You will not
see us masters of the galaxy. It is too big. We may need a million years. On
that time scale, individual pride is a small sacrifice to offer, when it
happens that compromise or retreat serves us best." Elwych swallowed.
"Retreat from Terra?" "I trust not. Terra
is the immediate obstacle. The duty of your generation is to remove it." "I don't
understand," Elwych protested. "What is the Terran Empire? A clot of
stars. An old, sated, corrupt people who want nothing except to keep what their
fathers won for them. Why pay them any heed whatsoever? Why not expand away
from them—around them—until they're engulfed?" "Precisely because
Terra's objective is the preservation of the status quo," Brechdan said.
"You are forgetting the political theory that was supposed to be part of
your training. Terra cannot permit us to become more powerful than she.
Therefore she is bound to resist our every attempt to grow. And do not
underestimate her. That race still bears the chromosomes of conquerors. There
are still brave men in the Empire, devoted men, shrewd men … with the
experience of a history longer than ours to guide them. If they see doom before
them, they'll fight like demons. So, until we have sapped their strength, we
move carefully. Do you comprehend?" "Yes, my
father," Elwych yielded. "I hope so." Brechdan eased. They had
been serious for as long as their roles demanded. "Come." His face
cracked in another smile; he took his son's arm. "Let us go greet your
kin." They walked down
corridors hung with the shields of their ancestors and the trophies of hunts on
more than one planet. A gravshaft lifted them to the gynaeceum level. The whole tribe waited,
Elwych's stepmothers, sisters and their husbands and cubs, younger brothers.
Everything dissolved in shouts, laughter, pounding of backs, twining of tails,
music from a record player and a ringdance over the floor. One cry interrupted.
Brechdan bent above the cradle of his newest grandcub. I should speak about
marriage to Elwych, he thought. High time he begot an Heir's Heir. The small
being who lay on the furs wrapped a fist around the gnarled finger that stroked
him. Brechdan Ironrede melted within himself. "You shall have stars for
toys," he crooned. "Wudda, wudda, wudda." 4 Ensign Dominic Flandry,
Imperial Naval Flight Corps, did not know whether he was alive through luck or
management. At the age of nineteen, with the encoding molecules hardly settled
down on your commission, it was natural to think the latter. But had a single
one of the factors he had used to save himself been absent—He didn't care to
dwell on that. Besides, his troubles
were far from over. As a merchant ship belonging to the Sisterhood of
Kursoviki, the Archer had been given a radio by the helpful Terrans. But it was
crap-out; some thumblewit had exercised some Iron Age notion of maintenance.
Dragoika had agreed to put back for her home. But with a foul wind, they'd be
days at sea in this damned wallowing bathtub before they were even likely to
speak a boat with a transmitter in working order. That wasn't fatal per se.
Flandry could shovel local rations through the chowlock of his helmet;
Starkadian biochemistry was sufficiently like Terran that most foods wouldn't
poison him, and he carried vitamin supplements. The taste, though, my God, the
taste! Most ominous was the
fact that he had been shot down, and at no large distance from here. Perhaps
the Seatrolls, and Merseians, would let this Tigery craft alone. If they
weren't yet ready to show their hand, they probably would. However, his
misfortune indicated their preparations were more or less complete. When he
chanced to pass above their latest kettle of mischief, they'd felt so confident
they opened fire. "And then the
Outside Folk attacked you?" Ferok prodded. His voice came as a purr
through whistle of wind, rush and smack of waves, creak of rigging, all
intensified and distorted by the thick air. "Yes," Flandry
said. He groped for words. They'd given him an electronic cram in the language
and customs of Kursovikian civilization while the transport bore him from
Terra. But some things are hard to explain in pre-industrial terms. "A
type of vessel which can both submerge and fly rose from the water. Its radio
shout drowned my call and its firebeams wrecked my craft before mine could
pierce its thicker armor. I barely escaped my hull as it sank, and kept
submerged until the enemy went away. Then I flew off in search of help. The
small engine which lifted me was nigh exhausted when I came upon your
ship." Truly his gravity
impeller wouldn't lug him much further until the capacitors were recharged. He
didn't plan to use it again. What power remained in the pack on his shoulders
must be saved to operate the pump and reduction valve in the vitryl globe which
sealed off his head. A man couldn't breathe Starkadian sea-level air and
survive. Such an oxygen concentration would burn out his lungs faster than
nitrogen narcosis and carbon dioxide acidosis could kill him. He remembered how
Lieutenant Danielson had gigged him for leaving off the helmet. "Ensign, I
don't give a ball of fertilizer how uncomfortable the thing is, when you might
be enjoying your nice Terra-conditioned cockpit. Nor do I weep at the invasion
of privacy involved in taping your every action in flight. The purpose is to
make sure that pups like you, who know so much more than a thousand years of
astronautics could possibly teach them, obey regulations. The next offense will
earn you thirty seconds of nerve-lash. Dismissed." So you saved my life,
Flandry grumbled. You're still a snot-nosed bastard. Nobody was to blame for
his absent blaster. It was torn from the holster in those wild seconds of
scrambling clear. He had kept the regulation knife and pouchful of oddments. He
had boots and gray coverall, sadly stained and in no case to be compared with
the glamorous dress uniform. And that was just about the lot. Ferok lowered the plumy
thermosensor tendrils above his eyes: a frown. "If the vaz-Siravo search
what's left of your flier, down below, and don't find your body, they may guess
what you did and come looking for you," he said. "Yes," Flandry
agreed, "they may." He braced himself
against pitch and roll and looked outward—tall, the lankiness of adolescence
still with him; brown hair, gray eyes, a rather long and regular face which
Saxo had burned dark. Before him danced and shimmered a greenish ocean,
sun-flecks and whitecaps on waves that marched faster, in Starkadian gravity,
than on Terra. The sky was pale blue. Clouds banked gigantic on the horizon,
but in a dense atmosphere they did not portend storm. A winged thing cruised, a
sea animal broached and dove again. At its distance, Saxo was only a third as
broad as Sol is to Terra and gave half the illumination. The adaptable human
vision perceived this as normal, but the sun was merciless white, so brilliant
that one dared not look anywhere near. The short day stood at late afternoon,
and the temperature, never very high in these middle northern latitudes, was
dropping. Flandry shivered. Ferok made a contrast to
him. The land Starkadian, Tigery, Toborko, or whatever you wanted to call him,
was built not unlike a short man with disproportionately long legs. His hands
were four-fingered, his feet large and clawed, he flaunted a stubby tail. The
head was less anthropoid, round, with flat face tapering to a narrow chin. The
eyes were big, slanted, scarlet in the iris, beneath his fronded tendrils. The
nose, what there was of it, had a single slit nostril. The mouth was wide and
carnivore-toothed. The ears were likewise big, outer edges elaborated till they
almost resembled bat wings. Sleek fur covered his skin, black-striped orange
that shaded into white at the throat. He wore only a beaded
pouch, kept from flapping by thigh straps, and a curved sword scabbarded across
his back. By profession he was the boatswain, a high rank for a male on a
Kursovikian ship; as such, he was no doubt among Dragoika's lovers. By nature he
was impetuous, quarrelsome, and dog-loyal to his allegiances. Flandry liked
him. Ferok lifted a telescope
and swept it around an arc. That was a native invention. Kursoviki was the
center of the planet's most advanced land culture. "No sign of anything yet,"
he said. "Do you think yon Outsider flyboat may attack us?" "I doubt
that," Flandry said. "Most likely it was simply on hand because of
having brought some Merseian advisors, and shot at me because I might be
carrying instruments which would give me a clue as to what's going on down
below. It's probably returned to Kimraig by now." He hesitated before
continuing: "The Merseians, like us, seldom take a direct role in any
action, and then nearly always just as individual officers, not representatives
of their people. Neither of us wishes to provoke a response in kind." "Afraid?" Lips
curled back from fangs. "On your
account," Flandry said, somewhat honestly. "You have no dream of what
our weapons can do to a world." "World … hunh,
the thought's hard to seize. Well, let the Sisterhood try. I'm happy to be a
plain male." Flandry turned and
looked across the deck. The Archer was a big ship by Starkadian measure,
perhaps five hundred tons, broad in the beam, high in the stern, a carven post
at the prow as emblem of her tutelary spirit. A deckhouse stood amidships,
holding galley, smithy, carpenter shop, and armory. Everything was gaudily
painted. Three masts carried yellow square sails aloft, fore-and-aft beneath;
at the moment she was tacking on the latter and a genoa. The crew were about
their duties on deck and in the rigging. They numbered thirty male hands and
half a dozen female officers. The ship had been carrying timber and spices from
Ujanka port down the Chain archipelago. "What armament have
we?" he asked. "Our Terran deck
gun," Ferok told him. "Five of your rifles. We were offered more, but
Dragoika said they'd be no use till we had more people skilled with them.
Otherwise, swords, pikes, crossbows, knives, belaying pins, teeth, and nails."
He gestured at the mesh which passed from side to side of the hull, under the
keel. "If that twitches much, could mean a Siravo trying to put a hole in
our bottom. Then we dive after him. You'd be best for that, with your
gear." Flandry winced. His helmet
was adjustable for underwater; on Starkad, thй concentration of dissolved
oxygen was almost as high as in Terra's air. But he didn't fancy a scrap with a
being evolved for such an environment. "Why are you here,
yourself?" Ferok asked conversationally. "Pleasure or plunder?" "Neither. I was
sent." Flandry didn't add that the Navy reckoned it might as well use
Starkad to give certain promising young officers some experience.
"Promising" made him sound too immature. At once he realized he'd
actually sounded unaggressive and prevaricated in haste: "Of course, with
the chance of getting into a fight, I would have asked to go anyway." "They tell me your
females obey males. True?" "Well,
sometimes." The second mate passed by and Flandry's gaze followed her. She
had curves, a tawny mane rippling down her back, breasts standing fuller and
firmer than any girl could have managed without technological assistance, and a
nearly humanoid nose. Her clothing consisted of some gold bracelets. But her
differences from the Terran went deeper than looks. She didn't lactate; those
nipples fed blood directly to her infants. And hers was the more imaginative,
more cerebral sex, not subordinated in any culture, dominant in the islands
around Kursoviki. He wondered if that might trace back to something as simple
as the female body holding more blood and more capacity to regenerate it. "But who, then,
keeps order in your home country?" Ferok wondered. "Why haven't you
killed each other off?" "Um-m-m, hard to
explain," Flandry said. "Let me first see if I understand your ways,
to compare mine. For instance, you owe nothing to the place where you live,
right? I mean, no town or island or whatever is ruled, as a ship
is … right? Instead—at any rate in this part of the world—the females
are organized into associations like the Sisterhood, whose members may live
anywhere, which even have their special languages. They own all important
property and make all important decisions through those associations. Thus
disputes among males have little effect on them. Am I right?" "I suppose so. You
might have put it more politely." "Apology-of-courage
is offered. I am a stranger. Now among my people—" A shout fell from the
crow's nest. Ferok whirled and pointed his telescope. The crew sprang to the
starboard rail, clustered in the shrouds, and yelled. Dragoika bounded from
the captain's cabin under the poop. She held a four-pronged fish spear in one
hand, a small painted drum beneath her arm. Up the ladder she went, to stand by
the quartermistress at the wheel and look for herself. Then, coolly, she tapped
her drum on one side, plucked the steel strings across the recessed head on the
other. Twang and thump carried across noise like a bugle call. All hands to
arms and battle stations! "The
vaz-Siravo!" Ferok shouted above clamor. "They're on us!" He
made for the deckhouse. Restored to discipline, the crew were lining up for
helmets, shields, byrnies, and weapons. Flandry strained his
eyes into the glare off the water. A score or so blue dorsal fins clove it,
converging on the ship. And suddenly, a hundred meters to starboard, a
submarine rose. A little, crude thing,
doubtless home-built to a Merseian design—for if you want to engineer a
planet-wide war among primitives, you should teach them what they can make and
do for themselves. The hull was greased leather stretched across a framework of
some undersea equivalent of wood. Harness trailed downward to the four fish
which pulled it; he could barely discern them as huge shadows under the
surface. The deck lay awash. But an outsize catapult projected therefrom.
Several dolphin-like bodies with transparent globes on their heads and
powerpacks on their backs crouched alongside. They rose onto flukes and
flippers; their arms reached to swing the machine around. "Dommaneek!"
Dragoika screeched. "Dommaneek Falan-daree! Can you man ours?" "Aye, aye!"
The Terran ran prow-ward. Planks rolled and thudded beneath his feet. On the forward deck, the
two females whose duty it was were trying to unlimber the gun. They worked
slowly, getting in each other's way, spitting curses. There hadn't yet been
time to drill many competent shots, even with a weapon as simple as this, a
rifle throwing 38 mm. chemical shells. Before they got the range, that catapult
might— "Gangway!"
Flandry shoved the nearest aside. She snarled and swatted at him with long red
nails. Dragoika's drum rippled an order. Both females fell back from him. He opened the breech,
grabbed a shell from the ammo box, and dogged it in. The enemy catapult
thumped. A packet arced high, down again, made a near miss and burst into flame
which spread crimson and smoky across the waves. Some version of Greek
fire—undersea oil wells—Flandry put his eye to the range finder. He was too excited
to be scared. But he must lay the gun manually. A hydraulic system would have
been too liable to breakdown. In spite of good balance and self-lubricating
bearings, the barrel swung with nightmare slowness. The Seatrolls were
rewinding their catapult … before Andromeda, they were fast! They
must use hydraulics. Dragoika spoke to the
quartermistress. She put the wheel hard over. Booms swung over the deck. The
jib flapped thunderous until crewmales reset the sheets. The Archer came about.
Flandry struggled to compensate. He barely remembered to keep one foot on the
brake, lest his gun travel too far. Bet those she-cats would've forgotten. The
enemy missile didn't make the vessel's superstructure as intended. But it
struck the hull amidships. Under this oxygen pressure, fire billowed
heavenward. Flandry pulled the
lanyard. His gun roared and kicked. A geyser fountained, mingled with
splinters. One draught fish leaped, threshed, and died. The rest already
floated bellies up. "Got him!" Flandry whooped. Dragoika plucked a
command. Most of the crew put aside their weapons and joined a firefighting
party. There was a hand pump at either rail, buckets with ropes bent to them,
sails to drag from the deckhouse and wet and lower. Ferok, or someone,
yelled through voices, wind, waves, brawling, and smoke of the flames. The
Seatrolls were coming over the opposite rail. They must have climbed
the nets. (Better invent a different warning gadget, raced through Flandry's
mind.) They wore the Merseian equipment which had enabled their kind to carry
the war ashore elsewhere on Starkad. Waterfilled helmets covered the blunt
heads, black absorbent skinsuits kept everything else moist. Pumps cycled
atmospheric oxygen, running off powerpacks. The same capacitors energized their
legs. Those were clumsy. The bodies must be harnessed into a supporting
framework, the two flippers and the fluked tail control four mechanical limbs
with prehensile feet. But they lurched across the deck, huge, powerful, their
hands holding spears and axes and a couple of waterproof machine pistols. Ten
of them were now aboard … and how many sailors could be spared from
the fire? A rifle bullet wailed. A
Seatroll sprayed lead in return. Tigeries crumpled. Their blood was human
color. Flandry rammed home
another shell and lobbed it into the sea some distance off. "Why?"
screamed a gunner. "May have been more
coming," he said. "I hope hydrostatic shock got 'em." He didn't
notice he used Anglic. Dragoika cast her fish
spear. One pistol wielder went down, the prongs in him. He scrabbled at the
shaft. Rifles barked, crossbows snapped, driving his mate to shelter between
the deckhouse and a lifeboat. Then combat ramped, leaping Tigeries, lumbering
Seatrolls, sword against ax, pike against spear, clash, clatter, grunt, shriek,
chaos run loose. Several firefighters went for their weapons. Dragoika drummed
them back to work. The Seatrolls made for them, to cut them down and let the
ship burn. The armed Tigeries tried to defend them. The enemy pistoleer kept
the Kursovikian rifle shooters pinned down behind masts and
bollards—neutralized. The battle had no more shape than that. A bullet splintered the
planks a meter from Flandry. For a moment, panic locked him where he stood.
What to do, what to do? He couldn't die. He mustn't. He was Dominic, himself,
with a lifetime yet to live. Outnumbered though they were, the Seatrolls need
but wreak havoc till the fire got beyond control and he was done. Mother! Help
me! For no sound reason, he
remembered Lieutenant Danielson. Rage blossomed in him. He bounded down the
ladder and across the main deck. A Seatroll chopped at him. He swerved and
continued. Dragoika's door stood
under the poop. He slid the panel aside and plunged into her cabin. It was
appointed in barbaric luxury. Sunlight sickled through an oval port, across the
bulkhead as the ship rolled, touching bronze candlesticks, woven tapestry, a
primitive sextant, charts and navigation tables inscribed on parchment. He
snatched what he had left here to satisfy her curiosity, his impeller, buckled
the unit on his back with frantic fingers and hooked in his capacitors. Now,
that sword, which she hadn't taken time to don. He re-emerged, flicked
controls, and rose. Over the deckhouse! The
Seatroll with the machine pistol lay next it, a hard target for a rifle,
himself commanding stem and stern. Flandry drew blade. The being heard the
slight noise and tried awkwardly to look up. Flandry struck. He missed the hand
but knocked the gun loose. It flipped over the side. He whirred aft, smiting
from above. "I've got him!" he shouted. "I've got him! Come out
and do some real shooting!" The fight was soon
finished. He used a little more energy to help spread the wet sail which
smothered the fire. After dark, Egrima and
Buruz again ruled heaven. They cast shivering glades across the waters. Few
stars shone through, but one didn't miss them with so much other beauty. The
ship plowed northward in an enormous murmurous hush. Dragoika stood with
Flandry by the totem at the prow. She had offered thanks. Kursovikian religion
was a paganism more inchoate than any recorded from ancient Terra—the Tigery
mind was less interested than the human in finding ultimate causes—but ritual
was important. Now the crew had returned to watch or to sleep and they two were
alone. Her fur was sparked with silver, her eyes pools of light. "Our thanks belong
more to you," she said softly. "I am high in the Sisterhood. They
will be told, and remember." "Oh, well."
Flandry shuffled his feet and blushed. "But have you not
endangered yourself? You explained what scant strength is left in those boxes
which keep you alive. And then you spent it to fly about." "Uh, my pump can be
operated manually if need be." "I shall appoint a
detail to do so." "No need. You see,
now I can use the Siravo powerpacks. I have tools in my pouch for adapting
them." "Good." She
looked awhile into the shadows and luminance which barred the deck. "That
one whose pistol you removed—" Her tone was wistful. "No, ma'm,"
Flandry said firmly. "You cannot have him. He's the only survivor of the
lot. We'll keep him alive and unhurt." "I simply thought
of questioning him about their plans. I know a little of their language. We've
gained it from prisoners or parleys through the ages. He wouldn't be too
damaged, I think." "My superiors can
do a better job in Highport." Dragoika sighed.
"As you will." She leaned against him. "I've met vaz-Terran
before, but you are the first I have really known well." Her tail wagged.
"I like you." Flandry gulped.
"I … I like you too." "You fight like a
male and think like a female. That's something new. Even in the far southern
islands—" She laid an arm around his waist. Her fur was warm and silken
where it touched his skin. Somebody had told him once that could you breathe
their air undiluted, the Tigeries would smell like new-mown hay. "I'll
have joy of your company." "Um-m-m … uh."
What can I say? "Pity you must wear
that helmet," Dragoika said. "I'd like to taste your lips. But
otherwise we're not made so differently, our two kinds. Will you come to my
cabin?" For an instant that
whirled, Flandry was tempted. He had everything he could do to answer. It
wasn't based on past lectures about taking care not to offend native mores, nor
on principle, nor, most certainly, on fastidiousness. If anything, her
otherness made her the more piquant. But he couldn't really predict what she
might do in a close relationship, and— "I'm deeply
sorry," he said. "I'd love to, but I'm under a—" what was the
word?—"a geas." She was neither offended
nor much surprised. She had seen a lot of different cultures. "Pity,"
she said. "Well, you know where the forecastle is. Goodnight." She
padded aft. En route, she stopped to collect Ferok. —and besides, those
fangs were awfully intimidating. 5 When Lord Hauksberg
arrived in Highport, Admiral Enriques and upper-echelon staff had given a
formal welcoming party for their distinguished visitor and his aides as
protocol required. Hauksberg was expected to reciprocate on the eve of
departure. Those affairs were predictably dull. In between, however, he invited
various officers to small gatherings. A host of shrewd graciousness, he thus
blunted resentment which he was bound to cause by his interviewing of
overworked men and his diversion of already inadequate armed forces to security
duty. "I still don't see
how you rate," Jan van Zuyl complained from the bunk where he sprawled.
"A lousy ensign like you." "You're an ensign
yourself, me boy," Flandry reminded him from the dresser. He gave his blue
tunic a final tug, pulled on his white gloves, and buffed the jetflare insignia
on his shoulders. "Yes, but not a
lousy one," said his roommate. "I'm a hero.
Remember?" "I'm a hero too.
We're all heroes." Van Zuyl's gaze prowled their dismal little chamber.
The girlie animations hardly brightened it. "Give L'Etoile a kiss for
me." "You mean she'll be
there?" Flandry's pulses jumped. "She was when
Carruthers got invited. Her and Sharine and—" "Carruthers is a
lieutenant j.g. Therefore he is ex officio a liar. Madame Cepheid's choicest
items are not available to anyone below commander." "He swears milord
had 'em on hand, and in hand, for the occasion. So he lies. Do me a favor and
elaborate the fantasy on your return. I'd like to keep that particular
illusion." "You provide the
whisky and I'll provide the tales." Flandry adjusted his cap to
micrometrically calculated rakish-ness. "Mercenary
wretch," van Zuyl groaned. "Anyone else would lie for pleasure and
prestige." "Know, O miserable
one, that I possess an inward serenity which elevates me far beyond any need
for your esteem. Yet not beyond need for your booze. Especially after the last
poker game. And a magnificent evening to you. I shall return." Flandry proceeded down
the hall and out the main door of the junior officers' dorm. Wind struck
viciously at him. Sea-level air didn't move fast, being too dense, but on this
mountaintop Saxo could energize storms of more than terrestroid ferocity. Dry
snow hissed through chill and clamor. Flandry wrapped his cloak about him with
a sigh for lost appearances, hung onto his cap, and ran. At his age he had soon
adapted to the gravity. HQ was the largest
building in Highport, which didn't say much, in order to include a level of
guest suites. Flandry had remarked on that to Commander Abrams, in one of their
conversations following the numerous times he'd been summoned for further
questioning about his experience with the Tigeries. The Intelligence chief had
a knack for putting people at their ease. "Yes, sir, quite a few of my
messmates have wondered if—uh—" "If the Imperium
has sludge on the brain, taking up shipping space with luxuries for pestiferous
junketeers that might've been used to send us more equipment. Hey?" Abrams
prompted. "Uh … nobody's
committing lиse majestй, sir." "The hell they
aren't. But I guess you can't tell me so right out. In this case, though, you
boys are mistaken." Abrams jabbed his cigar at Flandry. "Think, son.
We're here for a political purpose. So we need political support. We won't get
it by antagonizing courtiers who take champagne and lullaby beds for granted. Tell
your friends that silly-looking hotel is an investment." Here's where I find out.
A scanner checked Flandry and opened the door. The lobby beyond was warm! It
was also full of armed guards. They saluted and let him by with envious
glances. But as he went up the gravshaft, his self-confidence grew thinner.
Rather than making him bouncy, the graduated shift to Terran weight gave a
sense of unfirmness. "Offhand,"
Abrams had said when he learned about the invitation, "milord seems to
want you for a novelty. You've a good yarn and you're a talented spinner. Nu,
entertain him. But watch yourself. Hauksberg's no fool. Nor any idler. In fact,
I gather that every one of his little soirйes has served some business
purpose—off-the-record information, impressions of what we really expect will
happen and expect to do and how we really feel about the whole schtick." By that time, Flandry
knew him well enough to venture a grin. "How do we really feel, sir? I'd
like to know." "What's your
opinion? Your own, down inside? I haven't got any recorder turned on." Flandry frowned and
sought words. "Sir, I only work here, as they say.
But … indoctrination said our unselfish purpose is to save the land
civilizations from ruin; islanders depend on the sea almost as much as the
fishfolk. And our Imperial purpose is to contain Merseian expansionism
whereever it occurs. But I can't help wondering why anybody wants this
planet." "Confidentially,"
Abrams said, "my main task is to find the answer to that. I haven't
succeeded yet." —A liveried servant
announced Flandry. He stepped into a suite of iridescent walls, comfortable
loungers, an animation showing a low-gee production of Ondine. Behind a buffet
table poised another couple of servants, and three more circulated. A dozen men
stood conversing: officers of the mission in dress uniform, Hauksberg's staff
in colorful mufti. Only one girl was present. Flandry was a little too nervous
for disappointment. It was a relief to see Abrams' square figure. "Ah. Our gallant
ensign, eh?" A yellow-haired man set down his glass—a waiter with a tray
was there before he had completed the motion—and sauntered forth. His garments
were conservatively purple and gray, but they fitted like another skin and showed
him to be in better physical shape than most nobles. "Welcome.
Hauksberg." Flandry saluted.
"My lord." "At ease, at
ease." Hauksberg made a negligent gesture. "No rank or ceremony
tonight. Hate 'em, really." He took Flandry's elbow. "C'mon and be
introduced." The boy's superiors
greeted him with more interest than hitherto. They were men whom Starkad had
darkened and leaned; honors sat burnished on their tunics; they could be seen
to resent how patronizingly the Terran staffers addressed one of their own.
"—and my concubine, the right honorable Persis d'Io." "I am privileged to
meet you, Ensign," she said as if she meant it. Flandry decided she was
an adequate substitute for L'Etoile, at least in ornamental function. She was
equipped almost as sumptuously as Dragoika, and her shimmerlyn gown emphasized
the fact. Otherwise she wore a fire ruby at her throat and a tiara on
high-piled crow's-wing tresses. Her features were either her own or shaped by
an imaginative biosculptor: big green eyes, delicately arched nose, generous
mouth, uncommon vivacity. "Please get yourself a drink and a smoke,"
she said. "You'll need a soothed larynx. I intend to make you talk a
lot." "Uh … um—"
Flandry barely stopped his toes from digging in the carpet. The hand he closed
on a proffered wine glass was damp. "Little to talk about, Donna. Lots of
men have, uh, had more exciting things happen to them." "Hardly so
romantic, though," Hauksberg said. "Sailin" with a pirate crew,
et cet'ra." "They're not
pirates, my lord," Flandry blurted. "Merchants … Pardon
me." Hauksberg studied him.
"You like 'em, eh?" "Yes, sir,"
Flandry said. "Very much." He weighed his words, but they were
honest. "Before I got to know the Tigeries well, my mission here was only
a duty. Now I want to help them." "Commendable.
Still, the sea dwellers are also sentient bein's, what? And the Merseians, for
that matter. Pity everyone's at loggerheads." Flandry's ears burned.
Abrams spoke what he dared not: "My lord, those fellow beings of the
ensign's did their level best to kill him." "And in
retaliation, after he reported, an attack was made on a squadron of
theirs," Hauksberg said sharply. "Three Merseians were killed, plus a
human. I was bein' received by Commandant Runei at the time.
Embarrassin'." "I don't doubt the
Fodaich stayed courteous to the Emperor's representative," Abrams said.
"He's a charming scoundrel when he cares to be. But my lord, we have an
authorized, announced policy of paying back any attacks on our mission."
His tone grew sardonic. "It's a peaceful, advisory mission, in a territory
claimed by neither empire. So it's entitled to protection. Which means that
bushwhacking its personnel has got to be made expensive." "And if Runei
ordered a return raid?" Hauksberg challenged. "He didn't, my
lord." "Not yet. Bit of
evidence for Merseia's conciliatory attitude, what? Or could be my presence
influenced Runei. One day soon, though, if these skirmishes continue, a real
escalation will set in. Then everybody'll have the devil's personal job
controllin' the degree of escalation. Might fail. The time to stop was
yesterday." "Seems to me
Merseia's escalated quite a big hunk, starting operations this near our main
base." "The seafolk have
done so. They had Merseian help, no doubt, but it's their war and the
landfolk's. No one else's." Abrams savaged a cold
cigar. "My lord," he growled, "sea-folk and landfolk alike are
divided into thousands of communities, scores of civilizations. Many never
heard of each other before. The dwellers in the Zletovar were nothing but a
nuisance to the Kursovikians, till now. So who gave them the idea of mounting a
concerted attack? Who's gradually changing what was a stable situation into a
planet-wide war of race against race? Merseia!" "You overreach
yourself, Commander," said Captain Abd-es-Salem reluctantly. The
viscount's aides looked appalled. "No, no."
Hauksberg smiled into the angry brown face confronting him. "I appreciate
frankness. Terra's got quite enough sycophants without exportin' 'em. How can I
find facts as I'm s'posed to without listenin'? Waiter, refill—Commander
Abrams' glass." "Just what are the,
ah, opposition doing in local waters?" inquired a civilian. Abrams shrugged.
"We don't know. Kursovikian ships have naturally begun avoiding that area.
We could try sending divers, but we're holding off. You see, Ensign Flandry did
more than have an adventure. More, yet, than win a degree of respect and good
will among the Tigeries that'll prove useful to us. He's gathered information
about them we never had before, details that escaped the professional
xenologists, and given me the data as tightly organized as a limerick. Above
the lot, he delivered a live Seatroll prisoner." Hauksberg lit a cheroot.
"I gather that's unusual?" "Yes, sir, for
obvious environmental reasons as well as because the Tigeries normally barbecue
any they take." Persis d'Io grimaced.
"Did you say you like them?" she scolded Flandry. "Might be hard for
a civilized being to understand, Donna," Abrams drawled. "We prefer
nuclear weapons that can barbecue entire planets. Point is, though, our lad
here thought up gadgets to keep that Seatroll in health, things a smith and
carpenter could make aboard ship. I better not get too specific, but I've got
hopes about the interrogation." "Why not tell
us?" Hauksberg asked. "Surely you don't think anyone here is a
Merseian in disguise." "Probably
not," Abrams said. "However, you people are bound on to the enemy's
home planet. Diplomatic mission or no, I can't impose the risk on you of
carrying knowledge they'd like to have." Hauksberg laughed.
"I've never been called a blabbermouth more tactfully." Persis interrupted.
"No arguments, please, darling. I'm too anxious to hear Ensign Flandry." "You're on,
son," Abrams said. They took loungers.
Flandry received a goldleaf-tipped cigaret from Persis' own fingers. Wine and
excitement bubbled in him. He made the tale somewhat better than true:
sufficient to drive Abrams into a coughing fit. "—and so, one day
out of Ujanka, we met a ship that could put in a call for us. A flier took me
and the prisoner off." Persis sighed. "You
make it sound such fun. Have you seen your friends again since?" "Not yet, Donna.
I've been too busy working with Commander Abrams." In point of fact, he
had done the detail chores of data correlation on a considerably lower level.
"I've been temporarily assigned to his section. I do have an invitation to
visit down in Ujanka, and imagine I'll be ordered to accept." "Right,"
Captain Menotti said. "One of our problems has been that, while the
Sisterhood accepts our equipment and some of our advice, they've remained wary
of us. Understandable, when we're so foreign to them, and when their own
Seatroll neighbors were never a real menace. We've achieved better liaison with
less developed Starkadian cultures. Kursoviki is too proud, too jealous of its
privacies, I might say too sophisticated, to take us as seriously as we'd like.
Here we may have an entering wedge." "And also in your
prisoner," Hauksberg said thoughtfully. "Want to see him." "What?" Abrams
barked. "Impossible!" "Why?" "Why—that is—" "Wouldn't fulfill
my commission if I didn't," Hauksberg said. "I must insist." He
leaned forward. "You see, could be this is a wedge toward somethin' still
more important. Peace." '"How
so … my lord?" "If you pump him as
dry's I imagine you plan, you'll find out a lot about his culture. They won't
be the faceless enemy, they'll be real bein's with real needs and desires. He
can accompany an envoy of ours to his people. We can—not unthinkable, y'
know—we can p'rhaps head off this latest local war. Negotiate a peace between
the Kursovikians and their neighbors." "Or between lions
and lambs?" Abrams snapped. "How do you start? They'd never come near
any submarine of ours." "Go out in native
ships, then." "We haven't the men
for it. Damn few humans know how to operate a windjammer these days, and
sailing on Starkad is a different art anyhow. We should get Kursovikians to
take us on a peace mission? Ha!" "What if their chum
here asked 'em? Don't you think that might be worth a try?" "Oh!" Persis,
who sat beside him, laid a hand over Flandry's. "If you could—" Under those eyes, he
glowed happily and said he would be delighted. Abrams gave him a bleak look.
"If ordered, of course," he added in a hurry. "I'll discuss the
question with your superiors," Hauksberg said. "But gentlemen, this
is s'posed to be a social evenin'. Forget business and have another drink or
ten, eh?" His gossip from Terra
was scandalous and comical. "Darling," Persis said, "you mustn't
cynicize our guest of honor. Let's go talk more politely, Ensign." "W-w-with joy,
Donna." The suite was interior,
but a viewscreen gave on the scene outside. Snowfall had stopped; mountaintops
lay gaunt and white beneath the moons. Persis shivered. "What a dreadful
place. I pray we can bring you home soon." He was emboldened to
say, "I never expected a, uh, highborn and, uh, lovely lady to come this
long, dull, dangerous way." She laughed. "I
highborn? But thanks. You're sweet." Her lashes fluttered. "If I can
help my lord by traveling with him … how could I refuse? He's working
for Terra. So are you. So should I. All of us together, wouldn't that be
best?" She laughed again. "I'm sorry to be the only girl here. Would
your officers mind if we danced a little?" He went back to quarters
with his head afloat. Nonetheless, next day he gave Jan van Zuyl a good
bottle's worth. At the center of a
soundproofed room, whose fluoros glared with Saxo light, the Siravo floated in
a vitryl tank surrounded by machines. He was big, 210
centimeters in length and thick of body. His skin was glabrous, deep blue on
the back, paler greenish blue on the stomach, opalescent on the gillcovers. In
shape he suggested a cross between dolphin, seal, and man. But the flukes, and
the two flippers near his middle, were marvels of musculature with some
prehensile capability. A fleshy dorsal fin grew above. Not far behind the head
were two short, strong arms; except for vestigial webs, the hands were
startlingly humanlike. The head was big and golden of eyes, blunt of snout,
with quivering cilia flanking a mouth that had lips. Abrams, Hauksberg, and
Flandry entered. ("You come too," the commander had said to the
ensign. "You're in this thing ass deep.") The four marines on guard
presented arms. The technicians straightened from their instruments. "At ease,"
Abrams said. "Freely translated: get the hell back to work. How's she
coming, Leong?" "Encouraging,
sir," the scientific chief answered. "Computation from neurological
and encйphalographie data shows he can definitely stand at least a
half-intensity hypnoprobing without high probability of permanent lesion. We
expect to have apparatus modified for underwater use in another couple of
days." Hauksberg went to the
tank. The swimmer moved toward him. Look met look; those were beautiful eyes in
there. Hauksberg was flushing as he turned about. "Do you mean to torture
that bein'?" he demanded. "A light
hypnoprobing isn't painful, my lord," Abrams said. "You know what I
mean. Psychological torture. 'Specially when he's in the hands of utter aliens.
Ever occur to you to talk with him?" "That's easy? My
lord, the Kursovikians have tried for centuries. Our only advantages over them
are that we have a developed theory of linguistics, and vocalizers to reproduce
his kind of sounds more accurately. From the Tigeries and xenological records
we have a trifle of his language. But only a trifle. The early expeditions
investigated this race more thoroughly in the Kimraig area, where the Merseians
are now, no doubt for just that reason. The cultural patterns of Charlie here are
completely unknown to us. And he hasn't been exactly cooperative." "Would you be, in
his place?" "Hope not. But my
lord, we're in a hurry too. His people may be planning a massive operation,
like against settlements in the Chain. Or he may up and die on us. We think he
has an adequate diet and such, but how can we be certain?" Hauksberg
scowled. "You'll destroy any chance of gettin' his cooperation, let alone
his trust." "For negotiation
purposes? So what have we lost? But we won't necessarily alienate him forever.
We don't know his psyche. He may well figure ruthlessness is in the day's work.
God knows Tigeries in small boats get short shrift from any Seatrolls they
meet. And—" The great blue shape glided off to the end of the
tank—"he looks pretty, but he is no kin of you or me or the
landfolk." "He thinks. He
feels." "Thinks and feels
what? I don't know. I do know he isn't even a fish. He's homeothermic; his
females give live birth and nurse their young. Under high atmospheric pressure,
there's enough oxygen dissolved in water to support an active metabolism and a
good brain. That must be why intelligence evolved in the seas: biological
competition like you hardly ever find in the seas of Terra-type planets. But
the environment is almost as strange to us as Jupiter." "The Merseians get
along with his kind." "Uh-huh. They took
time to learn everything we haven't. We've tried to xenologize ourselves, in
regions the conflict hasn't reached so far, but the Merseians have always found
out and arranged trouble." "Found out
how?" Hauksberg pounced. "By spies?" "No, surveillance.
'Bout all that either side has available. If we could somehow get access to
their undersea information—" Abrams snapped his mouth shut and pulled out
a cigar. Hauksberg eased. He
smiled. "Please don't take me wrong, Commander. Assure you I'm not some
weepin' idealist. You can't make an omelet, et cet'ra. I merely object to
breakin' every egg in sight. Rather messy, that." He paused. "Won't
bother you more today. But I want a full report on this project to date, and
regular bulletins. I don't forbid hypnoprobin' categorically, but I will not
allow any form of torture. And I'll be back." He couldn't quite suppress a
moue of distaste. "No, no, thanks awf'lly but you needn't escort me out.
Good day, gentlemen." The door closed on his
elegance. Abrams went into a conference with Leong. They talked low. The hum,
click, buzz of machines filled the room, which was cold. Flandry stood staring
at the captive he had taken. "A millo for 'em," Abrams said. Flandry started. The
older man had joined him on cat feet. "Sir?" "Your thoughts.
What're you turning over in your mind, besides the fair d'Io?" Flandry blushed. "I
was wondering, sir. Hau—milord was right. You are pushing ahead terribly fast,
aren't you?" "Got to." "No," said
Flandry earnestly. "Pardon, sir, but we could use divers and subs and
probes to scout the Zletovar. Charlie here has more value in the long run, for
study. I've read what I could find about the Seatrolls. They are an unknown
quantity. You need a lot more information before you can be sure that any given
kind of questioning will show results." Beneath lowered bushy
brows, behind a tobacco cloud, Abrams regarded him. "Telling me my
business?" His tone was mild. "No, sir. Certainly
not. I—I've gotten plenty of respect for you." The idea flamed. "Sir!
You do have more information than you admit! A pipeline to—" "Shut up." The
voice stayed quiet, but Flandry gulped and snapped to an automatic brace.
"Keep shut up. Understand?" "Y-yes, sir." Abrams glanced at his
team. None of them had noticed. "Son," he
murmured, "you surprise me. You really do. You're wasted among those
flyboys. Ever considered transferring to the spyboys?" Flandry bit his lip. "All right,"
Abrams said. "Tell uncle. Why don't you like the idea?" "It—I mean—No, sir,
I'm not suited." "You look bundled
to the ears to me. Give me a break. Talk honest. I don't mind being called a
son of a bitch. I've got my birth certificate." "Well—"
Flandry rallied his courage. "This is a dirty business, sir." "Hm. You mean for
instance right here? Charlie?" "Yes, sir.
I … well, I sort of got sent to the Academy. Everybody took for
granted I'd go. So did I. I was pretty young." Abrams' mouth twitched
upward. "I've … started
to wonder, though," Flandry stumbled. "Things I heard at the
party … uh, Donna d'Io said—You know, sir, I wasn't scared in that
sea action, and afterward it seemed like a grand, glorious victory. But now
I—I've begun remembering the dead. One Tigery took a whole day to die. And
Charlie, he doesn't so much as know what's going to happen to him!" Abrams smoked a while.
"All beings are brothers, eh?" he said. "No, sir, not
exactly, but—" "Not exactly? You
know better'n that. They aren't! Not even all men are. Never have been. Sure,
war is degrading. But there are worse degradations. Sure, peace is wonderful.
But you can't always have peace, except in death, and you most definitely can't
have a peace that isn't founded on hard common interest, that doesn't pay off
for everybody concerned. Sure, the Empire is sick. But she's ours. She's all
we've got. Son, the height of irresponsibility is to spread your love and
loyalty so thin that you haven't got enough left for the few beings and the few
institutions which rate it from you." Flandry stood
motionless. "I know,"
Abrams said. "They rammed you through your education. You were supposed to
learn what civilization is about, but there wasn't really time, they get so
damned few cadets with promise these days. So here you are, nineteen years old,
loaded to the hatches with technical information and condemned to make for
yourself every philosophical mistake recorded in history. I'd like you to read
some books I pack around in micro. Ancient stuff mostly, a smidgin of
Aristotle, Machiavelli, Jefferson, Clausewitz, Jouvenel, Michaelis. But that'll
take a while. You just go back to quarters today. Sit. Think over what I
said." "Has the Fodaich
not seen the report I filed?" asked Dwyr the Hook. "Yes, of
course," Runei answered. "But I want to inquire about certain
details. Having gotten into the Terran base, even though your objective was too
well guarded to burgle, why did you not wait for an opportunity?" "The likelihood did
not appear great, Fodaich. And dawn was coming. Someone might have addressed
me, and my reply might have provoked suspicion. My orders were to avoid
unnecessary risks. The decision to leave at once is justified in retrospect,
since I did not find my vehicle in the canyon when I returned. A Terran patrol
must have come upon it. Thus I had to travel overland to our hidden depot, and
hence my delay in returning here." "What about that
other patrol you encountered on the way? How much did they see?" "Very little, I
believe, Fodaich. We were in thick forest, and they shot blindly when I failed
to answer their challenge. They did, as you know, inflict considerable damage
on me, and it is fortunate that I was then so close to my goal that I could
crawl the rest of the way after escaping them." "Khr-r-r,"
Runei sighed. "Well, the attempt was worth making. But this seems to make
you supernumerary on Starkad, doesn't it?" "I trust I may
continue to serve in honor." Dwyr gathered nerve. "Fodaich, I did
observe one thing from afar while in Highport, which may or may not be
significant. Abrams himself walked downstreet in close conversation with a
civilian who had several attendants—I suspect the delegate from Terra." "Who is most
wonderfully officious," Runei mused, "and who is proceeding on from
here. Did you catch anything of what was said?" "The noise level
was high, Fodaich. With the help of aural amplification and focusing, I could
identify a few words like 'Merseia.' My impression is that Abrams may be going
with him. In such case, Abrams had better be kept under special watch." "Yes." Runei
stroked his chin. "A possibility. I shall consider it. Hold yourself in
readiness for a quick departure." Dwyr saluted and left.
Runei sat alone. The whirr of ventilators filled his lair. Presently he nodded
to himself, got out his chessboard, and pondered his next move. A smile touched
his lips. 6 Starkad rotated thrice
more. Then the onslaught came. Flandry was in Ujanka.
The principal seaport of Kurijsoviki stood on "Here my mothers
dwelt since the town was founded," she told her guest. "Here Chupa
once feasted. Here the staircase ran with blood on the Day of the Gulch. There
are too many ghosts for me to abandon." She chuckled, deep in her throat,
and gestured around the stone-built room, at furs, carpets, furnishings, books,
weapons, bronze vases and candelabra, goblets of glass and seashell, souvenirs
and plunder from across a quarter of the planet. "Also, too much stuff to
move." Flandry glanced out the
third-floor window. A cobbled way twisted between tenements that could double
as fortresses. A pair of cowled males slunk by, swords drawn; a drum thuttered;
the yells and stampings and metal on metal of a brawl flared brief but loud. "What about
robbers?" he asked. Ferok grinned.
"They've learned better." He sprawled on a couch whose curves
suggested a ship. Likewise did his skipper and Iguraz, a portly grizzled male
who had charge of Seatraders' Castle. In the gloom of the chamber, their eyes
and jewelry seemed to glow. The weather outside was bright but chill. Flandry
was glad he had chosen to wear a thick coverall on his visit. They wouldn't
appreciate Terran dress uniform anyhow. "I don't understand
you people," Dragoika said. She leaned forward and sniffed the mild
narcotic smoke from a brazier. "Good to see you again, Dommaneek, but I
don't understand you. What's wrong with a fight now and then? And—after
personally defeating the vaz-Siravo—you come here to babble about making peace
with them!" Flandry turned. The
murmur of his airpump seemed to grow in his head. "I was told to broach
the idea," he replied. "But you don't like
it yourself?" Iguraz wondered. "Then why beneath heaven do you speak
it?" "Would you tolerate
insubordination?" Flandry said. "Not at sea,"
Dragoika admitted. "But land is different." "Well, if nothing
else, we vaz-Terran here find ourselves in a situation like sailors."
Flandry tried to ease his nerves by pacing. His boots felt heavy. "Why don't you
simply wipe out the vaz-Siravo for us?" Ferok asked. "Shouldn't be
hard if your powers are as claimed." Dragoika surprised
Flandry by lowering her tendrils and saying, "No such talk. Would you
upset the world?" To the human: "The Sisterhood bears them no vast
ill will. They must be kept at their distance like any other dangerous beasts.
But if they would leave us alone there would be no occasion for battle." "Perhaps they think
the same," Flandry said. "Since first your people went to sea, you
have troubled them." "The oceans are
wide. Let them stay clear of our islands." "They cannot.
Sunlight breeds life, so they need the shoals for food. Also, you go far out to
chase the big animals and harvest weed. They have to have those things
too." Flandry stopped, tried to run a hand through his hair, and struck
his helmet. "I'm not against peace in the Zletovar myself. If nothing
else, because the vaz-Merseian would be annoyed. They started this arming of
one folk against another, you know. And they must be preparing some action
here. What harm can it do to talk with the vaz-Siravo?" "How do so?"
Iguraz countered. "Any Toborko who went below'd be slaughtered out of
hand, unless you equipped her to do the slaughtering herself." "Be still,"
Dragoika ordered. "I asked you here because you have the records of what
ships are in, and Ferok because he's Dommaneek's friend. But this is female
talk." The Tigeries took her
reproof in good humor. Flandry explained: "The delegates would be my
people. We don't want to alarm the seafolk unduly by arriving in one of our own
craft. But we'll need a handy base. So we ask for ships of yours, a big enough
fleet that attack on it is unlikely. Of course, the Sisterhood would have to ratify
any terms we arrived at." "That's not so
easy," Dragoika said. "The Janjevar va-Radovik reaches far beyond
Kursovikian waters. Which means, I suppose, that many different Siravo
interests would also be involved in any general settlement." She rubbed
her triangular chin. "Nonetheless … a local truce, if nothing
else … hunh, needs thinking about—" And then, from the
castle, a horn blew. Huge, brazen,
bellows-driven, it howled across the city. The hills echoed. Birds stormed from
trees. Hoo-hoo! Fire, flood, or foe! To arms, to arms! Hoo, hoo-hoo, hoo-oo! "What the
wreck?" Ferok was on his feet, snatching sword and shield from the wall,
before Flandry had seen him move. Iguraz took his ponderous battleax. Dragoika
crouched where she was and snarled. Bronze and crystal shivered. "Attack?"
Flandry cried among the hornblasts. "But they can't!" The picture unreeled for
him. The mouth of Terran HQ had worried
about assaults on the archipelago colonies. Ujanka, though, had not seen war
for hundreds of years, and that was with other Tigeries … Hoo, hoo! "We'll go
look." Dragoika's gorgeous fur stood on end, her tail was rigid, her ears
aquiver; but now she spoke as if suggesting dinner and flowed from her couch
with no obvious haste. On the way, she slung a sword over her back. Blaster in hand, Flandry
followed her into a hall dominated by a contorted stone figure, three meters
high, from the They were halfway to the
top when the world said Crump! and stones trembled. Dragoika was thrown back
against Flandry. He caught her. It was like holding steel and rubber, sheathed
in velvet. A rumble of collapsing masonry beat through his helmet. Screams came
thin and remote. "What's
happened?" Iguraz bawled. Ferok cursed. Even then, Flandry noted some of
his expressions for later use. If there was a later. Dragoika regained balance.
"Thanks," she murmured, and stroked the human's arm. "Come."
She bounded on. They emerged on the
house tower as a second explosion went off. That one was further away. But
thunder rolled loud in Starkad's air. Flandry ran to the parapet. He stared
across steeply pitched red tile roofs whose beam ends were carved with flowers
and monster heads. Northward, beyond these old gray walls, the High Housing
lifted emerald green, agleam with villas. He could see the Concourse pylon,
where Pride's Way, the "There!" Ferok
yelled. He pointed to sea. Dragoika went to a telescope mounted under a canopy. Flandry squinted. Light
dazzled him off the water. He found the hulks, out past the Long Moles. They
lay ablaze. Past them—Dragoika nodded grimly and pulled him to her telescope. Where the bay broadened,
between Whitestrands to west and Sorrow Cliff to east, a whale shape basked.
Its hide was wet metal. A turret projected amidships; Flandry could just see
that it stood open and held a few shapes not unlike men. Fore and aft were
turrets more low, flat, with jutting tubes. As he looked, fire spat
from one of those dragon snouts. A moment later, smoke puffed off the high
square wall of Sea-Traders' Castle. Stones avalanched onto the wharf below. One
of the ships which crowded the harbor was caught under them. Her mast reeled
and broke, her hull settled. Noise rolled from waterfront to hills and back
again. "Lucifer! That's a submarine!" And nothing like what he
had fought. Yonder was a Merseian job, probably nuclear-propelled, surely
Merseian crewed. She wasn't very big, some twenty meters in length, must have
been assembled here on Starkad. Her guns, though of large caliber, were
throwing chemical H.E. So the enemy wasn't introducing atomics into this war.
(Yet. When somebody did, all hell would let out for "We'll burn!"
Ferok wailed. On this planet, no one
was ashamed to stand in terror of fire. Flandry raced through an assessment.
Detested hours and years of psych drill at the Academy paid off. He knew rage
and fear, his mouth was dry and his heart slammed, but emotion didn't get in
the way of logic. Ujanka wouldn't go up fast. Over the centuries, stone and
tile had replaced wood nearly everywhere. But if fire started among the ships,
there went something like half the strength of Kursoviki. And not many shells
were needed for that. Dragoika had had the
same thought. She wheeled to glare across the Pechaniki, where the Sisterhood
centrum lifted a green copper dome from the West Housing. Her mane fluttered
wild. "Why haven't they rung Quarters?" "Surely none need
reminding," Iguraz puffed. To Flandry: "Law is that when aught may
threaten the ships, their crews are to report aboard and take them out on the
bay." A shell trundled overhead. Its impact gouted near "But today they may
indeed forget," Dragoika said between her fangs. "They may panic.
Those tallywhackers yonder must've done so, not to be hanging on the bell ropes
now." She started forward.
"Best I go there myself. Ferok, tell them not to await me on the
Archer." Flandry stopped her. She
mewed anger. "Apology-of-courage," he said. "Let's try calling
first." "Call—argh, yes,
you've given 'em a radio, haven't you? My brain's beaten flat." Crash! Crash! The
bombardment was increasing. As yet it seemed almost random. The idea must be to
cause terror and conflagration as fast as possible. Flandry lifted wristcom
to helmet speaker and tuned the Sisters' waveband. His hope that someone would
be at the other end was not great. He let out a breath when a female voice
replied, insect small beneath whistle and boom: "Ey-ya, do you belong to
the vaz-Terran? I could not raise anyone of you." No doubt all
switchboards're flooded with yammer from Our Men In Ujanka, Flandry thought. He
couldn't see their dome in the hills, but he could imagine the scene. Those
were Navy too, of course—but engineers, technicians, hitherto concerned merely
with providing a few gadgets and training Tigeries in the use of same. Nor was
their staff large. Other regions, where the war was intense, claimed most of
what Terra could offer. (Five thousand or so men get spread horribly thin
across an entire world; and then a third of them are not technical but combat
and Intelligence units, lest Runei feel free to gobble the whole mission.) Like
him, the Ujanka team had sidearms and weaponless flitters: nothing else. "Why haven't
Quarters been rung?" Flandry demanded as if he'd known the law his whole
life. "But no one
thought—" "So start
thinking!" Dragoika put her lips close to Flan-dry's wrist. Her bosom
crowded against him. "I see no sign of craft readying to stand out." "When that thing
waits for them?" "They'll be safer
scattered than docked," Dragoika said. "Ring the call." "Aye. But when do
the vaz-Terran come?" "Soon,"
Flandry said. He switched to the team band. "I go now," Dragoika
said. "No, wait, I beg
you. I may need you to … to help." It would be so lonely on
this tower. Flandry worked the signal button with an unsteady forefinger. This
microunit couldn't reach Highport unless the local 'caster relayed, but he
could talk to someone in the dome, if anybody noticed a signal light, if every
circuit wasn't tied up—Brrum! A female loped down Shiv Alley. Two males
followed, their young in their arms, screaming. "Ujanka Station,
Lieutenant Kaiser." Shellburst nearly drowned the Anglic words. Concussion
struck like a fist. The tower seemed to sway. "Flandry
here." He remembered to overlook naming his rank, and crisped his tone.
"I'm down on the east side. Have you seen what's on the bay?" "Sure have. A
sub—" "I know. Is help on
the way?" "No." "What? But that
thing's Merseian! It'll take this town apart unless we strike." "Citizen,"
said the voice raggedly, "I've just signed off from HQ. Recon reports the
greenskin air fleet at hover in the stratosphere. Right over your head. Our
fliers are scrambled to cover Highport. They're not going anywhere else." Reckon they can't at
that, Flandry thought. Let a general dogfight develop, and the result is up for
grabs. A Merseian could even break through and lay an egg on our main base. "I understand
Admiral Enriques is trying to get hold of his opposite number and enter a
strenuous protest," Kaiser fleered. "Never mind. What
can you yourselves do?" "Not a mucking
thing, citizen. HQ did promise us a couple of transports equipped to spray
firefighting chemicals. They'll fly low, broadcasting their identity. If the
gatortails don't shoot them regardless, they should get here in half an hour or
so. Now, where are you? I'll dispatch a flitter." "I have my
own," Flandry said. "Stand by for further messages." He snapped off his unit.
From across the river began a high and striding peal. "Well?"
Dragoika's ruby eyes blazed at him. He told her. For a moment, her
shoulders sagged. She straightened again. "We'll not go down politely. If
a few ships with deck guns work close—" "Not a
chance," Flandry said. "That vessel's too well armored. Besides, she
could sink you at twice your own range." "I'll try
anyhow." Dragoika clasped his hands. She smiled. "Farewell. Perhaps we'll
meet in the "No!" It
leaped from him. He didn't know why. His duty was to save himself for future
use. His natural inclination was identical. But he wasn't about to let a bunch
of smug Merseians send to the bottom these people he'd sailed with. Not if he
could help it! "Come on," he
said. "To my flier." Ferok stiffened.
"I, flee?" "Who talked about
that? You've guns in this house, haven't you? Let's collect them and some
assistants." Flandry clattered down the stairs. He entered the alley
with a slugthrower as well as his blaster. The three Tigeries followed, bearing
several modern small arms between them. They ran into the Street Where They
Fought and on toward Seatraders' Castle. Crowds milled back and
forth. No one had the civilized reflex of getting under cover when artillery
spoke. But neither did many scuttle about blinded by terror. Panic would
likeliest take the form of a mob rush to the waterfront, with weapons-swords
and bows against pentanitro. Sailors shoved through the broil, purpose restored
to them by the bells. A shell smote close by.
Flandry was hurled into a cloth-dealer's booth. He climbed to his feet with
ears ringing, draped in multicolored tatters. Bodies were strewn between the
walls. Blood oozed among the cobbles. The wounded ululated, most horribly, from
beneath a heap of fallen stones. Dragoika lurched toward
him. Her black and orange fur was smeared with red. "Are you all
right?" he shouted. "Aye." She loped
on. Ferok accompanied them. Iguraz lay with a smashed skull, but Ferok had
gathered his guns. By the time he reached
the castle, Flandry was reeling. He entered the forecourt, sat down beside his
flitter, and gasped. Dragoika called males down from the parapets and armed
them. After a while, Flandry adjusted his pump. An upward shift in helmet
pressure made his abused eardrums protest, but the extra oxygen restored some
vitality. They crowded into the
flitter. It was a simple passenger vehicle which could hold a score or so if
they filled seats and aisle and rear end. Flandry settled himself at the board
and started the grav generators. Overloaded, the machine rose sluggishly. He
kept low, nigh shaving the heads of the Tigeries outside, until he was across
the river and past the docks and had a screen of forest between him and the
bay. "You're headed for
Whitestrands," Dragoika protested. "Of course,"
Flandry said. "We want the sun behind us." She got the idea.
Doubtless no one else did. They huddled together, fingered what guns they had,
and muttered. He hoped their first airborne trip wouldn't demoralize them. "When we set
down," he said loudly, "everyone jump out. You will find open hatches
on the deck. Try to seize them first. Otherwise the boat can submerge and drown
you." "Then their gunners
will drown too," said a vindictive voice at his back. "They'll have
reserves." Flandry understood, suddenly and shatteringly, how insane his
behavior was. If he didn't get shot down on approach, if he succeeded in
landing, he still had one blaster and a few bullet projectors against how many
Merseian firespitters? He almost turned around. But no, he couldn't, not in the
presence of these beings. Moral cowardice, that's what was the matter with him. At the beach he veered
and kicked in emergency overpower. The vehicle raced barely above the water,
still with grisly slowness. A gust threw spray across the windshield. The
submarine lay gray, indistinct, and terrible. "Yonder!"
Dragoika screeched. She pointed south. The
sea churned with dorsal fins. Fish-drawn catapult boats had begun to rise,
dotting it as far as one could eye. Of course, trickled through the cellars of
Flandry's awareness. This has to be largely a Seatroll operation, partly to conserve
Merseian facilities, partly to conserve the fiction. That sub's only an
auxiliary … isn't it? Those are only advisors—well, volunteers this
time—at the guns … aren't they? But once they've reduced Ujanka's
defenses, the Seatrolls will clean the place out. I don't give a hiss what
happens to Charlie. An energy bolt tore
through the thin fuselage. No one was hit. But he'd been seen. But he was under the
cannon. He was over the deck. He stopped dead and
lowered his wheels. A seat-of-the-pants shiver told him they had touched.
Dragoika flung wide the door. Yelling, she led the rush. Flandry held his flitter
poised. These were the worst seconds, the unreal ones when death, which must
not be real, nibbled around him. Perhaps ten Merseians were topside, in air
helmets and black uniforms: three at either gun, three or four in the opened
conning tower. For the moment, that tower was a shield between him and the
after crew. The rest wielded blasters and machine pistols. Lightnings raged. Dragoika had hit the
deck, rolled, and shot from her belly. Her chatterbox spewed lead. Flame raked
at her. Then Ferok was out, snapping with his own pistol. And more, and more. The officers in the
tower, sheltered below its bulwark, fired. And now the after crew dashed
beneath them. Bolts and slugs seethed through the flitter. Flandry drew up his
knees, hunched under the pilot board, and nearly prayed. The last Tigery was out.
Flandry stood the flitter upward. His luck had held; she was damaged but not
crippled. (He noticed, vaguely, a burn on his arm.) In a wobbling arc, he went
above the tower, turned sideways, hung onto his seat with one hand and fired
out the open door with the other. Return bursts missed him. However inadequate
it was, he had some protection. He cleared the Merseians away. An explosion rattled his
teeth. Motor dead, the flitter crashed three meters down, onto the conning
tower. After a minute, Flandry
was back to consciousness. He went on hands and knees across the buckled,
tilted fuselage, took a quick peek, and dropped to the bridge deck. A body,
still smoking, was in his path. He shoved it aside and looked over the bulwark.
The dozen Tigeries who remained active had taken the forward gun and were using
it for cover. They had stalled the second gang beneath Flandry. But
reinforcements were boiling from the after hatch. Flandry set his blaster
to wide beam and shot. Again. Again. The crew
must be small. He'd dropped—how many?—whoops, don't forget the hatch in the
tower itself, up to this place he commanded! No, his flitter blocked the
way … Silence thundered upon
him. Only the wind and the slap-slap of water broke it, that and a steady
sobbing from one Merseian who lay with his leg blasted off, bleeding to death.
Satan on Saturn, they'd done it. They'd actually done it. Flandry stared at his
free hand, thinking in a remote fashion how wonderful a machine it was, look,
he could flex the fingers. Not much time to spare.
He rose. A bullet whanged from the bows. "Hold off there, you tubehead!
Me! Dragoika, are you alive?" "Yes." She
trod triumphant from behind the gun. "What next?" "Some of you get
astern. Shoot anybody who shows himself." Dragoika drew her sword.
"We'll go after them." "You'll do no such
idiot thing," Flandry stormed. "You'll have trouble enough keeping
them bottled." "And
you … now," she breathed ecstatically, "you can turn these
guns on the vaz-Siravo." "Not that
either," Flandry said. God, he was tired! "First, I can't man
something so heavy alone and you don't know how to help. Second, we don't want
any heroic bastards who may be left below to get the idea they can best serve
the cause by dunking the lot of us." He tuned his
communicator. Call the Navy team to come get him and his people off. If they
were too scared of violating policy to flush out this boat with anesthetic gas
and take her for a prize, he'd arrange her sinking personally. But no doubt the
situation would be accepted. Successes don't bring courts-martial and policy is
the excuse you make up as you go along, if you have any sense. Call the
Sisterhood, too. Have them peal the battle command. Once organized, the
Kursovikian ships could drive off the Seatroll armada, if it didn't simply quit
after its ace had been trumped. And then—and
then—Flandry didn't know what. By choice, a week abed, followed by a medal and
assignment to making propaganda tapes about himself back on Terra. Wasn't going
to work that way, however. Merseia had ratcheted the war another step upward.
Terra had to respond or get out. He glanced down at Dragoika as she disposed
her followers on guard. She saw him and flashed back a grin. He decided he
didn't really want out after all. 7 Runei the Wanderer
leaned forward until black-clad shoulders and gaunt green visage seemed to
enter the office room of the suite. "My lord," he said, "you
know the juridical position of my government. The sea people are sovereign over
the Starkadian high seas. At most, landfolk ships may be conceded a limited
right of transit—provided the sea people agree. Likewise, outworld craft fly
above entirely on their sufferance. You accuse us of escalation? Frankly, I
think I showed remarkable forbearance in not ordering my air fleet into action
after your attack on a Merseian submarine." Hauksberg managed a
smile. "If I may speak rather frankly in return, Commandant," he
said, "the fact that Terra's airborne forces would then have joined the
fight may have stayed your hand. Eh?" Runei shrugged. "In
such case, who would have been escalating?" "By usin' a purely
Merseian unit against a, ah, Toborkan city, you've directly involved your
planet in the war." "Retaliation, my
lord, and not by Merseia; by the Six-point of Zletovar, using foreign
volunteers temporarily detached from duty with their regular units. It is Terra
which has long promulgated the doctrine that limited retaliation is not a casus
belli." Hauksberg scowled.
Speaking for the Empire, he could not utter his full disapproval of that
principle. "Goes far back into our hist'ry, to the era of international
wars. We use it these days so our people in remote parts of space'll have some
freedom of action when trouble develops, 'stead of havin' to send couriers home
askin' for orders. Unfortunate. P'rhaps its abolition can be arranged, at least
as between your government and mine. But we'll want guarantees in exchange, y'
know." "You are the
diplomat, not I," Runei said. "As of now, I chiefly want back any
prisoners you hold." "Don't know if
there were any survivors," Hauksberg said. He knew quite well there were
some, and that Abrams wouldn't release them till they'd been interrogated at
length, probably hypnoprobed; and he suspected Runei knew he knew. Most
embarrassing. "I'll inquire, if you wish, and urge—" "Thank you,"
Runei said dryly. After a minute: "Not to ask for military secrets, but
what will the next move be of your, khraich, allies?" "Not allies. The
Terran Empire is not a belligerent." "Spare me,"
Runei snorted. "I warn you, as I have warned Admiral Enriques, that
Merseia won't stand idle if the aggressors try to destroy what Merseia has
helped create to ameliorate the lot of the sea people." An opening! "Point
o' fact," Hauksberg said, as casually as he was able, "with the
assault on Ujanka repelled, we're tryin' to restrain the Kursovikians. They're
hollerin' for vengeance and all that sort o' thing, but we've persuaded 'em to
attempt negotiations." A muscle jumped in
Runei's jaw, the ebony eyes widened a millimeter, and he sat motionless for
half a minute. "Indeed?" he said, flat-toned. "Indeed."
Hauksberg pursued the initiative he had gained. "A fleet'll depart very
soon. We couldn't keep that secret from you, nor conceal the fact of our makin'
contact with the Siravoans. So you'll be told officially, and I may's well tell
you today, the fleet won't fight except in self-defense. I trust none o' those
Merseian volunteers participate in any violence. If so, Terran forces would
natur'lly have to intervene. But we hope to send envoys underwater, to discuss
a truce with the idea of makin' permanent peace." "So." Runei
drummed his desktop. "Our xenological
information is limited," Hauksberg said. "And o' course we won't
exactly get childlike trust at first. Be most helpful if you'd urge the, ah,
Sixpoint to receive our delegation and listen to 'em." "A joint
commission, Terran and Merseian—" "Not yet,
Commandant. Please, not yet. These'll be nothin' but informal preliminary
talks." "What you
mean," Runei said, "is that Admiral Enriques won't lend men to any
dealings that involve Merseians." Correct. "No, no. Nothin' so
ungracious. Nothin' but a desire to avoid complications. No reason why the sea
people shouldn't keep you posted as to what goes on, eh? But we have to know
where we stand with 'em; in fact, we have to know 'em much better before we can
make sensible suggestions; and you, regrettably, decline to share your
data." "I am under
orders," Runei said. "Quite. Policy'll
need to be modified on both sides before we can cooperate worth mentionin', let
alone think about joint commissions. That sort o' problem is why I'm goin' on
to Merseia." "Those hoofs will
stamp slowly." "Hey? Oh. Oh, yes.
We'd speak of wheels. Agreed, with the best will in the universe, neither
government can end this conflict overnight. But we can make a start, you and us.
We restrain the Kursovikians, you restrain the Sixpoint. All military
operations suspended in the Zletovar till further notice. You've that much
discretionary power, I'm sure." "I do," Runei
said. "You do. The natives may not agree. If they decide to move, either
faction, I am bound to support the sea people." Or if you tell them to
move, Hauksberg thought. You may. In which case Enriques will have no choice
but to fight. However, I'll assume you're honest, that you'd also like to see
this affair wound up before matters get out of hand. I have to assume that.
Otherwise I can only go home and help Terra prepare for interstellar war. "You'll be gettin'
official memoranda and such," he said. "This is preliminary
chit-chat. But I'll stay on, myself, till we see how our try at a parley is
shapin' up. Feel free to call on me at any time." "Thank you. Good
day, my lord." "Good day,
Com—Fodaich." Though they had been using Anglic, Hauksberg was rather
proud of his Eriau. The screen blanked. He
lit a cigaret. Now what? Now you sit and wait, m' boy. You continue gathering
reports, conducting interviews, making tours of inspection, but this is past
the point of diminishing returns, among these iron-spined militarists who
consider you a meddlesome ass. You'll see many an empty hour. Not much
amusement here. Good thing you had the foresight to take Persis along. He rose and drifted from
the office to the living room. She sat there watching the animation. Ondine
again—poor kid, the local tape library didn't give a wide selection. He lowered
himself to the arm of her lounger and laid a hand on her shoulder. It was bare,
in a low-cut blouse; the skin felt warm and smooth, and he caught a violet hint
of perfume. "Aren't you tired
o' that thing?" he asked. "No." She
didn't quite take her eyes from it. Her voice was dark and her mouth not quite
steady. "Wish I were, though." "Why?" "It frightens me.
It reminds me how far we are from home, the strangeness, the—And we're going
on." Half human, the mermaid
floated beneath seas which never were. "Merseia's p'rhaps
a touch more familiar," Hauksberg said. "They were already
industrialized when humans discovered 'em. They caught onto the idea of space
travel fast." "Does that make
them anything like us? Does it make us like … like ourselves?"
She twisted her fingers together. "People say 'hyperdrive' and
'light-year' so casually. They don't understand. They can't or won't. Too
shallow." "Don't tell me
you've mastered the theory," he jollied her. "Oh, no. I haven't
the brain. But I tried. A series of quantum jumps which do not cross the small
intervening spaces, therefore do not amount to a true velocity and are not
bound by the light-speed limitation … sounds nice and scientific to
you, doesn't it? You know what it sounds like to me? Ghosts flitting forever in
darkness. And have you ever thought about a light-year, one measly light-year,
how huge it is?" "Well, well."
He stroked her hair. "You'll have company." "Your staff. Your
servants. Little men with little minds. Routineers, yes-men, careerists who've
laid out their own futures on rails. They're nothing, between me and the night.
I'm sick of them, anyway." "You've me,"
he said. She smiled a trifle.
"Present company excepted. You're so often busy, though." "We'll have two or
three Navy chaps with us. Might interest you. Diff'rent from courtiers and
bureaucrats." She brightened further.
"Who?" "Well, Commander
Abrams and I got talkin', and next thing I knew I'd suggested he come along as
our expert on the waterfolk. We could use one. Rather have that Ridenour
fellow, 'course; he's the real authority, insofar as Terra's got any. But on
that account, he can't be spared here." Hauksberg drew in a long tail of
smoke. "Obvious dangers involved. Abrams wouldn't leave his post either,
if he didn't think this was a chance to gather more information than he can on
Starkad. Which could compromise our mission. I still don't know but what I was
cleverly maneuvered into co-optin' him." "That old bear,
manipulating you?" Persis actually giggled. "A shrewd bear. And
ruthless. Fanatical, almost. However, he can be useful, and I'll be sure to
keep a spot on him. Daresay he'll bring an aide or two. Handsome young
officers, hm?" "You're handsome
and young enough for me, Mark." Persis rubbed her head against him. Hauksberg chucked his
cigaret at the nearest disposal. "I'm not so frightfully busy,
either." The day was raw and
overcast, with whitecaps on a leaden sea. Wind piped in rigging; timbers
creaked; the Archer rocked. Astern lay the accompanying fleet, hove to. Banners
snapped from mastheads. One deck was covered by a Terra-conditioned sealtent.
But Dragoika's vessel bore merely a tank and a handful of humans. She and her
crew watched impassive as Ridenour, the civilian head of xenological studies,
went to release the Siravo. He was a tall,
sandy-haired man; within the helmet, his face was intense. His fingers moved
across the console of the vocalizer attached to one wall. Sounds boomed forth
which otherwise only a sea dweller's voice bladder could have made. The long body in the
tank stirred. Those curiously human lips opened. An answer could be heard. John
Ridenour nodded. "Very well," he said. "Let him go." Flandry helped remove
the cover. The prisoner arched his tail. In one dizzying leap he was out and
over the side. Water spouted across the deck. Ridenour went to the
rail and stood staring down. "So long, Evenfall," he said. "That his real
name?" Flandry asked. "What the phrase
means, roughly," the xenologist answered. He straightened. "I don't
expect anyone'll show for some hours. But be ready from 1500. I want to study
my notes." He walked to his cabin.
Flandry's gaze followed him. How much does he know? the ensign wondered. More'n
he possibly could learn from our Charlie, or from old records, that's for sure.
Somehow Abrams has arranged—Oh, God, the shells bursting in Ujanka! He fled that thought and
pulled his gaze back, around the team who were to go undersea. A couple of
assistant xenologists; an engineer ensign and four burly ratings with some
previous diving experience. They were almost more alien to him than the
Tigeries. The glory of having
turned the battle of Golden Bay was blown away on this mordant wind. So, too,
was the intoxicating sequel: that he, Dominic Flandry, was no longer a
wet-eared youngster but appreciated as he deserved, promised a citation, as the
hero of all Kursoviki, the one man who could talk the landfolk into attempting peace.
What that amounted to, in unromantic fact, was that he must go along with the
Terran envoys, so their mission would have his full approval in Tigery eyes.
And Ridenour had told him curtly to keep out of the way. Jan van Zuyl was
luckier! Well—Flandry put on his
best nonchalance and strolled to Dragoika. She regarded him gravely. "I
hate your going down," she said. "Nonsense," he
said. "Wonderful adventure. I can't wait." "Down where the
bones of our mothers lie, whom they drowned," she said. "Down where
there is no sun, no moons, no stars, only blackness and cold sliding currents.
Among enemies and horrors. Combat was better." "I'll be back soon.
This first dive is just to ask if they'll let us erect a dome on the bottom.
Once that's done, your fleet can go home." "How long will you
be there yourself, in the dome?" "I don't know. I
hope for not more than a few days. If things look promising, I—" Flandry
preened—"won't be needed so much. They'll need me more on land
again." "I will be gone by
then," Dragoika said. "The Archer still has an undelivered cargo, and
the Sisterhood wants to take advantage of the truce while it lasts." "You'll return,
won't you? Call me when you do, and I'll flit straight to Ujanka." He
patted her hand. She gripped his,
"Someday you will depart forever." "M-m … this
isn't my world." "I would like to
see yours," she said wistfully. "The stories we hear, the pictures we
see, like a dream. Like the lost island. Perhaps it is in truth?" "I fear not."
Flandry wondered why the Eden motif was universal in the land cultures of
Starkad. Be interesting to know. Except for this damned war, men could come
here and really study the planet. He thought he might like to join them. But no. There was little
pure research, for love, in the Empire any more. Outwardness had died from the
human spirit. Could that be because the Time of Troubles had brutalized
civilization? Or was it simply that when he saw he couldn't own the galaxy and
consolidated what little he had, man lost interest in anything beyond himself?
No doubt the ancient eagernesss could be regained. But first the Empire might
have to go under. And he was sworn to defend it. I better read more in those
books of Abrams'. So far they've mainly confused me. "You think high
thoughts," Dragoika said. He tried to laugh.
"Contrariwise. I'm thinking about food, fun, and females." "Yes.
Females." She stood quiet a while, before she too laughed. "I can try
to provide the fun, anyhow. What say you to a game of Yavolak?" "I haven't yet
straightened out those cursed rules," Flandry said. "But if we can
get a few players together, I have some cards with me and there's a Terran game
called poker." A head rose sleek and
blue from the waves. Flandry couldn't tell if it belonged to Evenfall or
someone else. The flukes slapped thrice. "That's our signal,"
Ridenour said. "Let's go." He spoke by radio. The
team were encased in armor which was supposed to withstand pressures to a
kilometer's depth. Wish I hadn't thought of "supposed" Flandry
regretted. He clumped across the deck and in his turn was lowered over the
side. He had a last glimpse of Dragoika, waving. Then the hull was before his
faceplate, and then green water. He cast loose, switched his communicator to sonic,
and started the motor on his back. Trailing bubbles, he moved to join the
others. For one who'd been trained in spacesuit maneuvers, underwater was
simple … Damn! He'd forgotten that friction would brake him. "Follow me in close
order," Ridenour's voice sounded in his earplugs. "And for God's
sake, don't get trigger happy." The being who was not a
fish glided in advance. The water darkened. Lightbeams weren't needed, though,
when they reached bottom; this was a shallow sea. Flandry whirred through a
crйpuscule that faded into sightlessness. Above him was a circle of dim
radiance, like a frosted port. Below him was a forest. Long fronds rippled
upward, green and brown and yellow. Massive boles trailed a mesh of filaments
from their branches. Shellfish, often immense, covered with lesser shells,
gripped lacy, delicately hued coraloid. A flock of crustaceans clanked—no other
word would do—across a weed meadow. A thing like an eel wriggled over their
heads. Tiny finned animals in rainbow stripes flitted among the sea trees. Why,
the place is beautiful! Charlie—no, Evenfall had
directed the fleet to a spot in midsea where ships rarely passed. How he
navigated was a mystery. But Shellgleam lay near. Flandry had gathered
that the vaz-Siravo of Zletovar lived in, and between, six cities more or less
regularly spaced around a circle. Tidehome and Reefcastle were at the end of
the Chain. The Kursovikians had long known about them; sometimes they raided
them, dropping stones, and sometimes the cities were bases for attacks on
Tigery craft. But Shellgleam, Vault, Crystal, and Outlier on the verge of that
stupendous downfall of sea bottom called the Deeps—those had been unsuspected.
Considering how intercity traffic patterns must go, Flandry decided that the
Sixpoint might as well be called the Davidstar. You couldn't make good
translations anyway from a language so foreign. A drumming noise
resounded through the waters. A hundred or more swimmers came into view, in
formation. They wore skull helmets and scaly leather corselets, they were armed
with obsidian-headed spears, axes, and daggers. The guide exchanged words with
their chief. They englobed the party and proceeded. Now Flandry passed above
agricultural (?) lands. He saw tended fields, fish penned in wicker domes,
cylindrical woven houses anchored by rocks, A wagon passed not far away, a
skin-covered torpedo shape with stabilizer fins, drawn by an elephant-sized
fish which a Siravo led. Belike he traveled from some cave or depth, because he
carried a lantern, a bladder filled with what were no doubt phosphorescent
microorganisms. As he approached town, Flandry saw a mill. It stood on an
upthrust—go ahead and say "hill"—and a shaft ran vertically from an
eccentric drive wheel. Aiming his laser light and adjusting his faceplate lens
for telescopic vision, he made out a sphere at the other end, afloat on the
surface. So, a tide motor. Shellgleam hove in
sight. The city looked frail, unstable, unreal: what a place to stage that
ballet! In this weatherless world, walls and roofs need but give privacy; they
were made of many-colored fabrics, loosely draped so they could move with
currents, on poles which gave shapes soaring in fantastic curves. The higher
levels were more broad than the lower. Lanterns glowed perpetually at the
corners, against night's advent. With little need for ground transport, streets
did not exist; but whether to control silt or to enjoy the sight, the builders
had covered the spaces between houses with gravel and gardens. A crowd assembled. Flandry
saw many females, holding infants to their breasts and slightly older offspring
on leash. Few people wore clothes except for jewelry. They murmured, a low surf
sound. But they were more quiet, better behaved, than Tigeries or humans. In the middle of town,
on another hill, stood a building of dressed stone. It was rectangular, the
main part roofless and colonnaded; but at the rear a tower equally wide thrust
up and up, with a thick glass top just below the surface. If, as presumably was
the case, it was similarly sealed further down, it should flood the interior
with light. Though the architecture was altogether different, that whiteness
reminded Flandry of Terra's Parthenon. He had seen the reconstruction
once … He was being taken thither. A shape darkened the
overhead luminance. Looking, he saw a fish team drawing a submarine. The escort
was a troop of swimmers armed with Merseian-made guns. Suddenly he remembered
he was among his enemies. 8 Once a dome was
established outside town and equipped for the long-term living of men, Flandry
expected to make rapid progress in Professor Abrams' Instant Philosophy of
History Course. What else would there be to do, except practice the different
varieties of thumbtwiddling, until HQ decided that sufficient of his prestige
had rubbed off on Ridenour and ordered him back to Highport? Instead, he found
himself having the time of his life. The sea people were
every bit as interested in the Terrans as the Terrans in them. Perhaps more so;
and after the horror stories the Merseians must have fed them, it was
astonishing that they could make such an effort to get at the truth for
themselves. But then, while bonny fighters at need and in some ways quite
devoid of pity, they seemed less ferocious by nature than humans, Tigeries, or
Merseians. Ridenour and his
colleagues were held to the Temple of Sky, where talk went on endlessly with
the powers that were in the Davidstar. The xenologist groaned when his
unoccupied followers were invited on a set of tours. "If you were trained,
my God, what you could learn!—Well, we simply haven't got any more
professionals to use here, so you amateurs go ahead, and if you don't observe
in detail I'll personally operate on you with a butter knife." Thus Flandry and one or
another companion were often out for hours on end. Since none of them
understood the native language or Eriau, their usual guide was Isinglass, who
had some command of Kursovikian and had also been taught by the Merseians to
operate a portable vocalizer. (The land tongue had been gotten gradually from
prisoners. Flandry admired the ingenuity of the methods by which their
technologically backward captors had kept them alive for weeks, but otherwise
he shuddered and hoped with all his heart that the age-old strife could indeed
be ended.) Others whom he got to know included Finbright, Byway, Zoomboy, and
the weise Frau Allhealer. They had total individuality, you could no more
characterize one of them in a sentence than you could a human. "We are glad you
make this overture," Isinglass said on first acquaintance. "So glad
that, despite their helpfulness to us, we told the Merseians to keep away while
you are here." "I have suspected
we and the landfolk were made pieces in a larger game," added Allhealer
through him. "Fortunate that you wish to resign from it." Flandry's cheeks burned
inside his helmet. He knew too well how little altruism was involved.
Scuttlebutt claimed Enriques had openly protested Hauksberg's proposal, and
yielded only when the viscount threatened to get him reassigned to Pluto.
Abrams approved because any chance at new facts was good, but he was not
sanguine. Nor was Byway.
"Peace with the Hunters is a contradiction in terms. Shall the gilltooth
swim beside the tail-on-head? And as long as the green strangers offer us
assistance, we must take it. Such is our duty to the cities and our
dependents." "Yet evidently,
while they support us, their adversaries are bound to support the
Hunters," Finbright said. "Best might be that both sets of foreigners
withdrew and let the ancient balance return." "I know not,"
Byway argued. "Could we win a final victory—" "Be not so tempted
by that as to overlook the risk of a final defeat," Allhealer warned. "To the Deeps with
your bone-picking!" Zoomboy exclaimed. "We'll be late for the
theater." He shot off in an exuberant curve. Flandry did not follow
the drama which was enacted in a faerie coraloid grotto. He gathered it was a
recently composed tragedy in the classic mode. But the eldritch grace of
movement, the solemn music of voices, strings, percussion, the utter balance of
every element, touched his roots. And the audience reacted with cries, surges
back and forth, at last a dance in honor of author and cast. To him, the sculptures
and oil paintings he was shown were abstract; but as such they were more
pleasing than anything Terra had produced for centuries. He looked at fishskin
scrolls covered with writing in grease-based ink and did not comprehend. Yet
they were so many that they must hold a deal of accumulated wisdom. Then he got off into
mathematics and science, and went nearly delirious. He was still so close to
the days when such things had been unfolded for him like a flower that he could
appreciate what had been done here. For the People (he
didn't like using the Kursovikian name "Siravo" in their own home,
and could certainly never again call them Seatrolls) lived in a different
conceptual universe from his. And though they were handicapped—fireless save
for volcanic outlets where glass was made as a precious material, metalless,
unable to develop more than a rudimentary astronomy, the laws of motion and
gravity and light propagation obscured for them by the surrounding water—they
had thought their way through to ideas which not only made sense but which
drove directly toward insights man had not had before Planck and Einstein. To them, vision was not
the dominant sense that it was for him. No eyes could look far undersea. Hence
they were nearsighted by his standards, and the optical centers of their brains
appeared to have slightly lower information-processing capability. On the other
hand, their perception of tactile, thermal, kinesthetic, olfactory, and less
familiar nuances was unbelievably delicate. The upper air was hostile to them;
like humans vis-а-vis water, they could control but not kill an instinctive
dread. So they experienced
space as relation rather than extension. For them, as a fact of daily life, it
was unbounded but finite. Expeditions which circumnavigated the globe had
simply given more weight and subtlety to that apprehension. Reflecting this
primitive awareness, undersea mathematics rejected infinity. A philosopher with
whom Flandry talked via Isinglass asserted that it was empirically meaningless
to speak of a number above factorial N, where N was 75 the total of
distinguishable particles in the universe. What could a larger number count?
Likewise, he recognized zero as useful notion, corresponding to the null class,
but not as a number. The least possible amount must be the inverse of the
greatest. You could count from there, on to NI, but if you proceeded beyond,
you would get decreasing quantities. The number axis was not linear but
circular. Flandry wasn't
mathematician enough to decide if the system was entirely self-consistent. As
far as he could tell, it was. It even went on to curious versions of negatives,
irrationals, imaginaries, approximational calculus, differential geometry,
theory of equations, and much else of whose Terran equivalents he was ignorant. Physical theory fitted
in. Space was regarded as quantized. Discontinuities between kinds of space
were accepted. That might only be an elaboration of the everyday—the sharp
distinction between water, solid ground, and air—but the idea of layered space
accounted well for experimental data and closely paralleled the relativistic
concept of a metric varying from point to point, as well as the wave-mechanical
basis of atomistics and the hyperdrive. Nor could time, in the
thought of the People, be infinite. Tides, seasons, the rhythm of life all
suggested a universe which would eventually return to its initial state and
resume a cycle which it would be semantically empty to call endless. But having
no means of measuring time with any precision, the philosophers had concluded
that it was essentially immeasurable. They denied simultaneity; how could you
say a distant event happened simultaneously with a near one, when news of the
former must be brought by a swimmer whose average speed was unpredictable?
Again the likeness to relativity was startling. Biology was well
developed in every macroscopic facet, including genetic laws. Physics proper,
as opposed to its conceptual framework, was still early Newtonian, and
chemistry little more than an embryo. But Judas on Jupiter, Flandry thought,
give these fellows some equipment tailored for underwater use and watch them
lift! "Come along,"
Zoomboy said impatiently. "Wiggle a flipper. We're off to
Reefcastle." En route, Flandry did
his unskilled best to get an outline of social structure. The fundamental
Weltanschauung eluded him. You could say the People of the Davidstar were
partly Apollonian and partly Dionysian, but those were mere metaphors which
anthropology had long discarded and were worse than useless in dealing with
nonhumans. Politics (if that word was applicable) looked simpler. Being more
gregarious and ceremony-minded than most humans, and less impulsive, and
finding travel easier than land animals do, the sea dwellers on Starkad tended
to form large nations without strong rivalries. The Zletovar culture was
organized hieratically. Governors inherited their positions, as did People in
most other walks (swims?) of life. On the individual level there existed a kind
of serfdom, binding not to a piece of territory but to the person of the
master. And females had that status with respect to their polygamous husbands. Yet such expressions
were misleading. The decision makers did not lord it over the rest. No
formalities were used between classes. Merit brought promotion; so had
Allhealer won her independence and considerable authority. Failure, especially
the failure to meet one's obligation to dependents, brought demotion. For the
system did nothing except apportion rights and duties. Terra had known similar
things, in theory. Practice had never worked out. Men were too greedy, too
lazy. But it seemed to operate among the People. At least, Isinglass claimed it
had been stable for many generations, and Flandry saw no evidence of discontent. Reefcastle was nothing
like Shellgleam. Here the houses were stone and coraloid, built into the
skerries off a small island. The inhabitants were more brisk, less
contemplative than their bottom-dwelling cousins; Isinglass scoffed at them as a
bunch of wealth-grubbing traders. "But I must admit they have bravely
borne an undue share of trouble from the Hunters," he added, "and
they went in the van of our late attack, which took courage, when none knew
about the Merseian boat." "None?" asked
Flandry in surprise. "I daresay the
governors were told beforehand. Otherwise we knew only that when the signal was
given our leg-equipped troops were to go ashore and lay waste what they could
while our swimmers sank the ships." "Oh." Flandry
did not describe his role in frustrating that. He felt an enormous relief. If
Abrams had learned from Evenfall about the planned bombardment, Abrams ought to
have arranged countermeasures. But since the information hadn't been there to
obtain—Flandry was glad to stop finding excuses for a man who was rapidly
becoming an idol. The party went among the
reefs beyond town to see their tide pools. Surf roared, long wrinkled
azure-and-emerald billows which spouted white under a brilliant sky. The People
frolicked, leaping out of the waves, plunging recklessly through channels where
cross-currents ramped. Flandry discarded the staleness of his armor for a plain
helmet and knew himself fully alive. "We shall take you
next to Outlier," Isinglass said on the way home to Shellgleam. "It
is something unique. Below its foundations the abyss goes down into a night
where fish and forests glow. The rocks are gnawed by time and lividly hued. The
water tastes of volcano. But the silence—the silence!" "I look
forward," Flandry said. "—?—. So. You scent
a future perfume." When he cycled through
the airlock and entered the Terran dome, Flandry was almost repelled. This
narrow, stinking, cheerless bubble, jammed with hairy bodies whose every motion
was a jerk against weight! He started peeling off his undergarment to take a
shower. "How was your
trip?" Ridenour asked. "Wonderful," Flandry glowed. "All right, I
guess," said Ensign Quarles, who had been along. "Good to get back,
though. How 'bout putting on a girlie tape for us?" Ridenour nipped the
switch of the recorder on his desk. "First things first," he said.
"Let's have your report." Flandry suppressed an
obscenity. Adventures got spoiled by being reduced to data. Maybe he didn't
really want to be a xenologist. At the end, Ridenour
grimaced. "Wish to blazes my part of the job were doing as well." "Trouble?"
Flandry asked, alarmed. "Impasse. Problem
is, the Kursovikians are too damned efficient. Their hunting, fishing,
gathering do make serious inroads on resources, which are never as plentiful in
the sea. The governors refuse any terms which don't involve the land-folk
stopping exploitation. And of course the landfolk won't. They can't, without
undermining their own economy and suffering famine. So I'm trying to persuade
the Sixpoint to reject further Merseian aid. That way we might get the Zletovar
out of the total-war mess. But they point out, very rightly, that what we've
given the Kursovikians has upset the balance of power. And how can we take our
presents back? We'd antagonize them—which I don't imagine Runei's agents would
be slow to take advantage of." Ridenour sighed. "I still have some
hopes of arranging for a two-sided phaseout, but they've grown pretty
dim." "We can't start
killing the People again!" Flandry protested. "Can't we
just?" Quarles said. "After what we've
seen, what they've done for us—" "Grow up. We belong
to the Empire, not some barnacle-bitten gang of xenos." "You may be out of
the matter anyhow, Flandry," Ridenour said. "Your orders came through
several hours ago." "Orders?" "You report to
Commander Abrams at Highport. An amphibian will pick you up at 0730 tomorrow,
Terran clock. Special duty, I don't know what." Abrams leaned back, put
one foot on his battered desk, and drew hard on his cigar. "You'd really
rather've stayed underwater?" "For a while,
sir," Flandry said from the edge of his chair. "I mean, well, besides
being interesting, I felt I was accomplishing something.
Information—friendship—" His voice trailed off. "Modest young chap,
aren't you? Describing yourself as 'interesting.' " Abrams blew a smoke
ring. "Oh, sure, I see your point. Not a bad one. Were matters different,
I wouldn't've hauled you topside. You might, though, ask what I have in mind
for you." "Sir?" "Lord Hauksberg is
continuing to Merseia in another couple days. I'm going along in an advisory
capacity, my orders claim. I rate an aide. Want the job?" Flandry goggled. His
heart somersaulted. After a minute he noticed that his mouth hung open. "Plain to
see," Abrams continued, "my hope is to collect some intelligence.
Nothing melodramatic; I hope I'm more competent than that. I'll keep my eyes
and ears open. Nose, too. But none of our diplomats, attachйs, trade-talk representatives,
none of our sources has ever been very helpful. Merseia's too distant from
Terra. Almost the only contact has been on the level of brute,
chip-on-your-shoulder power. This may be a chance to circulate under fewer
restrictions. "So I ought to
bring an experienced, proven man. But we can't spare one. You've shown yourself
pretty tough and resourceful for a younker. A bit of practical experience in
Intelligence will give you a mighty long leg up, if I do succeed in making you
transfer. From your standpoint, you get off this miserable planet, travel in a
luxury ship, see exotic Merseia, maybe other spots as well, probably get taken
back to Terra and then probably not reassigned to Starkad even if you remain a
flyboy—and make some highly useable contacts. How about it?" "Y-y-yes,
sir!" Flandry stammered. Abrams' eyes crinkled.
"Don't get above yourself, son. This won't be any pleasure cruise. I'll
expect you to forget about sleep and live on stimpills from now till departure,
learning what an aide of mine has to know. You'll be saddled with everything
from secretarial chores to keeping my uniforms neat. En route, you'll take an
electrocram in the Eriau language and as much Merseiology as your brain'll hold
without exploding. I need hardly warn you that's no carnival Once we're there,
if you're lucky you'll grind through a drab list of duties. If you're
unlucky—if things should go nova—you won't be a plumed knight of the skies any
longer, you'll be a hunted animal, and if they take you alive their style of
quizzing won't leave you any personality worth having. Think about that." Flandry didn't. His one
regret was that he'd likely never see Dragoika again, and it was a passing
twinge. "Sir," he declaimed, "you've got yourself an aide." 9 The Dronning Margrete was
not of a size to land safely on a planet. Her auxiliaries were small spaceships
in their own right. Officially belonging to Ny Kalmar, in practice a yacht for
whoever was the current viscount, she did sometimes travel in the Imperial
service: a vast improvement with respect to comfort over any Navy vessel. Now
she departed her orbit around Starkad and accelerated outward on gravities.
Before long she was into clear enough space that she could switch over to
hyperdrive and outpace light. Despite her mass, with her engine power and phase
frequency, top pseudo-speed equalled that of a Planet class warcraft. The sun
she left behind was soon dwindled to another star, and then to nothing. Had the
viewscreens not compensated for aberration and Doppler effect, the universe
would have looked distorted beyond recognition. Yet the constellations
changed but slowly. Days and nights passed while she fled through the marches.
Only once was routine broken, when alarms sounded. They were followed
immediately by the All Clear. Her force screens, warding off radiation and
interstellar atoms, had for a microsecond brushed a larger piece of matter, a
pebble estimated at five grams. Though contact with the hull would have been
damaging, given the difference in kinetic velocities, and though such
meteoroids occur in the galaxy to the total of perhaps 1050, the likelihood of
collision was too small to worry about. Once, also, another vessel passed
within a light-year and thus its "wake" was detected. The pattern indicated
it was Ymirite, crewed by hydrogen breathers whose civilization was nearly
irrelevant to man or Merseian. They trafficked quite heavily in these parts.
Nonetheless this sign of life was the subject of excited conversation. So big
is the cosmos. There came at last the
time when Hauksberg and Abrams sat talking far into the middle watch. Hitherto
their relationship had been distant and correct. But with journey's end
approaching they saw a mutual need to understand each other better. The
viscount invited the commander to dinner а deux in his private suite. His chef
transcended himself for the occasion and his butler spent considerable time
choosing wines. Afterward, at the cognac stage of things, the butler saw he
could get away with simply leaving the bottle on the table plus another in
reserve, and went off to bed. The ship whispered,
powerplant, ventilators, a rare hail when two crewmen on duty passed in the
corridor outside. Light glowed soft off pictures and drapes. A heathery scent
in the air underlay curling smoke. After Starkad, the Terran weight maintained
by the gravitors was good; Abrams still relished a sense of lightness and often
in his sleep had flying dreams. "Pioneer types,
eh?" Hauksberg kindled a fresh cheroot. "Sounds int'restin'. Really
must visit Dayan someday." "You wouldn't find
much there in your line," Abrams grunted. "Ordinary people." "And what they've
carved for themselves out of howlin' wilderness. I know." The blond head
nodded. "Natural you should be a little chauvinistic, with such a
background. But's a dangerous attitude." "More dangerous to
sit and wait for an enemy," Abrams said around his own cigar. "I got
a wife and kids and a million cousins. My duty to them is to keep the Merseians
at a long arm's length." "No. Your duty is
to help make that unnecess'ry." "Great, if the
Merseians'll cooperate." "Why shouldn't
they? No, wait." Hauksberg lifted a hand. "Let me finish. I'm not
int'rested in who started the trouble. That's childish. Fact is, there we were,
the great power among oxygen breathers in the known galaxy. S'pose they'd been?
Wouldn't you've plumped for man acquirin' a comparable empire? Otherwise
we'd've been at their mercy. As was, they didn't want to be at our mercy. So,
by the time we took real notice, Merseia'd picked up sufficient real estate to
alarm us. We reacted, propaganda,
alliances, diplomacy, economic maneuvers, subversion, outright armed clashes
now and then. Which was bound to confirm their poor opinion of our intentions.
They re-reacted, heightenin' our fears. Positive feedback. Got to be
stopped." "I've heard this
before," Abrams said. "I don't believe a word of it. Maybe memories
of Assyria, Rome, and Germany are built into my chromosomes, I dunno. Fact is,
if Merseia wanted a real dйtente she could have one today. We're no longer
interested in expansion. Terra is old and fat. Merseia is young and full of
beans. She hankers for the universe. We stand in the way. Therefore we have to
be eaten. Everything else is dessert." "Come, come,"
Hauksberg said. "They're not stupid. A galactic government is impossible.
It'd collapse under its own weight. We've everything we can do to control what
we have, and we don't control tightly. Local self-government is so strong, most
places, that I see actual feudalism evolvin' within the Imperial structure.
Can't the Merseians look ahead?" "Oh, Lord, yes. Can
they ever. But I don't imagine they want to copy us. The Roidhunate is not like
the Empire." "Well, the electors
of the landed clans do pick their supreme chief from the one landless one, but
that's a detail." "Yes, from the Vach
Urdiolch. It's not a detail. It reflects their whole concept of society. What
they have in mind for their far future is a set of autonomous Merseian-ruled
regions. The race, not the nation, counts with them. Which makes them a hell of
a lot more dangerous than simple imperialists like us, who only want to be top
dogs and admit other species have an equal right to exist. Anyway, so I think
on the basis of what information is available. While on Merseia I hope to read
a lot of their philosophers." Hauksberg smiled.
"Be my guest. Be theirs. Long's you don't get zealous and upset things
with any cloak-and-dagger stuff, you're welcome aboard." The smile faded.
"Make trouble and I'll break you." Abrams looked into the
blue eyes. They were suddenly very cold and steady. It grew on him that
Hauksberg was not at all the fop he pretended to be. "Thanks for warning
me," the officer of Intelligence said. "But damnation!" His fist
smote the table. "The Merseians didn't come to Starkad because their
hearts bled for the poor oppressed seafolk. Nor do I think they stumbled in by
mistake and are looking for any face-saving excuse to pull out again. They
figure on a real payoff there." "F'r
instance?" "How the devil
should I know? I swear none of their own personnel on Starkad do. Doubtless
just a hatful of higher-ups on Merseia itself have any idea what the grand
strategy is. But those boys see it in clockwork detail." "Valuable minerals
undersea, p'rhaps?" "Now you must
realize that's ridiculous. Likewise any notion that the seafolk may possess a
great secret like being universal telepaths. If Starkad per se has something
useful, the Merseians could have gotten it more quietly. If it's a base they're
after, say for the purpose of pressuring Betel-geuse, then there are plenty of
better planets in that general volume. No, they for sure want a showdown." "I've speculated
along those lines," Hauksberg said thoughtfully. "S'pose some
fanatical militarists among 'em plan on a decisive clash with Terra. That'd
have to be built up to. If nothin' else, lines of communication are so long
that neither power could hope to mount a direct attack on the other. So if they
escalate things on an intrinsically worthless Starkad—well, eventually there
could be a confrontation. And out where no useful planet got damaged." "Could be,"
Abrams said. "In fact, it's sort of a working hypothesis for me. But it
don't smell right somehow." "I aim to warn
them," Hauksberg said. "Informally and privately, to keep pride and
such from complicatin' matters. If we can discover who the reasonable elements
are in their government, we can cooperate with those—most discreetly—to freeze
the warhawks out." "Trouble is,"
Abrams said, "the whole bunch of them are reasonable. But they don't
reason on the same basis as us." "No, you're the
unreasonable one, old chap. You've gotten paranoid on the subject."
Hauksberg refilled their glasses, a clear gurgle through the stillness.
"Have another drink while I explain to you the error of your ways." The officers' lounge was
deserted. Persis had commandeered from the bar a demi of port but had not
turned on the fluoros. Here in the veranda, enough light came through the
viewport which stretched from deck to overhead. It was soft and shadowy,
caressed a cheek or a lock of hair and vanished into susurrant dark. Stars were the source,
uncountable throngs of them, white, blue, yellow, green, red, cold and
unwinking against an absolute night. And the Milky Way was a shining smoke and
the nebulae and the sister galaxies glimmered at vision's edge. That was a
terrible beauty. Flandry was far too
conscious of her eyes and of the shape enclosed by thin, slightly
phosphorescent pajamas, where she faced him in her lounger. He sat stiff on
his. "Yes," he said, "yonder bright one, you're right, Donna, a
nova. What … uh … what Saxo's slated to become before
long." "Really?" Her
attentiveness flattered him. "Yes. F-type, you
know. Evolves faster than the less massive suns like Sol, and goes off the main
sequence more spectacularly. The red giant stage like Betelgeuse is short—then
bang." "But those poor
natives!" Flandry made a
forced-sounding chuckle. "Don't worry, Donna. It won't happen for almost a
billion years, according to every spectroscopic indication. Plenty of time to
evacuate the planet." "A billion
years." She shivered a little. "Too big a number. A billion years
ago, we were still fish in the Terran seas, weren't we? All the numbers are too
big out here." "I, uh, guess I'm
more used to them." His nonchalance didn't quite come off. He could barely see how
her lips curved upward. "I'm sure you are," she said. "Maybe you
can help me learn to feel the same way." His tunic collar was
open but felt tight anyhow. "Betelgeuse is an interesting case," he
said. "The star expanded slowly by mortal standards. The autochthons could
develop an industrial culture and move out to Alfzar and the planets beyond.
They didn't hit on the hyperdrive by themselves, but they had a high-powered
interplanetary society when Terrans arrived. If we hadn't provided a better
means, they'd have left the system altogether in sublight ships. No real rush.
Betelgeuse won't be so swollen that Alfzar becomes uninhabitable for another
million years or better. But they had their plans in train. A fascinating
species, the Betelgeuseans." "True." Persis
took a sip of wine, then leaned forward. One leg, glimmering silky in the
starlight, brushed his. "However," she said, "I didn't lock onto
you after dinner in hopes of a lecture." "Why, uh, what can
I do for you, Donna? Glad to, if—" Flandry drained his own goblet with a
gulp. His pulse racketed. "Talk to me. About
yourself. You're too shy." "About me?" he
squeaked. "Whatever for? I mean, I'm nobody." "You're the first
young hero I've met. The others, at home, they're old and gray and crusted with
decorations. You might as well try to make conversation with Mount Narpa.
Frankly, I'm lonesome on this trip. You're the single one I could relax and
feel human with. And you've hardly shown your nose outside your office." "Uh, Donna,
Commander Abrams has kept me busy. I didn't want to be unsociable, but, well,
this is the first time he's told me I could go off duty except to sleep. Uh,
Lord Hauksberg—" Persis shrugged.
"He doesn't understand. All right, he's been good to me and without him
I'd probably be an underpaid dancer on Luna yet. But he does not
understand." Flandry opened his
mouth, decided to close it again, and recharged his goblet. "Let's get
acquainted," Persis said gently. "We exist for such a short time at
best. Why were you on Starkad?" "Orders,
Donna." "That's no answer.
You could simply have done the minimum and guarded jour neck. Most ot them seem
to. You must have some belief in what you're doing." "Well—I don't know,
Donna. Never could keep out of a good scrap, I suppose." She sighed. "I
thought better of you, Dominic." "Beg pardon?" "Cynicism is
boringly fashionable. I didn't think you would be afraid to say mankind is
worth fighting for." Flandry winced. She had
touched a nerve. "Sort of thing's been said too often, Donna. The words
have gone all hollow. I … I do like some ancient words.
' … the best fortress is to be found in the love of the people.' From
Machiavelli." "Who? Never mind. I
don't care what some dead Irishman said. I want to know what you care about.
You are the future. What did Terra give you, for you to offer your life in
return?" "Well, uh, places
to live. Protection. Education." "Stingy
gifts," she said. "You were poor?" "Not really, Donna.
Illegitimate son of a petty nobleman. He sent me to good schools and finally
the Naval Academy." "But you were
scarcely ever at home?" "No. Couldn't be. I
mean, my mother was in opera then. She had her career to think of. My father's
a scholar, an encyclopedist, and, uh, everything else is sort of incidental to
him. That's the way he's made. They did their duty by me. I can't complain,
Donna." "At least you
won't." She touched his hand. "My name is Persis." Flandry swallowed. "What a hard, harsh
life you've had," she mused. "And still you'll fight for the
Empire." "Really, it wasn't
bad … Persis." "Good. You
progress." This time her hand lingered. "I mean, well, we
had fun between classes and drills. I'm afraid I set some kind of record for
demerits. And later, a couple of training cruises, the damnedest things happened." She leaned closer.
"Tell me." He spun out the yarns as
amusingly as he was able. She cocked her head at
him. "You were right fluent there," she said. "Why are you
backward with me?" He retreated into his
lounger. "I—I, you see, never had a chance to, uh, learn how to, well,
behave in circumstances like—" She was so near that
beneath perfume he caught the odor of herself. Her eyes were half closed, lips
parted. "Now's your chance," she whispered. "You weren't afraid
of anything else, were you?" Later, in his cabin, she
raised herself to one hand and regarded him for a long moment. Her hair spilled
across his shoulder. "And I thought I was your first," she said. "Why, Persis!"
he grinned. "I felt so—And
every minute this evening you knew exactly what you were doing." "I had to take
action," he said. "I'm in love with you. How could I help
being?" "Do you expect me
to believe that? Oh, hell, just for this voyage I will. Come here again." 10 Ardaig, the original
capital, had grown to surround that bay where the River Oiss poured into the
Wilwidh Ocean; and its hinterland was now megalopolis eastward to the Hun
foothills. Nonetheless it retained a flavor of antiquity. Its citizens were
more tradition-minded, ceremonious, leisurely than most. It was the cultural
and artistic center of Merseia. Though the Grand Council still met here
annually, and Castle Afon was still the Roidhun's official primary residence,
the bulk of government business was transacted in antipodal Tridaig. The co-capital
was young, technology-oriented, brawling with traffic and life, seething with
schemes and occasional violence. Hence there had been surprise when Brechdan
Ironrede wanted the new Navy offices built in Ardaig. He did not encounter
much opposition. Not only did he preside over the Grand Council; in the space
service he had attained fleet admiral's rank before succeeding to Handship of
the Vach Ynvory, and the Navy remained his special love and expertise.
Characteristically, he had offered little justification for his choice. This
was his will, therefore let it be done. In fact he could not
even to himself have given fully logical reasons. Economics, regional balance,
any such argument was rebuttable. He appreciated being within a short flit of
Dhangodhan's serenity but hoped and believed that had not influenced him. In
some obscure fashion he simply knew it was right that the instrument of
Merseia's destiny should have roots in Merseia's eternal city. And thus the tower
arose, tier upon gleaming tier until at dawn its shadow engulfed Afon. Aircraft
swarmed around the upper flanges like seabirds. After dark its windows were a
constellation of goblin eyes and the beacon on top a torch that frightened
stars away. But Admiralty House did not clash with the battlements, dome roofs,
and craggy spires of the old quarter. Brechdan had seen to that. Rather, it was
a culmination of them, their answer to the modern skyline. Its uppermost floor,
decked by nothing except a level of traffic control automata, was his own
eyrie. A while after a certain
sunset he was there in his secretorium. Besides himself, three living creatures
were allowed entry. Passing through an unoccupied antechamber before which was
posted a guard, they would put eyes and hands to scanner plates in the armored
door. Under positive identification, it would open until they had stepped
through. Were more than one present, all must be identified first. The rule was
enforced by alarms and robotic blasters. The vault behind was
fitted with spaceship-type air recyclers and thermostats. Walls, floor, ceiling
were a sable against which Brechdan's black uniform nigh vanished, the medals
he wore tonight glittering doubly fierce. The furnishing was usual for an
office—desk, communicators, computer, dicto-scribe. But in the center a
beautifully grained wooden pedestal supported an opalescent box. He walked thither and
activated a second recognition circuit. A hum and swirl of dim colors told him
that power had gone on. His fingers moved above the console. Photoelectric
cells fired commands to the memory unit. Electromagnetic fields interacted with
distorted molecules. Information was compared, evaluated, and assembled. In a
nanosecond or two, the data he wanted—ultrasecret, available to none but him and
his three closest, most trusted colleagues—flashed onto a screen. Brechdan had seen the
report before, but on an interstellar scale (every planet a complete world, old
and infinitely complex) an overlord was doing extraordinarily well if he could
remember that a specific detail was known, let alone the fact itself. A
sizeable party in the Council wanted to install more decision-making machines
on that account. He had resisted them. Why ape the Terrans? Look what a state
their dominions had gotten into. Personal government, to the greatest extent
possible, was less stable but more flexible. Unwise to bind oneself to a single
approach, in this unknowable universe. "Khraich." He
switched his tail. Shwylt was entirely correct, the matter must be attended to
without delay. An unimaginative provincial governor was missing a radium
opportunity to bring one more planetary system into the power of the race. And yet—He sought his
desk. Sensing his absence, the data file went blank. He stabbed a communicator
button. On sealed and scrambled circuit, his call flew across a third of the
globe. Shwylt Shipsbane
growled. "You woke me. Couldn't you pick a decent hour?" "Which would be an
indecent one for me," Brechdan laughed. "This Therayn business won't
wait on our joint convenience. I have checked, and we'd best get a fleet out
there as fast as may be, together with a suitable replacement for Gadrol." "Easy to say. But
Gadrol will resent that, not without justice, and he has powerful friends. Then
there are the Terrans. They'll hear about our seizure, and even though it's
taken place on the opposite frontier to them, they'll react. We have to get a
prognostication of what they'll do and a computation of how that'll affect
events on Starkad. I've alerted Lifrith and Priadwyr. The sooner the four of us
can meet on this problem, the better." "I can't, though.
The Terran delegation arrived today. I must attend a welcoming festival
tonight." "What?"
Shwylt's jaws snapped together. "One of their stupid rites? Are you
serious?" "Quite. Afterward I
must remain available to them. In Terran symbology, it would be grave indeed if
the, gr-r-rum, the prime minister of Merseia snubbed the special representative
of his Majesty." "But the whole
thing is such a farce!" "They don't know
that. If we disillusion them promptly, we'll accelerate matters off schedule.
Besides, by encouraging their hopes for a Starkadian settlement we can soften
the emotional impact of our occupying Therayn. Which means I shall have to
prolong these talks more than I originally intended. Finally, I want some
personal acquaintance with the significant members of this group." Shwylt rubbed the spines
on his head. "You have the strangest taste in friends." "Like you?"
Brechdan gibed. "See here. The plan for Starkad is anything but a road we
need merely walk at a pre-calculated pace. It has to be watched, nurtured,
modified according to new developments, almost day by clay. Something
unforeseeable—a brilliant Terran move, a loss of morale among them, a change in
attitude by the natives themselves—anything could throw off the timing and
negate our whole strategy. The more subliminal data we possess, the better our
judgments. For we do have to operate on their emotions as well as their
military logic, and they are an alien race. We need empathy with them. In their
phrase, we must play by ear." Shwylt looked harshly
out of the screen. "I suspect you actually like them." "Why, that's no
secret," Brechdan said. "They were magnificent once. They could be
again. I would love to see them our willing subjects." His scarred
features drooped a little. "Unlikely, of course. They're not that kind of
species. We may be forced to exterminate." "What about
Therayn?" Shwylt demanded. "You three take
charge," Brechdan said. "I'll advise from time to time, but you will
have full authority. After the post-seizure configuration has stabilized enough
for evaluation, we can all meet and discuss how this will affect Starkad." He did not add he would
back them against an outraged Council, risking his own position, if they should
make some ruinous error. That went without saying. "As you wish,"
nodded Shwylt. "Hunt well." "Hunt well."
Brechdan broke the circuit. For a space he sat quiet. The day had been long for
him. His bones felt stiff and his tail ached from the weight on it. Yes, he
thought, one grows old; at first the thing merely creeps forward, a dulling of
sense and a waning of strength, nothing that enzyme therapy can't handle—then
suddenly, overnight, you are borne on a current so fast that the landscape
blurs, and you hear the cataract roar ahead of you. Dearly desired he to
flit home, breathe the purity which blew around Dhangodhan's towers, chat over
a hot cup with Elwych and tumble to bed. But they awaited him at the Terran
Embassy; and afterward he must return hither and meet with … who was
that agent waiting down in Intelligence? … Dwyr the Hook, aye; and
then he might as well bunk here for what remained of the night. He squared his
shoulders, swallowed a stimpill, and left the vault. His Admiralty worked
around the clock. He heard its buzz, click, foot-shuffle, mutter through the
shut anteroom door. Because he really had not time for exchanging salutes
according to rank and clan with every officer, technician, and guard, he seldom
passed that way. Another door opened directly on his main suite of offices.
Opposite, a third door gave on a private corridor which ran blank and straight
to the landing flange. When he stepped out onto
that, the air was cool and damp. The roof screened the beacon from him and he
saw clearly over Ardaig. It was not a Terran city
and knew nothing of hectic many-colored blaze after dark. Ground vehicles were
confined to a few avenues, otherwise tubeways; the streets were for pedestrians
and gwydh riders. Recreation was largely at home or in ancient theaters and
sports fields. Shops—as contrasted to mercantile centers with communicator and
delivery systems—were small enterprises, closed at this hour, which had been in
the same house and the same family for generations. Tridaig shouted. Ardaig
murmured, beneath a low salt wind. Luminous pavements wove their web over the
hills, trapping lit windows; aircraft made moving lanterns above; spotlights on
Afon simply heightened its austerity. Two of the four moons were aloft,
Neihevin and Seith. The bay glowed and sparkled under them. Brechdan's driver folded
arms and bowed. Illogical, retaining that old gaffer when this aircar had a
robopilot. But his family had always served the Ynvorys. Guards made their
clashing salute and entered the vehicle too. It purred off. The stimulant took hold.
Brechdan felt renewed eagerness. What might he not uncover tonight? Relax, he
told himself, keep patience, wait for the one gem to appear from a dung-heap of
formalisms … If we must exterminate the Terrans, we will at lease
have rid the universe of much empty chatter. His destination was
another offense, a compound of residences and offices in the garish bubble
style of the Imperium four hundred years ago. Then Merseia was an up-and-coming
planet, worth a legation but in no position to dictate architecture or site.
Qgoth Heights lay well outside Ardaig. Later the city grew around them and the
legation became an embassy and Merseia could deny requests for expanded
facilities. : Brechdan walked the entranceway alone, between rosebushes. He did
admire that forlorn defiance. A slave took his cloak, a butler tall as himself
announced him to the company. The usual pack of civilians in fancy dress,
service attachйs in uniform—no, yonder stood the newcomers. Lord Oliveira of
Ganymede, Imperial Ambassador to his Supremacy the Roidhun, scurried forth. He
was a thin and fussy man whose abilities had on a memorable occasion given
Brechdan a disconcerting surprise. "Welcome,
Councillor," he said in Eriau, executing a Terran style bow. "We are
delighted you could come." He escorted his guest across the parquet floor.
"May I present his Majesty's envoy, Lord Markus Hauksberg, Viscount of Ny
Kalmar?" "I am honored,
sir." (Languid manner belied by physical condition, eyes that watched
closely from beneath the lids, good grasp of language.) " … Commander
Max Abrams." "The Hand of the
Vach Ynvory is my shield." (Dense accent, but fluent; words and gestures
precisely right, dignified greeting of one near in rank to his master who is
your equal. Stout frame, gray-shot hair, big nose, military carriage. So this
was the fellow reported by courier to be coming along from Starkad. Handle with
care.) Introductions proceeded.
Brechdan soon judged that none but Hauksberg and Abrams were worth more than
routine attention. The latter's aide, Flandry, looked alert; but he was young
and very junior. A trumpet blew the At
Ease. Oliveira was being especially courteous in following local custom. But as
this also meant females were excluded, most of his staff couldn't think what to
do next. They stood about in dismal little groups, trying to make talk with
their Merseian counterparts. Brechdan accepted a
glass of arthberry wine and declined further refreshment. He circulated for
what he believed was a decent minimum time—let the Terrans know that he could
observe their rituals when he chose—before he zeroed in on Lord Hauksberg. "I trust your
journey here was enjoyable," he began. "A bit dull,
sir," the viscount replied, "until your naval escort joined us. Must
say they put on a grand show; and the honor guard after we landed was better
yet. Hope no one minded my taping the spectacle." "Certainly not,
provided you stopped before entering Afon." "Haw! Your, ah,
foreign minister is a bit stiff, isn't he? But he was quite pleasant when I
offered my credentials, and promised me an early presentation to his
Supremacy." Brechdan took Hauksberg's
arm and strolled him toward a corner. Everyone got the hint; the party plodded
on at a distance from where they two sat down below an abominable portrait of
the Emperor. "And how was
Starkad?" Brechdan asked. "Speaking for
myself, sir, grim and fascinating," Hauksberg said. "Were you ever
there?" "No."
Sometimes Brechdan was tempted to pay a visit. By the God, it was long since he
had been on a planet unraped by civilization! Impossible, however, at any rate
for the next few years when Starkad's importance must be underplayed.
Conceivably near the end—He decided that he hoped a visit would not be called
for. Easier to make use of a world which was a set of reports than one whose
people had been seen in their own lives. "Well, scarcely in
your sphere of interest, eh, sir?" Hauksberg said. "We are bemused
by, ah, Merseia's endeavors." "The Roidhunate has
explained over and over." "Of course. Of
course. But mean to say, sir, if you wish to practice charity, as you obviously
do, well, aren't there equal needs closer to home? The Grand Council's first
duty is to Merseia. I would be the last to accuse you of neglecting your
duty." Brechdan shrugged.
"Another mercantile base would be useful in the Betelgeuse region. Starkad
is not ideal, either in location or characteristics, but it is acceptable. If
at the same time we can gain the gratitude of a talented and deserving species,
that tips the balance." He sharpened his gaze. "Your government's
reaction was distressing." "Predictable,
though." Hauksberg sprawled deeper into his antique chromeplated chair.
"To build confidence on both sides, until a true general agreement can be
reached—" mercifully, he did not say "between our great
races"—"the inter-imperial buffer space must remain inviolate. I
might add, sir, that the landfolk are no less deserving than the seafolk.
Meaningless quibble, who was the initial aggressor. His Majesty's government
feels morally bound to help the landfolk before their cultures go under." "Now who is
ignoring needs close to home?" Brechdan asked dryly. Hauksberg grew earnest.
"Sir, the conflict can be ended. You must have received reports of our
efforts to negotiate peace in the Zletovar area. If Merseia would join her good
offices to ours, a planet-wide arrangement could be made. And as for bases
there, why should we not establish one together? A long stride toward real
friendship, wouldn't you say?" "Forgive possible
rudeness," Brechdan parried, "but I am curious why your pacific
mission includes the chief of Intelligence operations on Starkad." "As an advisor,
sir," Hauksberg said with less enthusiasm. "Simply an advisor who
knows more about the natives than anyone else who was available. Would you like
to speak with him?" He raised an arm and called in Anglic, which Brechdan
understood better than was publicly admitted: "Max! I say, Max, come over
here for a bit, will you?" Commander Abrams
disengaged himself from an assistant secretary (Brechdan sympathized; that
fellow was the dreariest of Oliveira's entire retinue) and saluted the
Councillor. "May I serve the Hand?" "Never mind
ceremony, Max," Hauksberg said in Eriau. "We're not talking business
tonight. Merely sounding each other out away from protocol and recorders.
Please explain your intentions here." "Give what facts I
have and my opinions for whatever they are worth, if anyone asks," Abrams
drawled. "I don't expect I'll be called on very often." "Then why did you
come, Commander?" Brechdan gave him his title, which he had not bothered
to do for Hauksberg. "Well, Hand, I did
hope to ask a good many questions." "Sit down,"
Hauksberg invited. Abrams said, "With
the Hand's leave?" Brechdan touched a
finger to his brow, feeling sure the other would understand. He felt a higher
and higher regard for this man, which meant Abrams must be watched closer than
anyone else. The officer plumped his
broad bottom into a chair. "I thank the Hand." He lifted a glass of
whisky-and-soda to them, sipped, and said: "We really know so little on
Terra about you. I couldn't tell you how many Merseiological volumes are in the
archives, but no matter; they can't possibly contain more than a fraction of
the truth. Could well be we misinterpret you on any number of important
points." "You have your
Embassy," Brechdan reminded him. "The staff includes
xenologists." "Not enough, Hand.
Not by a cometary orbit. And in any event, most of what they do learn is
irrelevant at my level. With your permission, I'd like to talk freely with a
lot of different Merseians. Please keep those talks surveyed, to avoid any
appearance of evil." Brechdan and Abrams exchanged a grin. "Also, I'd
like access to your libraries, journals, whatever is public information as far
as you're concerned but may not have reached Terra." "Have you any
specific problems in mind? I will help if I can." "The Hand is most
gracious. I'll mention just one typical point. It puzzles me, I've ransacked
our files and turned researchers loose on it myself, and still haven't found an
answer. How did Merseia come upon Starkad in the first place?" Brechdan stiffened.
"Exploring the region," he said curtly. "Unclaimed space is free
to all ships." "But suddenly,
Hand, there you were, active on the confounded planet. Precisely how did you
happen to get interested?" Brechdan took a moment
to organize his reply. "Your people went through that region rather
superficially in the old days," he said. "We are less eager for
commercial profit than the Polesotechnic League was, and more eager for
knowledge, so we mounted a systematic survey. The entry for Saxo, in your
pilot's manual, made Starkad seem worth thorough study. After all, we too are
attracted by planets with free oxygen and liquid water, be they ever so
inhospitable otherwise. We found a situation which needed correction, and
proceeded to send a mission. Inevitably, ships in the Betelgeuse trade noted
frequent wakes near Saxo. Terran units investigated, and the present unhappy
state of affairs developed." "Hm." Abrams
looked into his glass. "I thank the Hand. But it'd be nice to have more
details. Maybe, buried somewhere among them, is a clue to something our side
has misunderstood—semantic and cultural barrier, not so?" "I doubt
that," Brechdan said. "You are welcome to conduct inquiries, but on
this subject you will waste your energy. There may not even be a record of the
first several Merseian expeditions to the Saxo vicinity. We are not as concerned
to put everything on tape as you." Sensing his coldness,
Hauksberg hastened to change the subject. Conversation petered out in
banalities. Brechdan made his excuses and departed before midnight. A good opponent, Abrams,
he thought. Too good for my peace of mind. He is definitely the one on whom to
concentrate attention. Or is he? Would a
genuinely competent spy look formidable? He could be a—yes, they call it a
stalking horse—for someone or something else. Then again, that may be what he
wants me to think. Brechdan chuckled. This
regression could go on forever. And it was not his business to play watchbeast.
The supply of security officers was ample. Every move that every Terran made,
outside the Embassy which they kept bugproof with annoying ingenuity, was
observed as a matter of course. Still, he was about to
see in person an individual Intelligence agent, one who was important enough to
have been sent especially to Starkad and especially returned when wily old
Runei decided he could be more valuable at home. Dwyr the Hook might carry
information worthy of the Council president's direct hearing. After which
Brechdan could give him fresh orders … In the icy fluorescence
of an otherwise empty office, the thing waited. Once it had been Merseian and
young. The lower face remained, as a mask rebuilt by surgery; part of the
torso; left arm and right stump. The rest was machine. Its biped frame executed
a surprisingly smooth salute. At such close quarters Brechdan, who had keen
ears, could barely discern the hum from within. Power coursed out of capacitors
which need not be recharged for several days, even under strenuous use: out
through microminiaturized assemblies that together formed a body. "Service
to my overlord." A faint metal tone rang in the voice. Brechdan responded in
honor. He did not know if he would have had the courage to stay alive so
amputated. "Well met, Arlech Dwyr. At ease." "The Hand of the
Vach Ynvory desired my presence?" "Yes, yes."
Brechdan waved impatiently. "Let us have no more etiquette. I'm fed to the
occiput with it. Apology that I kept you waiting, but before I could talk
meaningfully about those Terrans I must needs encounter them for myself. Now
then, you worked on the staff of Fodaich Runei's Intelligence corps as well as
in the field, did you not? So you are conversant both with collated data and
with the problems of gathering information in the first place. Good. Tell me in
your own words why you were ordered back." "Hand," said
the voice, "as an operative, I was useful but not indispensable. The one
mission which I and no other might have carried out, failed: to burgle the
office of the Terran chief of Intelligence." "You expected
success?" Brechdan hadn't known Dwyr was that good. "Yes, Hand. I can
be equipped with electromagnetic sensors and transducers, to feel out a hidden
circuit. In addition, I have developed an empathy with machines. I can be
aware, on a level below consciousness, of what they are about to do, and adjust
my behavior accordingly. It is analogous to my former perception, the normal
one, of nuances in expression, tone, stance on the part of fellow Merseians
whom I knew intimately. Thus I could have opened the door without triggering an
alarm. Unfortunately, and unexpectedly, living guards were posted. In physical
strength, speed, and agility, this body is inferior to what I formerly had. I
could not have killed them unbeknownst to their mates." "Do you think
Abrams knows about you?" Brechdan asked sharply. "No, Hand. Evidence
indicates he is ultra-cautious by habit. Those Terrans who damaged me later in
the jungle got no good look at me. I did glimpse Abrams in companionship with
the other, Hauksberg. This led us to suspect early that he would accompany the
delegation to Merseia, no doubt in the hope of conducting espionage. Because of
my special capabilities, and my acquaintance with Abrams' working methods,
Fodaich Runei felt I should go ahead of the Terrans and await their
arrival." "Khraich. Yes.
Correct." Brechdan forced himelf to look at Dwyr as he would at a fully
alive being. "You can be put into other bodies, can you not?" "Yes, Hand,"
came from the blank visage. "Vehicles, weapons, detectors, machine tools,
anything designed to receive my organic component and my essential prostheses.
I do not take long to familiarize myself with their use. Under his Supremacy, I
stand at your orders." . "You will have
work." Brechdan said "In truth you will. I know not what as yet. You
may even be asked to burgle the envoy's ship in orbit. For a beginning,
however, I think we must plan a program again our friend Abrams. He will expect
the usual devices; you may give him a surprise. If you do, you shall not go
unhonored." Dwyr the Hook waited to
hear further. Brechdan could not
forebear taking a minute for plain fleshly comradeship. "How were you
hurt?" he asked. "In the conquest of
Janair, Hand. A nuclear blast. The field hospital kept me alive and sent me to
base for regeneration. But the surgeons there found that the radiation had too
much deranged my cellular chemistry. At that point I requested death. They
explained that techniques newly learned from Gorrazan gave hope of an
alternative, which might make my service quite precious. They were
correct." Brechdan was momentarily
startled. This didn't sound right—Well, he was no biomedic. His spirits darkened.
Why pretend pity? You can't be friends with the dead. And Dwyr was dead, in
bone, sinew, glands, gonads, guts, everything but a brain which had nothing
left except the single-mindedness of a machine. So, use him. That was what
machines were for. Brechdan took a turn
around the room, hands behind back, tail unrestful, scar throbbing.
"Good," he said. "Let us discuss procedure." 11 "Oh, no,"
Abrams had said. "I thank most humbly the government of his Supremacy for
this generous offer, but would not dream of causing such needless trouble and
expense. True, the Embassy cannot spare me an airboat. However, the ship we
came in, Dronning Margrete, has a number of auxiliaries now idle. I can use one
of them." "The Commander's
courtesy is appreciated," bowed the officiai at the other end of the
vidiphone line. "Regrettably, though, law permits no one not of Merseian
race to operate within the Korychan System a vessel possessing hyperdrive
capabilities. The Commander will remember that a Merseian pilot and engineer
boarded his Lordship's vessel for the last sublight leg of the journey here. Is
my information correct that the auxiliaries of his Lordship's so impressive vessel
possess hyperdrives in addition to gravities?" "They do,
distinguished colleague. But the two largest carry an airboat apiece as their
own auxiliaries. I am sure Lord Hauksberg won't mind lending me one of those
for my personal transportation. There is no reason to bother your
department." "But there
is!" The Merseian threw up his hands in quite a manlike gesture of horror.
"The Commander, no less than his Lordship, is a guest of his Supremacy. We
cannot disgrace his Supremacy by failing to show what hospitality lies within
our power. A vessel will arrive tomorrow for the Commander's personal use. The
delay is merely so that it may be furnished comfortably for Terrans and the
controls modified to a Terran pattern. The boat can sleep six, and we will
stock its galley with whatever is desired and available here. It has full
aerial capability, has been checked out for orbital use, and could no doubt
reach the outermost moon at need. I beg for the Commander's acceptance." "Distinguished
colleague, I in turn beg that you, under his Supremacy, accept my sincerest
thanks," Abrams beamed. The beam turned into a guffaw as soon as he had
cut the circuit. Of course the Merseians weren't going to let him travel around
unescorted—not unless they could bug his transportation. And of course they
would expect him to look for eavesdropping gimmicks and find any of the usual
sorts. Therefore he really needn't conduct that tedious search. Nonetheless, he did.
Negligence would have been out of character. To those who delivered his
beautiful new flier he explained that he set technicians swarming through her
to make certain that everything was understood about her operation; different
cultures, different engineering, don't y' know. The routine disclaimer was met
by the routine pretense of believing it. The airboat carried no spy gadgets
apart from the one he had been hoping for. He found this by the simple
expedient of waiting till he was alone aboard and then asking. The method of
its concealment filled him with admiration. But thereafter he ran
into a stone wall—or, rather, a pot of glue. Days came and went, the long
thirty-seven-hour days of Merseia. He lost one after another by being summoned
to the chamber in Castle Afon where Hauksberg and staff conferred with Brechdan's
puppets. Usually the summons was at the request of a Merseian, who wanted
elucidation of some utterly trivial question about Starkad. Having explained,
Abrams couldn't leave. Protocol forbade. He must sit there while talk droned
on, inquiries, harangues, haggles over points which a child could see were
unessential—oh, yes, these greenskins had a fine art of making negotiations
interminable. Abrams said as much to
Hauksberg, once when they were back at the Embassy. "I know," the
viscount snapped. He was turning gaunt and hollow-eyed. "They're so
suspicious of us. Well, we're partly to blame for that, eh? Got to show good
faith. While we talk, we don't fight." "They fight on
Starkad," Abrams grumbled around his cigar. "Terra won't wait on
Brechdan's comma-counting forever." "I'll dispatch a
courier presently, to report and explain. We are gettin' somewhere, don't
forget. They're definitely int'rested in establishin' a system for continuous
medium-level conference between the governments." "Yah. A great big
gorgeous idea which'll give political leverage to our accommodationists at home
for as many years as Brechdan feels like carrying on discussions about it. I
thought we came here to settle the Starkad issue." "I thought I was
the head of this mission," Hauksberg retorted. "That'll do,
Commander." He yawned and stretched, stiffly. "One more drink and ho
for bed. Lord Emp'ror, but I'm tired!" On days when he was not
immobilized, Abrams ground through his library research and his interviews. The
Merseians were most courteous and helpful. They flooded him with books and
periodicals. Officers and officials would talk to him for hours on end. That
was the trouble. Aside from whatever feel he might be getting for the basic
setup, he learned precisely nothing of value. Which was a kind of
indicator too, he admitted. The lack of hard information about early Merseian
journeys to the Saxo region might be due to sloppiness about record keeping as
Brechdan had said. But a check of other planets showed that they were, as a
rule, better documented. Starkad appeared to have some secret importance. So
what else is new? At first Abrams had
Flandry to help out. Then an invitation arrived. In the cause of better
understanding between races, as well as hospitality, would Ensign Flandry like
to tour the planet in company with some young Merseians whose rank corresponded
more or less to his? "Would you?"
Abrams asked. "Why—" Flandry
straightened at his desk. "Hell, yes. Right now I feel as if every library
in the universe should be bombed. But you need me here … I
suppose." "I do. This is a
baldpated ruse to cripple me still worse. However, you can go." "You mean
that?" Flandry gasped. "Sure. We're
stalled here. You just might discover something." "Thank you,
sir!" Flandry rocketed out of his chair. "Whoa there, son.
Won't be any vacation for you. You've got to play the decadent Terran
nogoodnik. Mustn't disappoint their expectations. Besides, it improves your
chances. Keep your eyes and ears open, sure, but forget the rule about keeping
your mouth shut. Babble. Ask questions. Foolish ones, mainly; and be damned
sure not to get so inquisitive they suspect you of playing spy." Flandry frowned.
"Uh … sir, I'd look odd if I didn't grab after information.
Thing to do, I should guess, is be clumsy and obvious about it." "Good. You catch on
fast. I wish you were experienced, but—Nu, everybody has to start sometime, and
I'm afraid you will not run into anything too big for a pup to handle. So go
get yourself some experience." Abrams watched the boy
bustle off, and a sigh gusted from him. By and large, after winking at a few
things, he felt he'd have been proud to have Dominic Flandry for a son. Though
not likely to hit any pay dirt, this trip would further test the ensign's
competence. If he proved out well, then probably he must be thrown to the
wolves by Abrams' own hand. Because events could not
be left on dead zero as long as Brechdan wished. The situation right now
carried potentials which only a traitor would fail to exploit. Nonetheless, the
way matters had developed, with the mission detained on Merseia for an
indefinite period, Abrams could not exploit them as he had originally schemed.
The classically neat operation he had had in mind must be turned into an
explosion. And Flandry was the
fuse. Like almost every
intelligent species, the Merseians had in their past evolved thousands of
languages and cultures. Finally, as in the case of Terra, one came to dominate
the others and slowly absorb them into itself. But the process had not gone as
far on Merseia. The laws and customs of the lands bordering the Wilwidh Ocean
were still a mere overlay on some parts of the planet. Eriau was the common
tongue, but there were still those who were less at home in it than in the
languages they had learned from their mothers. Perhaps this was why
Lannawar Belgis had never risen above yqan—CPO, Flandry translated—and was at
the moment a sort of batman to the group. He couldn't even pronounce his rating
correctly. The sound rendered by q, approximately kdh where dh = th as in
"the," gave him almost as much trouble as it did an Anglic speaker.
Or perhaps he just wasn't ambitious. For certainly he was able, as his huge
fund of stories from his years in space attested. He was also a likeable old
chap. He sat relaxed with the
Terran and Tachwyr the Dark, whose rank of mei answered somewhat to lieutenant
j.g. Flandry was getting used to the interplay of formality and ease between
officers and enlisted personnel in the Merseian service. Instead of the mutual
aloofness on Terran ships, there was an intimacy which the seniors led but did
not rigidly control, a sort of perpetual dance. "Aye,
foreseers," Lannawar rumbled, "yon was a strange orb and glad I was
to see the last of it. Yet somehow, I know not, ours was never a lucky ship
afterward. Nothing went ever wholly right, you track me? Speaking naught
against captain nor crew, I was glad for transfer to the Bedh-Ivrich. Her
skipper was Runei the Wanderer, and far did he take us on explores." Tachwyr's tailtip jerked
and he opened his mouth. Someone was always around to keep a brake on
Lannawar's gar-rulousness. Flandry, who had sat half drowsing, surged to
alertness. He beat Tachwyr by a millisecond in exclaiming: "Runei? The
same who is now Fodaich on Starkad?" "Why … aye,
believe so, foreseer." Eyes squinched in the tattooed face across the
table. A green hand scratched the paunch where the undress tunic bulged open.
"Not as I know much. Heard naught of Starkad ere they told me why you
Terrans is come." Flandry's mind went into
such furious action that he felt each of the several levels on which it was
operating. He had to grab whatever lead chance had offered him after so many
fruitless days; he must fend off Tachwyr's efforts to wrench the lead away from
him, for a minute or two anyhow; at the same time, he must maintain his role.
(Decadent, as Abrams had suggested, and this he had enjoyed living up to
whenever his escorts took him to some place of amusement. But not fatuous; he
had quickly seen that he'd get further if they respected him a little and were
not bored by his company. He was naпve, wide-eyed, pathetically hoping to
accomplish something for Mother Terra, simultaneously impressed by what he saw
here. In wry moments he admitted to himself that this was hardly a faked
character.) On lower levels of consciousness, excitement opened the sensory
floodgates. Once more he noticed the
background. They sat, with a bench for him, in a marble pergola intricately
arabesqued and onion-domed. Tankards of bitter ale stood before them. Merseian
food and drink were nourishing to a Terran, and often tasty. They had entered
this hilltop restaurant (which was also a shrine, run by the devotees of a very
ancient faith) for the view and for a rest after walking around in Dalgorad.
That community nestled below them, half hidden by lambent flowers and
deep-green fronds, a few small modern buildings and many hollowed-out trees
which had housed untold generations of a civilized society. Past the airport
lay a beach of red sand. An ocean so blue it was nearly black cast breakers
ashore; their booming drifted faint to Flandry on a wind that smelled cinnamon.
Korych shone overhead with subtropical fierceness, but the moons Wythna and
Lythyr were discernible, like ghosts. Interior sensations:
muscles drawn tight in thighs and belly, bloodbeat in the eardrums, chill in
the palms. No feeling of excess weight; Merseian gravity was only a few percent
above Terra's. Merseian air, water, biochemistry, animal and plant life, were
close parallels to what man had evolved among. By the standards of either
world, the other was beautiful. Which made the two races
enemies. They wanted the same kind of real estate. "So Runei himself
was not concerned with the original missions to Starkad?" Flandry asked. "No, foreseer. We
surveyed beyond Rigel." Lannawar reached for his tankard. "I imagine,
though," Flandry prompted, "from time to time when space explorers
got together, as it might be in a tavern, you'd swap yarns?" "Aye, aye. What
else? 'Cept when we was told to keep our hatches dogged about where we'd been.
Not easy, foreseer, believe you me 'tis not, when you could outbrag the crew of
'em save 'tis a Naval secret." "You must have
heard a lot about the Betelgeuse region, regardless." Lannawar raised his
tankard. Thereby he missed noticing Tachwyr's frown. But he did break the
thread, and the officer caught the raveled end deftly. "Are you really
interested in anecdotes, Ensign? I fear that our good yqan has nothing else to
give you." "Well, yes, Mei, I
am interested in anything about the Betelgeuse sector," Flandry said.
"After all, it borders on our Empire. I've already served there, on
Starkad, and I daresay I will again. So I'd be grateful for whatever you care
to tell me." Lannawar came up for
air. "If you yourself, Yqan, were never there, perhaps you know someone
who was. I ask for no secrets, of course, only stories." "Khr-r-r."
Lannawar wiped foam off his chin. "Not many about. Not many what have
fared yonderways. They're either back in space, or they've died. Was old Ralgo
Tamuar, my barracks friend in training days. He was there aplenty. How he could
lie! But he retired to one of the colonies, let me see now, which one?" "Yqan Belgis."
Tachwyr spoke quietly, with no special inflection, but Lannawar stiffened.
"I think best we leave this subject. The Starkadian situation is an
unfortunate one. We are trying to be friends with our guest, and I hope we are
succeeding, but to dwell on the dispute makes a needless obstacle." To
Flandry, with sardonicism: "I trust the ensign agrees?" "As you wish,"
the Terran mumbled. Damn, damn, and damn to
the power of hell! He'd been on a scent. He could swear he'd been. He felt
nauseated with frustration. Some draughts of ale
soothed him. He'd never been idiot enough to imagine himself making any
spectacular discoveries or pulling off any dazzling coups on this junket.
(Well, certain daydreams, but you couldn't really count that.) What he had
obtained now was—a hint which tended to confirm that the early Merseian
expeditions to Starkad had found a big and strange thing. As a result, secrecy
had come down like a candlesnuffer. Officers and crews who knew, or might
suspect, the truth were snatched from sight. Murdered? No, surely not. The
Merseians were not the antlike monsters which Terran propaganda depicted.
They'd never have come as far as this, or be as dangerous as they were, had
that been the case. To shut a spacefarer's mouth, you reassigned him or retired
him to an exile which might well be comfortable and which he himself might
never realize was an exile. Even for the post of
Starkadian commandant, Brechdan had been careful to pick an officer who knew
nothing beforehand about his post, and could not since have been told the hidden
truth. Why … aside from those exploratory personnel who no longer
counted, perhaps only half a dozen beings in the universe knew! Obviously Tachwyr
didn't. He and his fellows had simply been ordered to keep Flandry off certain
topics. The Terran believed they
were honest, most of them, in their friendliness toward him and their expressed
wish that today's discord could be resolved. They were good chaps. He felt more
akin to them than to many humans. In spite of which, they
served the enemy, the real enemy, Brechdan Ironrede and his Grand Council, who
had put something monstrous in motion. Wind and surfbeat sounded all at once
like the noise of an oncoming machine. I haven't found anything
Abrams doesn't already suspect, Flandry thought. But I have got for him a bit
more proof. God! Four days to go before I can get back and give it to him. His mouth still felt
dry. "How about another round?" he said. "We're going for a
ride," Abrams said. "Sir?" Flandry
blinked. "Little pleasure
trip. Don't you think I deserve one too? A run to Gethwyd Forest, say, that's
an unrestricted area." Flandry looked past his
boss's burly form, out the window to the compound. A garden robot whickered
among the roses, struggling to maintain the microecology they required. A
secretary on the diplomatic staff stood outside one of the residence bubbles,
flirting boredly with the assistant naval attache's wife. Beyond them, Ardaig's
modern towers shouldered brutally skyward. The afternoon was hot and quiet. "Uh … sir—"
Flandry hesitated. "When you 'sir' me
in private these days, you want something," Abrams said. "Carry
on." "Well, uh, could we
invite Donna d'Io?" Beneath those crow's-footed eyes, Flandry felt himself
blush. He tried to control it, which made matters worse. "She, uh, must be
rather lonesome when his Lordship and aides are out of town." Abrams grinned.
"What, I'm not decorative enough for you? Sorry. It wouldn't look right.
Let's go." Flandry stared at him.
He knew the man by now. At least, he could spot when something unadmitted
lurked under the skin. His spine tingled. Having reported on his trip, he'd
expected a return to desk work, dullness occasionally relieved after dark. But
action must be starting at last. However much he had grumbled, however
sarcastic he had waxed about the glamorous life in romantic alien capitals, he
wasn't sure he liked the change. "Very good,
sir," he said. They left the office and
crossed aboveground to the garages. The Merseian technics reported periodically
to inspect the luxury boat lent Abrams, but today a lone human was on duty.
Envious, he floated the long blue teardrop out into the sunlight. Abrams and
Flandry boarded, sealed the door, and found chairs in the saloon. "Gethwyd
Forest, main parking area," Abrams said. "Five hundred KPH. Any
altitude will do." The machine communicated
with other machines. Clearance was granted and lane assigned. The boat rose
noiselessly. On Terra, its path could have been monitored, but the haughty
chieftains of Merseia had not allowed that sort of capability to be built in
for possible use against them. Traffic control outside of restricted sections
was automatic and anonymous. Unless they shadowed a boat, or bugged it somehow,
security officers were unable to keep it under surveillance. Abrams had
remarked that he liked that, on principle as well as because his own
convenience was served. He groped in his tunic
for a cigar. "We could have a drink," he suggested. "Whisky and
water for me." Flandry got it, with a
stiff cognac for himself. By the time he returned from the bar, they were
leveled off at about six kilometers and headed north. They would take a couple
of hours, at this ambling pace, to reach the preserve which the Vach Dathyr had
opened to the public. Flandry had been there before, on a holiday excursion
Oliveira arranged for Hauksberg and company. He remembered great solemn trees,
gold-feathered birds, the smell of humus and the wild taste of a spring. Most
vividly he remembered sunflecks patterned across Persis' thin gown. Now he saw
the planet's curve through a broad viewport, the ocean gleaming westward, the
megalopolitan maze giving way to fields and isolated castles. "Sit down,"
Abrams said. His hand chopped at a lounger. Smoke hazed him where he sprawled. Flandry lowered himself.
He wet his lips. "You've business with me, haven't you?" he said. "Right on the first
guess! To win your Junior Spy badge and pocket decoder, tell me what an
elephant is." "Huh, sir?" "An elephant is a
mouse built to government specifications. Or else a mouse is a transistorized
elephant." Abrams didn't look jovial. He was delaying. Flandry took a nervous
sip. "If it's confidential," he asked, "should we be here?" "Safer than the
Embassy. That's only probably debugged, not certainly, and old-fashioned
listening at doors hasn't ever quite gone out of style." "But a Merseian
runabout—" "We're safe. Take
my word." Abrams glared at the cigar he rolled between his fingers.
"Son, I need you for a job of work and I need you bad. Could be dangerous
and sure to be nasty. Are you game?" Flandry's heart bumped.
"I'd better be, hadn't I?" Abrams cocked his head
at the other. "Not bad repartee for a nineteen-year-old. But do you mean
it, down in your bones?" "Yes, sir." I
think so. "I believe you. I
have to." Abrams took a drink and a long drag. Abruptly: "Look here, let's
review the circumstances as she stands. I reckon you have the innate common
sense to see what's written on your eyeballs, that Brechdan hasn't got the
slightest intention of settling the squabble on Starkad. I thought for a while,
maybe he figured to offer us peace there in exchange for some other thing he
really wants. But if that were the case, he wouldn't have thrown a triple gee
field onto the parley the way he has. He'd have come to the point with the
unavoidable minimum of waste motion. Merseians don't take a human's glee in
forensics. If Brechdan wanted to strike a a bargain, Hauksberg would be home on
Terra right now with a preliminary report. "Instead,
Brechdan's talkboys have stalled, with one quibble and irrelevancy after another.
Even Hauksberg's getting a gutful. Which I think is the reason Brechdan
personally invited him and aides to Dhangodhan for a week or two of shootin'
and fishin'. Partly because that makes one more delay by itself; partly to
smooth our viscount's feelings with a 'gesture of goodwill.' " The quotes
were virtually audible. "I was invited too, but begged off on grounds of
wanting to continue my researches. If he'd thought of it, Brechdan'd likely
have broken custom and asked Donna Persis, as an added inducement for staying
in the mountains a while. Unless, hm, he's provided a little variety for his
guests. There are humans in Merseian service, you know." Flandry nodded. For a
second he felt disappointment. Hauksberg's absence when he returned had seemed
to provide a still better opportunity than Hauksberg's frequent exhaustion in
Ardaig. But excitement caught him. Never mind Persis. She was splendid
recreation, but that was all. "I might be tempted
to think like his Lordship, Brechdan is fundamentally sincere," he said.
"The average Merseian is, I'm sure." "Sure you're sure.
And you're right. Fat lot of difference that makes." "But anyhow,
Starkad is too important. Haven't you told that idi—Lord Hauksberg so?" "I finally got
tired of telling him," Abrams said. "What have I got to argue from
except a prejudice based on experiences he's never shared?" "I wonder why
Brechdan agreed to receive a delegation in the first place." "Oh, easier to
accept than refuse, I suppose. Or it might have suited his plans very well. He
doesn't want total war yet. I do believe he originally intended to send us
packing in fairly short order. What hints I've gathered suggest that another
issue has arisen—that he's planning quite a different move, not really germane
to Starkad—and figures to put a better face on it by acting mild toward us. God
alone knows how long we'll be kept here. Could be weeks more." Abrams leaned forward.
"And meanwhile," he continued, "anything could happen. I came
with some hopes of pulling off a hell of a good stunt just before we left. And
it did look hopeful at first, too. Could give us the truth about Starkad. Well,
things have dragged on, configurations have changed, my opportunity may vanish.
We've got to act soon, or our chance of acting at all will be mighty
poor." This is it, Flandry
thought, and a part of him jeered at the banality, while he waited with
hardheld breath. "I don't want to
tell you more than I've got to," Abrams said. "Just this: I've
learned where Brechdan's ultrasecret file is. That wasn't hard; everybody knows
about it. But I think I can get an agent in there. The next and worst problem
will be to get the information out, and not have the fact we're doing so be
known. "I dare not wait
till we all go home. That gives too much time for too many things to go wrong.
Nor can I leave beforehand by myself. I'm too damn conspicuous. It'd look too
much as if I'd finished whatever I set out to do. Hauksberg himself might
forbid me to go, precisely because he suspected I was going to queer his
pea-ea-eace mission. Or else … I'd be piloted out of the system by
Merseians. Brechdan's bully boys could arrange an unfortunate accident merely
as a precaution. They could even spirit me off to a hypnoprobe room, and what
happened to me there wouldn't matter a hoot-let compared to what'd happen to
our forces later. I'm not being melodramatic, son. Those are the unbuttered
facts of life." Flandry sat still.
"You want me to convey the data out, if you get them," he said. "Ah, you do know what
an elephant is." "You must have a
pretty efficient pipeline to Merseian HQ." "I've seen
worse," Abrams said rather smugly. "Couldn't have been
developed in advance." Flandry spoke word by word. Realization was
freezing him. "Had it been, why should you yourself come here? Must be
something you got hold of on Starkad, and hadn't a chance to instruct anyone
about that you trusted and who could be spared." "Let's get down to
business," Abrams said fast. "No. I want to
finish this." "You?" Flandry stared past
Abrams like a blind man. "If the contact was that good," he said,
"I think you got a warning about the submarine attack on Ujanka. And you
didn't tell. There was no preparation. Except for a fluke, the city would have
been destroyed." He rose. "I saw Tigeries killed in the
streets." "Sit down!" "One mortar planted
on a wharf would have gotten that boat." Flandry started to walk away. His
voice lifted. "Males and females and little cubs, blown apart, buried
alive under rubble, and you did nothing!" Abrams surged to his
feet and came after him. "Hold on, there," he barked. Flandry whirled on him.
"Why the obscenity should I?" Abrams grabbed the boy's
wrists. Flandry tried to break free. Abrams held him where he was. Rage rode
across the dark Chaldean face. "You listen to me," Abrams said.
"I did know. I knew the consequences of keeping silent. When you saved
that town, I went down on my knees before God. I'd've done it before you if you
could've understood. But suppose I had acted. Runei is no man's fool. He'd have
guessed I had a source, and there was exactly one possibility, and after he
looked into that my pipeline would've been broken like a dry stick. And I was
already developing it as a line into Brechdan's own files. Into the truth about
Starkad. How many lives might that save? Not only human. Tigery, Siravo, hell,
Merseian! Use your brains, Dom. You must have a couple of cells clicking
together between those ears. Sure, this is a filthy game. But it has one point
of practicality which is also a point of honor. You don't compromise your
sources. You don't!" Flandry struggled for
air. Abrams let him go. Flandry went back to his lounger, collapsed in it, and
drank deep. Abrams stood waiting. Flandry looked up.
"I'm sorry, sir," he got out. "Overwrought, I guess." "No excuses
needed." Abrams clapped his shoulder. "You had to learn sometime.
Might as well be now. And you know, you give me a tinge of hope. I'd begun to
wonder if anybody was left on our side who played the game for anything but its
own foul sake. When you get some rank—Well, we'll see." He sat down too. Silence
lay between them for a while. "I'm all right now,
sir," Flandry ventured. "Good," Abrams
grunted. "You'll need whatever all rightness you can muster. The best way
I can see to get that information out soon involves a pretty dirty trick too.
Also a humiliating one. I'd like to think you can hit on a better idea, but
I've tried and failed." Flandry gulped.
"What is it?" Abrams approached the
core gingerly. "The problem is this," he said. "I do believe we
can raid that file unbeknownst. Especially now while Brechdan is away, and the
three others who I've found have access to that certain room. But even so, it'd
look too funny if anyone left right after who didn't have a plausible reason.
You can have one." Flandry braced himself.
"What?" "Well … if
Lord Hauksberg caught you in flagrante delicto with his toothsome traveling
companion—" That would have unbraced
a far more sophisticated person. Flandry leaped from his seat. "Sir!" "Down, boy. Don't
tell me the mice haven't been playing while the cat's elsewhere. You've been so
crafty that I don't think anybody else guesses, even in our gossipy little
enclave. Which augurs well for your career in Intelligence. But son, I work
close to you. When you report draggle-tailed on mornings after I noticed Lord
Hauksberg was dead tired and took a hypnotic; when I can't sleep and want to
get some work done in the middle of the night and you aren't in your room; when
you and she keep swapping glances—Must I spell every word? No matter. I don't
condemn you. If I weren't an old man with some eccentric ideas about my
marriage, I'd be jealous. "But this does give
us our chance. All we need do is keep Persis from knowing when her lord and
master is coming back. She don't mix much with the rest of the compound—can't
say I blame her—and you can provide the distraction to make sure. Then the
message sent ahead—which won't be to her personally anyhow, only to alert the
servants in the expectation they'll tell everyone—I'll see to it that the word
doesn't reach her. For the rest, let nature take its course." "No!" Flandry
raged. "Have no fears for
her," Abrams said. "She may suffer no more than a scolding. Lord
Hauksberg is pretty tolerant. Anyway, he ought to be. If she does lose her
position … our corps has a slush fund. She can be supported in
reasonable style on Terra till she hooks someone else. I really don't have the
impression she'd be heartbroken at having to trade Lord Hauksberg in on a newer
model." "But—"
Confound that blush! Flandry stared at the deck. His fists beat on his knees.
"She trusts me. I can't." "I said this was a
dirty business. Do you flatter yourself she's in love with you?" "Well—uh—" "You do. I
wouldn't. But supposing she is, a psych treatment for something that simple is
cheap, and she's cool enough to get one. I've spent more time worrying about
you." "What about
me?" asked Flandry miserably. "Lord Hauksberg has
to retaliate on you. Whatever his private feelings, he can't let something like
this go by; because the whole compound, hell, eventually all Terra is going to
know, if you handle the scene right. He figures on dispatching a courier home a
day or two after he gets back from Dhangodhan, with a progress report. You'll
go on the same boat, in disgrace, charged with some crime like disrespect for
hereditary authority. "Somewhere along
the line—I'll have to work out the details as we go—my agent will nobble the
information and slip it to me. I'll pass it to you. Once on Terra, you'll use a
word I'll give you to get the ear of a certain man. Afterward—son, you're in.
You shouldn't be fumblydiddling this way. You should be licking my boots for
such an opportunity to get noticed by men who count. My boots need
polishing." Flandry shifted, looked
away, out to the clouds which drifted across the green and brown face of
Merseia. The motor hum pervaded his skull. "What about
you?" he asked finally. "And the rest?" "We'll stay here
till the farce is over." "But … no,
wait, sir … so many things could go wrong. Deadly wrong." "I know. That's the
risk you take." "You more."
Flandry swung back to Abrams. "I might get free without a hitch. But if
later there's any suspicion—" "They won't bother
Persis," Abrams said. "She's not worth the trouble. Nor Hauksberg.
He's an accredited diplomat, and arresting him would damn near be an act of
war." "But you, sir! You
may be accredited to him, but—" "Don't fret,"
Abrams said. "I aim to die of advanced senile decay. If that starts
looking unlikely, I've got my blaster. I won't get taken alive and I won't go
out of the cosmos alone. Now: are you game?" It took Flandry's entire
strength to nod. 12 Two days later, Abrams
departed the Embassy again in his boat. Ahead, on the ocean's rim, smoldered a
remnant of sunset. The streets of Ardaig glowed ever more visible as dusk
deepened into night. Windows blinked to life, the Admiralty beacon flared like
a sudden red sun. Traffic was heavy, and the flier's robopilot must keep
signals constantly flickering between itself, others, and the nearest routing
stations. The computers in all stations were still more tightly linked, by a
web of data exchange. Its nexus was Central Control, where the total pattern
was evaluated and the three-dimensional grid of airlanes adjusted from minute
to minute for optimum flow. Into this endless
pulsation, it was easy to inject a suitably heterodyned and scrambled message.
None but sender and recipient would know. Nothing less than a major job of
stochastic analysis could reveal to an outsider that occasional talk had passed
(and even then, would not show what the talk had been about). Neither the boat
nor the Terran Embassy possessed the equipment for that. From the darkness where
he lay, Dwyr the Hook willed a message forth. Not sent: willed, as one wills a
normal voice to speak; for his nerve endings meshed directly with the circuits
of the vessel and he felt the tides in the electronic sea which filled Ardaig
like a living creature feeling the tides in its own blood. "Prime Observer
Three to Intelligence Division Thirteen." A string of code symbols
followed. "Prepare to receive report." Kilometers away, a
Merseian tautened at his desk. He was among the few who knew about Dwyr; they
alternated shifts around the clock. Thus far nothing of great interest had been
revealed to them. But that was good. It proved the Terran agent, whom they had
been warned was dangerous, had accomplished nothing. "Division Thirteen to
Prime Three. Dhech on duty. Report." 120 "Abrams has boarded
alone and instructed the 'pilot to take him to the following location."
Dwyr specified. He identified the place as being in a hill suburb, but no more;
Ardaig was not his town. "Ah, yes,"
Dhech nodded. "Fodaich Qwynn's home. We knew already Abrams was going
there tonight." "Shall I expect
anything to happen?" Dwyr asked. "No, you'll be
parked for several hours, I'm sure, and return him to the Embassy. He's been
after Qwynn for some time for an invitation, so they could talk privately and
at length about certain questions of mutual interest. Today he pressed so hard
that Qwynn found it impossible not to invite him for tonight without open
discourtesy." "Is that
significant?" "Hardly. We judge
Abrams makes haste simply because he got word that his chief will return
tomorrow with the Hand of the Vach Ynvory, great protector of us all.
Thereafter he can expect once more to be enmeshed in diplomatic maneuverings.
This may be his last chance to see Qwynn." "I could leave the
boat and spy upon them," Dwyr offered. "No need. Qwynn is
discreet, and will make his own report to us. If Abrams hopes to pick up a
useful crumb, he will be disappointed. Quite likely, though, his interest is
academic. He appears to have abandoned any plans he may have entertained for
conducting espionage." "He has certainly
done nothing suspicious under my surveillance," Dwyr said, "in a boat
designed to make him think it ideal for hatching plots. I will be glad when he
leaves. This has been a drab assignment." "Honor to you for
taking it," Dhech said. "No one else could have endured so
long." A burst of distortion made him start. "What's that?" "Some trouble with
the communicator," said Dwyr, who had willed the malfunction. "It had
better be checked soon. I might lose touch with you." "We'll think of
some excuse to send a technician over in a day or so. Hunt well." "Hunt well."
Dwyr broke the connection. Through the circuits,
which included scanners, he observed both outside and inside the hull. The boat
was slanting down toward its destination. Abrams had risen and donned a formal
cloak. Dwyr activated a speaker. "I have contacted Division
Thirteen," he said. "They are quite unsuspicious. I planted the idea
that my sender may go blank, in case for some reason they try to call me while
I am absent." "Good lad."
Abrams' tones were likewise calm, but he took a last nervous pull on his cigar
and stubbed it out viciously. "Now remember, I'll stay put for several
hours. Should give you ample time to do your job and slip back into this shell.
But if anything goes wrong, I repeat, what matters is the information. Since we
can't arrange a safe drop, and since mine host tonight will have plenty of
retainers to arrest me, in emergency you get hold of Ensign Flandry and tell
him. You recall he should be in Lord Hauksberg's suite, or else his own room;
and I've mapped the Embassy for you. Now also, make damn sure the phone here is
hooked to the 'pilot, so you or he can call this boat to him. I haven't told
him about you, but I have told him to trust absolutely whoever has the key
word. You remember?" "Yes, of course.
Meshuggah. What does it mean?" "Never mind."
Abrams grinned. "What about
rescuing you?" "Don't. You'd come
to grief for certain. Besides, my personal chances are better if I invoke
diplomatic immunity. I hope, though, our stunt will go off without a
hitch." Abrams looked about. "I can't see you, Dwyr, and I can't
shake your hand, but I'd sure like to. And one day I plan to." The boat
grounded. "Good luck." Dwyr's electronic gaze
followed the stocky figure out, down the ramp and across the small parking
strip in the garden. A pair of clan members saluted the Terran and followed him
toward the mansion. A screen of trees soon hid them. No one else was in view.
Shadows lay heavy around the boat. Let us commence, Dwyr
thought. His decision was altogether unperturbed. Once he would have tasted
fear, felt his heart thud, clutched to him the beloved images of wife and young
and their home upon far Tanis. Courage would have followed, sense of high
purpose, joy of proving his maleness by a leap between the horns of death—thus
did you know yourself wholly alive! But those things had departed with his
body. He could no longer recollect how they felt. The one emotion which never
left him, like an unhealing wound, was the wish to know all emotions again. He had a few.
Workmanship gave a cerebral pleasure. Hate and fury could still
burn … though cold, cold. He wondered if they were not mere habits,
engraved in the synapses of his brain. He stirred in the
womblike cubicle where he lay. Circuit by circuit, his living arm disconnected
his machine parts from the boat. For a moment he was totally cut off. How many
hours till sensory deprivation broke down his sanity? He had been kept supplied
with impressions of the world, and asleep he never dreamed. But suppose he
stayed where he was, in this lightless, soundless, currentless nothing. When he
began to hallucinate, would he imagine himself back on Tanis? Or would Sivilla
his wife come to him? Nonsense. The objective
was that he come to her, whole. He opened a panel and glided forth. The systems
that kept him functional were mounted in a tiny gravsled. His first task would
be to exchange it for a more versatile body. Emerging, he floated low,
keeping to the bushes and shadows. Stars were plainer to see here, away from
the city web and the beacon flare which lay at the foot of these hills. He
noted the sun of Tanis, where Merseians had made their homes among mountains
and forests, where Sivilla lived yet with their children. She thought him dead,
but they told him she had not remarried and the children were growing up well. Was that another lie? The problem of weaving
his way unseen into the city occupied a bare fragment of Dwyr's attention. His
artificial senses were designed for this kind of task, and he had a decade of
experience with them. Mostly he was remembering. "I was reluctant to
leave," he had confessed to Abrams on Starkad. "I was happy. What was
the conquest of Janair to me? They spoke of the glory of the race. I saw
nothing except that other race, crushed, burned, enslaved as we advanced. I
would have fought for my liberty as they did for theirs. Instead, being
required to do my military service, I was fighting to rob them of their
birthright. Do not misunderstand. I stayed loyal to my Roidhun and my people.
It was they who betrayed me." "They sure as the
seventh hell did," Abrams said. That was after the
revelation which knocked Dwyr's universe apart. "What?" Abrams had roared.
"You could not be regenerated? Impossible!" "But radiation
damage to the cells—" "With that kind of
radiation damage, you'd've been dead. The basic gene pattern governs the
organism throughout life. If everything mutated at once, life would have to
stop. And the regeneration process uses the chromosomes for a chemical
template. No, they saw their chance to make a unique tool out of you, and lied.
I suppose they must've planted an unconscious mental block too, so you'd never
think to study basic biomedicine for yourself, and avoid situations where
somebody might tell you. God! I've seen some vile tricks in my time, but this
one takes the purple shaft, with pineapple clusters." "You can heal
me?" Dwyr screamed. "Our chemosurgeons
can. But slow down. Let's think a bit. I could order the job done on you, and
would as a matter of ethics. Still, you'd be cut off from your family. What we
ought to do is smuggle them out also. We could resettle you on an Imperial
planet. And I haven't the authority to arrange that. Not unless you rate it.
Which you could, by serving as a double agent." "To you too, then,
I am nothing but a tool." "Easy. I didn't say
that. I just said that getting back your family won't come cheap. It'll involve
some risk to the crew who fetch them. You've got to earn a claim on us.
Willing?" Oh, very willing! As he darted between
towers, Dwyr was no more conspicuous than a nigh third. He could easily reach
the place assigned him, on an upper level of a control station where only computers
dwelt, without being noticed. That had been arranged on Brechdan Ironrede's own
command. The secret of Dwyr's existence was worth taking trouble to preserve. A
recognition lock opened for him and he glided into a room crowded with his
bodies and attachments. There was nothing else; an amputated personality did
not carry around the little treasures of a mortal. He had already chosen
what to take. After detaching from the sled, he hitched himself to the biped
body which lay stretched out like a metal corpse. For those moments he was
without any senses but sight, hearing, a dim touch and kinesthesia, a jab of
pain through what remained of his tissues. He was glad when he had finished
making the new connections. Rising, he lumbered
about and gathered what else he would need and fastened it on: special tools
and sensors, a gravity impeller, a blaster. How weak and awkward he was. He
much preferred being a vehicle or a gun. Metal and plastic did not substitute
well for cells, nerves, muscles, the marvelous structure which was bone. But
tonight an unspecialized shape was required. Last came some disguise.
He could not pass for Merseian (after what had been done to him) but he could
look like a spacesuited human or Iskeled. The latter race had long ago become
resigned to the domination of his, and furnished many loyal personnel. No few
had been granted Merseian citizenship. It had less significance than the
corresponding honor did for Terra, but it carried certain valuable privileges. Ready. Dwyr left his
room and took to the air again, openly this time. Admiralty House grew before
him, a gaunt mountain where caves glared and the beacon made a volcano spout. A
sound of machines mumbled through the sky he clove. He sensed their radiation
as a glow, a tone, a rising wave. Soaring, he approached the forbidden zone and
spoke, on a tight beam, those passwords Brechdan had given him. "Absolute
security," he added. "My presence is to be kept secret." When he landed on the
flange, an officer had joined the sentries. "What is your business on this
level?" the Merseian demanded. "Our protector the Hand is not in
Ardaig." "I know," Dwyr
said. "I am at his direct orders, to conduct some business inside. That is
as much as I am allowed to tell you. You and these males will admit me, and let
me out in a while, and forget I was ever here. It is not to be mentioned to
anyone in any circumstances. The matter is sealed." "Under what
code?" "Triple Star." The officer saluted.
"Pass." Dwyr went down the
corridor. It echoed a little to his footfalls. When he reached the anteroom, he
heard the buzz of work in the offices beyond; but he stood alone at the door of
the vault. He had never seen this place. However, the layout was no secret and
had been easy to obtain. The door itself,
though—He approached with immense care, every sensor at full amplification. The
scanners saw he was not authorized to go by, and might trigger an alarm. No.
Nothing. After all, people did use this route on certain errands. He removed
the false glove on his robot arm and extended tendrils to the plates. They reacted. By
induction, his artificial neurones felt how signals moved into a comparison
unit and were rejected. So now he must feed in pulses which would be
interpreted as the right eye and hand patterns. Slowly … slowly,
micro-metric exactitude, growing into the assembly, feeling with it, calling
forth the response he wanted, a seduction which stirred instincts until his
machine heart and lungs moved rapidly and he was lost to the exterior
world … there! The door opened,
ponderous and silent. He trod through. It closed behind him. In a black
chamber, he confronted a thing which shone like opal. Except for possessing a
recognition trigger of its own, the molecular file was no different from
numerous others he had seen. Still full of oneness with the flow of electrons
and inter-meshed fields, still half in a dream, he activated it. The operation code
was unknown to him, but he detected that not much information was stored here.
Stood to reason, the thought trickled at the back of his awareness. No
individual could single-handedly steer an empire. The secrets which Brechdan
reserved for himself and his three comrades must be few, however tremendous.
He, Dwyr the Hook, need not carry on a lengthy random search before he got the
notes on Starkad. Eidhafor: Report on
another Hand who often opposed Brechdan in Council; data which could be used,
at need, to break him. Maxwell Crawford: Ha,
the Terran Emperor's governor of the Arachnean System was in Merseian pay. A
sleeper, kept in reserve. Therayn: So that was
what preoccupied Brechdan's friends. Abrams was evidently right; Hauksberg was
being delayed so as to be present, influenceable, when the news broke. Starkad! Onto the screen flashed
a set of numbers. 0.17847, 3° 14' 22".591, 1818 h.3264 … Dwyr
memorized them automatically, while he stood rigid with shock. Something had
happened in the file. An impulse had passed. Its transient radiation had given
his nerves a split second's wispy shiver. Might be nothing. But better finish
up and get out fast! The screen blanked.
Dwyr's fingers moved with blurring speed. The numbers returned. Why—they were
the whole secret. They were what Starkad was about. And he didn't know what
they meant. Let Abrams solve this
riddle. Dwyr's task was done. Almost. He went toward the door.
It opened and he stepped into the antechamber. The door behind, to the main offices,
was agape. A guard waited, blaster poised. Two more were hurrying toward him.
Desk workers scuttled from their path. "What is the
matter?" Dwyr rapped. Because he could not feel terror or dismay, a blue
flame of wrath sheeted through him. Sweat glistened on the
guard's forehead and ran down over the brow ridges. "You were in his
secretorium," he whispered. So terrible is the magic
in those numbers that the machine has had one extra geas laid upon it. When
they are brought forth, it calls for help. "I am
authorized," Dwyr said. "How else do you think I could enter?" He did not really
believe his burglary could long remain unknown. Too many had seen. But he might
gain a few hours. His voice belled. "No one is to speak of this to anyone
else whatsoever, not even among yourselves. The business is sealed under a code
which the officer of the night knows. He can explain its significance to you.
Let me pass." "No." The
blaster trembled. "Do you wish to be
charged with insubordination?" "I … I must
take that risk, foreseer. We all must. You are under arrest until the Hand
clears you in person." Dwyr's motors snarled.
He drew his own gun as he flung himself aside. Fire and thunder broke free. The
Merseian collapsed in a seared heap. But he had shot first. Dwyr's living arm
was blasted off. He did not go into
shock. He was not that alive. Pain flooded him, he staggered for a moment in
blindness. Then the homeostats in his prostheses reacted. Chemical stimulation
poured from tubes into veins. Electronic impulses at the control of a
microcomputer joined the nerve currents, damped out agony, forced the flesh to
stop bleeding. Dwyr whirled and ran. The others came behind
him. Guns crashed anew. He staggered from their impact. Looking down, he saw a
hole drilled in him from back to breast. The energy beam must have wrecked some
part of the mechanism which kept his brain alive. What part, he didn't know.
Not the circulation, for he continued moving. The filtration system, the
purifier, the osmotic balancer? He'd find out soon enough. Crash! His left leg
went immobile. He fell. The clatter was loud in the corridor. Why hadn't he
remembered his impeller? He willed the negagravity field to go on. Still he lay
like a stone. The Merseians pounded near, shouting. He flipped the manual
switch and rose. The door to the flange
stood shut. At top speed, he tore the panels asunder. A firebolt from a guard
rainbowed off his armor. Out … over the verge … down toward
shadow! And shadows were closing
in on him. His machinery must indeed have been struck in a vital spot. It would
be good to die. No, not yet. He must hang on a while longer. Get by secret ways
to the Terran Embassy; Abrams was too far, and effectively a prisoner in any
event. Get to the Embassy—don't faint!—find this Flandry—how it roared in his
head—summon the airboat—the fact that his identity was unknown to his pursuers
until they called Brechdan would help—try for an escape—if you must faint, hide
yourself first, and do not die, do not die—perhaps Flandry can save you. If
nothing else, you will have revenged yourself a little if you find him.
Darkness and great rushing waters … Dwyr the Hook fled alone
over the night city. 13 That afternoon, Abrams
had entered the office where Flandry was at work. He closed the door and said,
"All right, son, you can knock off." "Glad to,"
Flandry said. Preparing a series of transcribed interviews for the computer was
not his idea of sport, especially when the chance of anything worthwhile being
buried in them hovered near zero. He shoved the papers across his desk, leaned
back, and tensed cramped muscles against each other. "How come?" "Lord Hauksberg's
valet just called the majordomo here. They're returning tomorrow morning.
Figure to arrive about Period Four, which'd be fourteen or fifteen hundred
Thursday, Terran Prime Meridian." Flandry sucked in a
breath, wheeled his chair about, and stared up at his chief.
"Tonight—?" "Uh-huh,"
Abrams nodded. "I won't be around. For reasons you don't need to know, except
that I want attention focused my way, I'm going to wangle me an invite to a
local Pooh-Bah." "And a partial
alibi, if events go sour." Flandry spoke with only the top half of his
mind engaged. The rest strove to check pulse, lungs, perspiration, tension. It
had been one thing to dash impulsively against a Merseian watercraft. It would
be quite another to play against incalculable risks, under rules that would
change minute by minute, in cold blood, for x many hours. He glanced at his
chrono. Persis was doubtless asleep. Unlike Navy men, who were trained to adapt
to nonterrestrial diurnal periods by juggling watches, the Embassy civilians
split Merseia's rotation time into two short, complete "days." She
followed the practice. "I suppose I'm to stand by in reserve,"
Flandry said. "Another reason for our separating." "Smart boy,"
Abrams said. "You deserve a pat and a dog biscuit. I hope your lady fair
will provide the same." "I still hate
to … to use her this way." "In your position,
I'd enjoy every second. Besides, don't forget your friends on Starkad. They're
being shot at." "Y-yes."
Flandry rose. "What about, uh, emergency procedure?" "Be on tap, either
in her place or yours. Our agent will identify himself by a word I'll think of.
He may look funny, but trust him. I can't give you specific orders. Among other
reasons, I don't like saying even this much here, however unbuggable we're
alleged to be. Do whatever seems best. Don't act too damned fast. Even if the
gaff's been blown, you might yet manage to ride out the aftermath. But don't
hesitate too long, either. If you must move, then: no heroics, no rescues, no
consideration for any living soul. Plain get that information out!" "Aye, aye,
sir." "Sounds more like
Tyi-yi, sir!'," Abrams laughed. He seemed I at ease. "Let's hope the
whole operation proves dull and sordid. Good ones are, you know. Shall we
review a few details?" Later, when twilight
stole across the city, Flandry made his way to the principal guest suite. The
corridor was deserted. Ideally, Lord Hauksberg should come upon his impudence
as a complete surprise. That way, the viscount would be easier to provoke into
rage. However, if this didn't work—if Persis learned he was expected and shooed
Flandry out—the scandal must be leaked to the entire compound. He had a scheme
for arranging that. He chimed on the door.
After a while, her voice came il drowsy. "Who's there?" He waved at
the scanner. "Oh. What is it, Ensign?" "May I come in,
Donna?" She stopped to throw on
a robe. Her hair was tumbled and she was charmingly flushed. He entered and
closed the door. "We needn't be so careful," he said. "Nobody
watching. My boss is gone for the night and a good part of tomorrow." He
laid hands on her waist. "I couldn't pass up the chance." "Nor I." She
kissed him at great length. "Why don't we
simply hide in here?" he suggested. "I'd adore to. But
Lord Oliveira—" "Call the butler.
Explain you're indisposed and want to be alone till tomorrow. Hm?" "Not very polite.
Hell, I'll do it. We have so little time, darling." Flandry stood in back of
the vidiphone while she talked. If the butler should mention that Hauksberg was
due in, he must commence Plan B. But that didn't happen, as curt as Persis was.
She ordered food and drink 'chuted here and switched off. He deactivated the
instrument. "I don't want any distractions," he explained. "What wonderful
ideas you have," she smiled. "Right now I have
still better ones." "Me too."
Persis rejoined him. Her thoughts included
refreshments. The Embassy larder was lavishly stocked, and the suite had a
small server to prepare meals which she knew well how to program. They began
with eggs Benedict, caviar, akvavit, and champagne. Some hours later followed
Perigordian duck, with trimmings, and Bordeaux. Flandry's soul expanded.
"My God," he gusted, "where has this sort of thing been all my
life?" Persis chuckled. "I
believe I have launched you on a new career. You have the makings of a gourmet
first class." "So, two causes why
I shall never forget you." "Only two?" "No, I'm being
foolish, Aleph-null causes at the minimum. Beauty, brains, charm—Well, why'm I
just talking?" "You have to rest
sometime. And I do love to hear you talk." "Hm? I'm not much
in that line. After the people and places you've known—" "What places?"
she said with a quick, astonishing bitterness. "Before this trip, I was
never further than Luna. And the people, the articulate, expensive, brittle
people, their intrigues and gossip, the shadow shows that are their adventures,
the words they live by—words, nothing but words, on and on and on—No, Dominic
my dearest, you've made me realize what I was missing. You've pulled down a
wall for me that was shutting off the universe." Did I do you any favor?
He dared not let conscience stir, he drowned it in the fullness of this moment. They were lying side by
side, savoring an ancient piece of music, when the door recognized Lord
Hauksberg and admitted him. "Persis? I say,
where—Great Emperor!" He stopped cold in the
bedroom archway. Persis smothered a scream and snatched for her robe. Flandry
jumped to his feet. But it's still dark! What's happened? The blond man looked
altogether different in green hunting clothes and belted blaster. Sun and wind
had darkened his face. For an instant that visage was fluid with surprise. Then
the lines congealed. The eyes flared like blue stars. He clapped hand to weapon
butt. "Well, well," he said. "Mark—" Persis
reached out. He ignored her. "So
you're the indisposition she had," he said to Flandry. Here we go. Off
schedule, but lift gravs anyway. The boy felt blood course thickly, sweat
trickle down ribs; worse than fear, he was aware how ludicrous he must look. He
achieved a grin. "No, my lord. You are." "What d'you
mean?" "You weren't being
man enough." Flandry's belly grew stiff, confronting that gun. Strange to
hear Mozart lilting on in the background. The blaster stayed
sheathed. Hauksberg moved only to breathe. "How long's this been between
you?" "It was my fault,
Mark," Persis cried. "All mine." Tears whipped over her cheeks. "No, my sweet, I
insist," Flandry said. "My idea entirely. I must say, my lord, you
weren't nice to arrive unannounced. Now what?" "Now you're under
nobleman's arrest, you whelp," Hauksberg said. "Put on some clothes.
Go to your quarters and stay there." Flandry scrambled to
obey. On the surface, everything had gone smoothly, more so than expected. Too
much more so. Hauksberg's tone was not furious; it was almost absent-minded. Persis groped toward
him. "I tell you, Mark, I'm to blame," she wept. "Let him alone.
Do what you want to me, but not him!" Hauksberg shoved her
away. "Stop blubberin'," he snapped. "D' you think I care a pip
on a 'scope about your peccadillos, at a time like this?" "What's
happened?" Flandry asked sharply. Hauksberg turned and
looked at him, up and down, silent for an entire minute. "Wonder if you
really don't know," he said at the end. "Wonder quite a lot." "My lord, I
don't!" Flandry's mind rocked. Something was wrong. "When word came to
Dhangodhan, natur'lly we flitted straight back," Hauksberg said.
"They're after Abrams this minute, on my authority. But you—what was your
part?" I've got to get out.
Abrams' agent has to be able to reach me. "I don't know anything, my lord.
I'll report to my room." "Stop!" Persis sat on the bed,
face in hands, and sobbed. She wasn't loud. "Stay right
here," Hauksberg said. "Not a step, understand?" His gun came
free. He edged from the chamber, keeping Flandry in sight, and went to the
phone. "Hm. Turned off, eh?" He flipped the switch. "Lord Oliveira." Silence lay thick while
the phone hunted through its various scanner outlets. The screen flickered, the
ambassador looked forth. "Hauksberg! What the devil?" "Just
returned," said the viscount. "We heard of an attempt to rifle
Premier Brechdan's files. May have been a successful attempt, too; and the
agent escaped. The premier accused me of havin' a finger in it. Obvious
thought. Somebody wants to sabotage my mission." "I—" Oliveira
collected himself. "Not necessarily. Terra isn't the only rival Merseia
has." "So I pointed out.
Prepare to do likewise at length when you're notified officially. But we've got
to show good faith. I've deputed the Merseians to arrest Commander Abrams.
He'll be fetched back here. Place him under guard." "Lord Hauksberg!
He's an Imperial officer, and accredited to the diplomatic corps." "He'll be detained
by Terrans. By virtue of my commission from his Majesty, I'm assumin' command.
No back talk if you don't want to be relieved of your position." Oliveira whitened but
bowed. "Very good, my lord. I must ask for this in properly recorded
form." "You'll have it
when I get the chance. Next, this young fella Flandry, Abrams' assistant.
Happens I've got him on deck. Think I'll quiz him a while myself. But have a
couple of men march him to detention when I give the word. Meanwhile, alert
your staff, start preparin' plans, explanations, and disclaimers, and stand by
for a visit from Brechdan's foreign office." Hauksberg cut the
circuit. "Enough," he said. "C'mon out and start talkin',
you." Flandry went. Nightmare
hammered at him. In the back of his head ran the thought: Abrams was right. You
don't really want drama in these things. What'll happen to him? To me? To Persis? To
Terra? "Sit down."
Hauksberg pointed his gun at a lounger and swung the barrel back at once. With
his free hand he pulled a flat case from his tunic pocket. He appeared a little
relaxed; had he begun to enjoy the tableau? Flandry lowered himself.
Psychological disadvantage, looking upward. Yes, we underestimated his Lordship
badly. Persis stood in the archway, red-eyed, hugging herself and gulping. Hauksberg flipped open
the case—an unruly part of Flandry noticed how the chased silver shone beneath
the fluoro-ceiling—and stuck a cheroot between his teeth. "What's your
role in this performance?" he asked. "Nothing, my
lord," Flandry stammered. "I don't know—I mean, if—if I were
concerned, would I have been here tonight?" "Might."
Hauksberg returned the case and extracted a lighter. His glance flickered to
Persis. "What about you, m' love?" "I don't know
anything," she whispered. "And neither does he. I swear it." "Inclined to
b'lieve you." The lighter scritted and flared. "In this case, though,
you've been rather cynic'lly used." "He wouldn't!" "Hm."
Hauksberg dropped the lighter on a table and blew smoke from his nostrils.
"Could be you both were duped. We'll find that out when Abrams is
probed." "You can't!"
Flandry shouted. "He's an officer!" "They certainly can
on Terra, my boy. I'd order it done this very hour, and risk the repercussions,
if we had the equipment. 'Course, the Merseians do. If necess'ry, I'll risk a
much bigger blowback and turn him over to them. My mission's too important for
legal pettifoggin". You might save the lot of us a deal of grief by
tellin' all, Ensign. If your testimony goes to prove we Terrans are not
involved—d' you see?" Give him a story, any
story, whatever gets you away. Flandry's brain was frozen. "How could we
have arranged the job?" he fumbled. "You saw what kind of
surveillance we've been under." "Ever hear about
agents provocateurs? I never believed Abrams came along for a ride."
Hauksberg switched the phone to Record. "Begin at the beginnin",
continue to the end, and stop. Why'd Abrams co-opt you in the first
place?" "Well, I—that is,
he needed an aide." What actually did happen? Everything was so gradual.
Step by step. I never really did decide to go into Intelligence. But somehow,
here I am. Persis squared her
shoulders. "Dominic had proven himself on Starkad," she said
wretchedly. "Fighting for the Empire." "Fine, sonorous
phrase." Hauksberg tapped the ash from his cheroot. "Are you really
infatuated with this lout? No matter. P'rhaps you can see anyhow that I'm
workin' for the Empire myself. Work sounds less romantic than fight, but's a
bit more useful in the long haul, eh? Go on, Flandry. What'd Abrams tell you he
meant to accomplish?" "He … he
hoped to learn things. He never denied that. But spying, no. He's not so
stupid, my lord." He's simply been outwitted. "I ask you, how could
he arrange trouble?" "Leave the
questions to me. When'd you first get together with Persis, and why?" "We—I—" Seeing
the anguish upon her, Flandry knew in full what it meant to make an implement
of a sentient being. "My fault. Don't listen to her. On the way—" The door opened. There
was no more warning than when Hauksberg had entered. But the thing which glided
through, surely the lock was not keyed to that! Persis shrieked.
Hauksberg sprang back with an oath. The thing, seared and twisted metal, blood
starting afresh from the cauterized fragment of an arm, skin drawn tight and
gray across bones in what was left of a face, rattled to the floor. "Ensign
Flandry," it called. The voice had volume yet, but no control, wavering
across the scale and wholly without tone. Light came and went in the scanners
which were eyes. Flandry's jaws locked.
Abrams' agent? Abrams' hope, wrecked and dying at his feet? "Go on,"
Hauksberg breathed. The blaster crouched in his fist. "Talk to him." Flandry shook his head
till the sweat-drenched hair flew. "Talk, I say,"
Hauksberg commanded. "Or I'll kill you and most surely give Abrams to the
Merseians." The creature which lay
and bled before the now shut main door did not seem to notice. "Ensign
Flandry. Which one is you? Hurry. Meshuggah. He told me to say meshuggah." Flandry moved without
thinking, from his lounger, down on his knees in the blood. "I'm
here," he whispered. "Listen." The
head rolled, the eyes flickered more and more dimly, a servomotor rattled dry
bearings inside the broken shell. "Memorize. In the Starkad file, these
numbers." As they coughed forth,
one after the next in the duodecimals of Eriau, Flandry's training reacted. He
need not understand, and did not; he asked for no repetitions; each phoneme was
burned into his brain. "Is that
everything?" he asked with someone else's throat. "Aye. The whole."
A hand of metal tendrils groped until he clasped it. "Will you remember my
name? I was Dwyr of Tanis, once called the Merry. They made me into this. I was
planted in your airboat. Commander Abrams sent me. That is why he left this
place, to release me unobserved. But an alarm order was on the Starkad reel. I
was ruined in escaping. I would have come sooner to you but I kept fainting.
You must phone for the boat and … escape, I think. Remember
Dwyr." "We will always
remember." "Good. Now let me
die. If you open the main plate you can turn oft my heart." The words
wobbled insanely, but they were clear enough. "I cannot hold Sivilla long
in my brain. It is poisoned and oxygen starved. The cells are going out, one by
one. Turn off my heart." Flandry disengaged the
tendrils around his hand and reached for the hinged plate. He didn't see very
well, nor could he smell the oil and scorched insulation. "Hold off,"
Hauksberg said. Flandry didn't hear him. Hauksberg stepped close and kicked
him. "Get away from there, I say. We want him alive." Flandry lurched erect.
"You can't." "Can and
will." Hauksberg's lips were drawn back, his chest rose and fell, the
cheroot had dropped from his mouth into the spreading blood. "Great
Emperor! I see the whole thing. Abrams had this double agent. He'd get the
information, it'd be passed on to you, and you'd go home in disgrace when I
caught you with Persis." He took a moment to give the girl a look of
triumph. "You follow, my dear? You were nothin' but an object." She strained away from
them, one hand to her mouth, the other fending off the world. "Sivilla,
Sivilla," came from the floor. "Oh, hurry!" Hauksberg backed toward
the phone. "We'll call a medic. I think if we're fast we can save this
chap." "But don't you
understand?" Flandry implored. "Those numbers—there is something
about Starkad—your mission never had a chance. We've got to let our people
know!" "Let me worry 'bout
that," Hauksberg said. "You face a charge of treason." "For trying to bail
out the Empire?" "For tryin' to
sabotage an official delegation. Tryin' to make your own policy, you and
Abrams. Think you're his Majesty? You'll learn better." Flandry took a
step forward. The gun jerked. "Stand back! Soon blast you as not, y'
know." Hauksberg's free hand reached for the phone. Flandry stood over Dwyr,
in a private Judgment Day. Persis ran across the
floor. "Mark, no!" "Get away."
Hauksberg held his gun on the boy. Persis flung her arms
around him. Suddenly her hands closed on his right wrist. She threw herself
down, dragging the blaster with her. "Nicky!" she screamed. Flandry sprang.
Hauksberg hit Persis with his fist. She took the blow on her skull and hung on.
Flandry arrived. Hauksberg struck at him. Flandry batted the hand aside with
one arm. His other, stiff-fingered, drove into the solar plexus. Hauksberg
doubled. Flandry chopped him behind the ear. He fell in a heap. Flandry scooped up the
blaster and punched the phone controls. "Airboat to Embassy," he
ordered in Eriau. Turning, he strode back
to Dwyr, knelt, and opened the frontal plate. Was this the switch he wanted? He
undid its safety lock. "Good-bye, my friend," he said. "One moment,"
wavered from the machine. "I lost her. So much darkness.
Noise … Now." Flandry pulled the
switch. The lights went out in the eyes and Dwyr lay still. Persis sprawled by
Hauksberg, shaken with crying. Flandry returned and raised her. "I'll have
to make a dash," he said. "Might not finish it. Do you want to
come?" She clung to him.
"Yes, yes, yes. They'd have killed you." He embraced her
one-armed, his other hand holding the blaster on Hauksberg, who stirred and
choked. Wonder broke upon him like morning. "Why did you help me?" he
asked low. "I don't know. Take
me away from here!" "Well … you
may have done something great for the human race. If that information really is
important. It has to be. Go put on a dress and shoes. Comb your hair. Find me a
clean pair of pants. These are all bloody. Be quick." She gripped him
tighter and sobbed. He slapped her. "Quick, I said! Or I'll have to leave
you behind." She ran. He nudged
Hauksberg with his foot. "Up, my lord." Hauksberg crawled to a
stance. "You're crazy," he gasped. "Do you seriously expect to
escape?" "I seriously expect
to try. Give me that holster belt." Flandry clipped it on. "We'll
walk to the boat. If anyone asks, you're satisfied with my story, I've given
you news which can't wait, and we're off to report in person to the Merseian
authorities. At the first sign of trouble, I'll start shooting my way through,
and you'll get the first bolt. Clear?" Hauksberg rubbed the
bruise behind his ear and glared. With action upon him,
Flandry lost every doubt. Adrenaline sang in his veins. Never had he perceived
more sharply—this over-elegant room, the bloodshot eyes in front of him, the
lovely sway of Persis re-entering in a fire-red gown, odors of sweat and anger,
sigh of a ventilator, heat in his skin, muscle sliding across muscle, the angle
of his elbow where he aimed the gun, by eternity, he was alive! Having changed pants, he
said, "Out we go. You first, my lord. Me a pace behind, as fits my rank.
Persis next to you. Watch his face, darling. He might try to signal with it. If
he blows a distress rocket from his nose, tell me and I'll kill him." Her lips trembled.
"No. You can't do that. Not to Mark." "He'd've done it to
me. We're committed, and not to any very genteel game. If he behaves himself he'll
live, maybe. March." As they left, Flandry
saluted that which lay on the floor. But he did not forget to
screen the view of it with his body on his way out to the corridor, until the
door shut behind him. Around a corner, they met a couple of young staffmen
headed in their direction. "Is everything well, my lord?" one asked.
Flandry's fingers twitched near his sheathed gun. He cleared his throat loudly. Hauksberg made a nod.
"Bound for Afon," he said. "Immediately. With these
people." "Confidential
material in the suite," Flandry added. "Don't go in, and make sure
nobody else does." He was conscious of
their stares, like bullets hitting his back. Could he indeed bluff his way
clear? Probably. This was no police or military center, wasn't geared to
violence, only created violence for others to quell. His danger lay beyond the
compound. Surely, by now, the place was staked out. Dwyr had wrought a miracle
in entering unseen. They were stopped again
in the lobby, and again got past on words. Outside, the garden lay aflash with
dew under Lythyr and a sickle Neihevin. The air was cool. It quivered with
distant machine sounds. Abrams' speedster had arrived. O God, I have to leave
him behind! It sat on the parking strip, door open. Flandry urged Hauksberg and
Persis aboard. He closed the door and waved on the lights. "Sit down at
the console," he ordered his prisoner. "Persis, bring a towel from
the head. My lord, we're about to talk our way through their security cordon.
Will they believe we're harmlessly bound for Dhangodhan?" Hauksberg's face
contorted. "When Brechdan is here? Don't be ridiculous. C'mon, end the
comedy, surrender and make things easier for yourself." "Well, we'll do it
the hard way. When we're challenged, tell 'em we're headed back to your ship to
fetch some stuff we need to show Brechdan in connection with this
episode." "D' you dream
they'll swallow that?" "I think they
might. Merseians aren't as rule-bound as Terrans. To them, it's in character
for a boss noble to act on his own, without filing twenty different
certificates first. If they don't believe us, I'll cut out the safety locks and
ram a flier of theirs; so be good." Persis gave Flandry the towel.
"I'm going to tie your hands. Cooperate or I'll slug you." He grew conscious, then,
of what power meant, how it worked. You kept the initiative. The other fellow's
instinct was to obey, unless he was trained in self-mastery. But you dared not
slack off the pressure for a second. Hauksberg slumped in his seat and gave no
trouble. "You won't hurt
him, Nicky?" Persis begged. "Not if I can avoid
it. Haven't we troubles enough?" Flandry took the manual-pilot chair. The
boat swung aloft. A buzz came from the
console. Flandry closed that circuit. A uniformed Merseian looked from the
vidscreen. He could see nothing but their upper bodies. "Halt!" he
ordered. "Security." Flandry nudged
Hauksberg. The viscount said, "Ah … we must go to my ship—"
No human would have accepted a tale so lamely delivered. Nor would a Merseian
educated in the subtleties of human behavior. But this was merely an officer of
planetary police, assigned here because he happened to be on duty at the time
of the emergency. Flandry had counted on that. "I shall
check," said the green visage. "Don't you
realize?" Hauksberg snapped. "I am a diplomat. Escort us if you like.
But you have no right to detain us. Move along, pilot." Flandry gunned the
gravs. The boat mounted. Ardaig fell away beneath, a glittering web, a spot of
light. Tuning in the after viewscreen, Flandry saw two black objects circle
about and trail him. They were smaller than this vessel, but they were armed
and armored. "Nice work, there
at the end, my lord," he said. Hauksberg was rapidly
regaining equilibrium. "You've done rather well yourself," he
answered. "I begin to see why Abrams thinks you've potentialities." "Thanks."
Flandry concentrated on gaining speed. The counteracceleration field was not
quite in tune; he felt a tug of weight that, uncompensated, would have left him
hardly able to breathe. "But it won't tick,
y' know," Hauksberg continued. "Messages are flyin' back and forth.
Our escort'll get an order to make us turn back." "I trust not. If I
were them, I'd remember Queen Maggy was declared harmless by her Merseian
pilot. I'd alert my forces, but otherwise watch to see what you did. After all,
Brechdan must be convinced you're sincere." Ardaig was lost.
Mountains gleamed in moonlight, and high plains, and cloud cover blanketing the
planet in white. The wail of air grew thin and died. Stars trod forth, wintry
clear. "More I think about
it," Hauksberg said, "more I'd like to have you on the right side.
Peace needs able men even worse'n war does." "Let's establish
peace first, huh?" Flandry's fingers rattled computer keys. As a matter of
routine, he had memorized the six elements of the spaceship's orbit around
Merseia. Perturbation wouldn't have made much difference yet. "That's what I'm
tryin' for. We can have it, I tell you. You've listened to that fanatic Abrams.
Give me a turn." "Sure."
Flandry spoke with half his attention. "Start by explaining why Brechdan
keeps secrets about Starkad." "D' you imagine
we've no secrets? Brechdan has to defend himself. If we let mutual fear and
hate build up, of course we'll get the big war." "If we let Terra be
painted into a corner, I agree, my lord, the planet incinerators will
fly." "Ever look at it
from the Merseian viewpoint?" "I didn't say it's
wise to leave them with no out but to try and destroy us." Flandry
shrugged. "That's for the statesmen, though, I'm told. I only work here.
Please shut up and let me figure my approach curve." Korych flamed over the
edge of the world. That sunrise was gold and amethyst, beneath a million stars. The communicator buzzed
anew. "Foreseer," said the Merseian, "you may board your ship
for a limited time provided we accompany you." "Regrets,"
Hauksberg said. "But quite impossible. I'm after material which is for the
eyes of Protector Brechdan alone. You are welcome to board as soon as I have it
in this boat, and escort me straight to Castle Afon." "I shall convey the
foreseer's word to my superiors and relay their decision." Blankoff. "You're
wonderful," Persis said. Hauksberg barked a
laugh. "Don't fancy this impetuous young hero of yours includin' me in his
Divine Wind dive." Seriously: "I s'pose you figure to escape in an
auxiliary. Out of the question. Space patrol'll overhaul you long before you
can go hyper." "Not if I go hyper
right away," Flandry said. "But—snakes alive,
boy! You know what the concentration of matter is, this near a sun. If a
microjump lands you by a pebble, even—" "Chance we take.
Odds favor us, especially if we head out normally to the ecliptic plane." "You'll be in
detection range for a light-year. A ship with more legs can run you down. And
will." "You won't be
there," Flandry said. "Dog your hatch. I'm busy." The minutes passed. He
scarcely noticed when the call came, agreeing that Hauksberg's party might
board alone. He did reconstruct the reasoning behind that agreement. Dronning
Margrete was unarmed and empty. Two or three men could not start her up in less
than hours. Long before then, warcraft would be on hand to blast her. Hauksberg
must be honest. Let him have his way and see what he produced. The great tapered
cylinder swam into sight. Flandry contacted the machines within and made
rendezvous on instruments and trained senses. A boatlock gaped wide. He slid
through. The lock closed, air rushed into the turret, he killed his motor and
stood up. "I'll have to secure you, my lord," he said. "They'll
find you when they enter." Hauksberg regarded him.
"You'll not reconsider?" he asked. "Terra shouldn't lose one
like you." "No. Sorry." "Warn you, you'll
be outlawed. I don't aim to sit idle and let you proceed. After what's
happened, the best way I can show my bona fides is to cooperate with the Merseians
in headin' you off." Flandry touched his
blaster. Hauksberg nodded. "You can delay matters a trifle by killin'
me," he said. "Have no fears.
Persis, another three or four towels. Lie down on the deck, my lord." Hauksberg did as he was
told. Looking at the girl, he said: "Don't involve yourself. Stay with me.
I'll tell 'em you were a prisoner too. Hate to waste women." "They are in short
supply hereabouts," Flandry agreed. "You'd better do it,
Persis." She stood quiet for a
little. "Do you mean you forgive me, Mark?" she asked. "Well, yes,"
Hauksberg said. She bent and kissed him
lightly. "I think I believe you. But no, thanks. I've made my
choice." "After the way your
boy friend's treated you?" "He had to. I have
to believe that." Persis helped bind Hauksberg fast. She and Flandry left the
boat. The passageways glowed and echoed as they trotted. They hadn't far to go
until they entered another turret. The slim hull of a main auxiliary loomed
over them. Flandry knew the model: a lovely thing, tough and versatile, with
fuel and supplies for a journey of several hundred parsecs. Swift, too; not
that she could outpace a regular warcraft, but a stern chase is a long chase
and he had some ideas about what to do if the enemy came near. He made a quick check of
systems. Back in the control room, he found Persis in the copilot's seat.
"Will I bother you?" she asked timidly. "Contrariwise,"
he said. "Keep silent, though, till we're in hyperdrive." "I will," she
promised. "I'm not a complete null, Nicky. You learn how to survive when
you're a low-caste dancer. Different from space, of course. But this is the
first time 145 I've done anything for
anyone but myself. Feels good. Scary, yes, but good." He ran a hand across the
tangled dark hair, smooth cheek and delicate profile, until his fingers tilted
her chin and he bestowed his own kiss on her. "Thanks more'n I can
say," he murmured. "I was doing this mainly on account of Max Abrams.
It'd have been cold, riding alone with his ghost. Now I've got you to live
for." He seated himself. At
his touch, the engine woke. "Here we go," he said. 14 Dawn broke over Ardaig,
and from the tower on Eidh Hill kettledrums spoke their ancient prayer.
Admiralty House cast its shadow across the Oiss, blue upon the mists that still
hid early river traffic. Inland the shadow was black, engulfing Castle Afon. Yet Brechdan Ironrede
chose to receive the Terrans there instead of in his new eyrie. He's shaken,
Abrams thought. He's rallying quick, but he needs the help of his ancestors. Entering the audience
chamber, a human was at first dazed, as if he had walked into a dream. He
needed a moment to make sense of what he saw. The proportions of long, flagged
floor, high walls, narrow windows arched at both top and bottom, sawtoothed vaulting
overhead, were wrong by every Terran canon and nonetheless had a Tightness of
their own. The mask helmets on suits of armor grinned like demons. The patterns
of faded tapestries and rustling battle banners held no human symbology. For
this was Old Wilwidh, before the machine came to impose universal sameness. It
was the wellspring of Merseia. You had to see a place like this if you would
understand, in your bones, that Merseians would never be kin to you. I wish my ancestors were
around. Approaching the dais beside a silent Hauksberg, his boots resounding
hollow, bitter incense in his nostrils, Abrams conjured up Dayan in his head. I
too have a place in the cosmos. Let me not forget. Black-robed beneath a
dragon carved in black wood, the Hand of the Vach Ynvory waited. The men bowed
to him. He lifted a short spear and crashed it down in salute. Brusquely, he
said: "This is an evil thing that has happened." "What news,
sir?" Hauksberg asked. His eyes were sunken and a tic moved one corner of
his mouth. "At latest report,
a destroyer had locked detectors on Flandry's hyperwake. It can catch him, but
time will be required, and meanwhile both craft have gone beyond detection
range." "The Protector is
assured anew of my profoundest regrets. I am preferring charges against this
malefactor. Should he be caught alive, he may be treated as a common
pirate." Yah, Abrams thought.
Dragged under a hypnoprobe and wrung dry. Well, he doesn't have any vital
military secrets, and testimony about me can't get me in any deeper than I am.
But please, let him be killed outright. "My lord," he
said, "to you and the Hand I formally protest. Dominic Flandry holds an
Imperial commission. At a minimum the law entitles him to a court-martial. Nor
can his diplomatic immunity be removed by fiat." "He was not
accredited by his Majesty's government, but myself," Hauksberg snapped.
"The same applies to you, Abrams." "Be still,"
Brechdan ordered him. Hauksberg gaped unbelieving at the massive green
countenance. Brechdan's look was on Abrams. "Commander," the Merseian
said, "when you were seized last night, you insisted that you had
information I must personally hear. Having been told of this, I acceded. Do you
wish to talk with me alone?" Hang on, here we go. I
boasted to Dom once, they wouldn't take me in any condition to blab, and they'd
pay for whatever they got. Nu, here I am, whole-skinned and disarmed. If I'm to
justify my brag, these poor wits will have to keep me out of the interrogation
cell. "I thank the Hand," Abrams said, "but the matter concerns
Lord Hauksberg also." "Speak freely.
Today is no time for circumlocutions." Abrams' heart thudded
but he held his words steady. "Point of law, Hand. By the Covenant of
Alfzar, Merseia confirmed her acceptance of the rules of war and diplomacy
which evolved on Terra. They evolved, and you took them over, for the excellent
reason that they work. Now if you wish to declare us personae non gratae and
deport us, his Majesty's government will have no grounds for complaint. But
taking any other action against any one of us, no matter what the source of our
accreditation, is grounds for breaking off relations, if not for war." "Diplomatic
personnel have no right to engage in espionage," Brechdan said. "No, Hand. Neither
is the government to which they are sent supposed to spy on them. And in fact,
Dwyr the Hook was planted on me as a spy. Scarcely a friendly act, Hand, the
more so when urgent negotiations are under way. It happened his sympathies were
with Terra—" Brechdan's smile was
bleak. "I do not believe it merely happened, Commander. I have the
distinct impression that you maneuvered to get him posted where he would be in
contact with you. Compliments on your skill." "Hand, his
Majesty's government will deny any such allegation." "How dare you speak
for the Empire?" Hauksberg exploded. "How dare you, my
lord?" Abrams replied. "I am only offering a prediction. But will the
Hand not agree it is probably correct?" Brechdan rubbed his
chin. "Charge and counter-charge, denial and
counter-denial … yes, no doubt. What do you expect the Empire to
maintain?" "That rests with
the Policy Board, Hand, and how it decides will depend on a number of factors,
including mood. If Merseia takes a course which looks reasonable in Terran
eyes, Terra is apt to respond in kind." "I presume a
reasonable course for us includes dropping charges against yourself,"
Brechdan said dryly. Abrams lifted his
shoulders and spread his palms. "What else? Shall we say that Dwyr and
Flandry acted on impulse, without my knowledge? Isn't it wise to refrain from
involving the honor of entire planets?" "Khraich. Yes. The
point is well taken. Though frankly, I am disappointed in you. I would stand by
a subordinate." "Hand, what happens
to him is outside your control or mine. He and his pursuer have gone past
communication range. It may sound pompous, but I want to save myself for
further service to the Empire." "We'll see about
that," Hauksberg said venomously. "I told you to be
silent," Brechdan said. "No, Commander, on Merseia your word is not
pompous at all." He inclined his head. "I salute you. Lord Hauksberg
will oblige me by considering you innocent." "Sir," the
viscount protested, "surely he must be confined to the Embassy grounds for
the duration of our stay. What happens to him on his return will lie with his
service and his government." "I do request the
commander to remain within the compound," Brechdan said. He leaned
forward. "Now, delegate, comes your turn. If you are willing to continue
present discussions, so are we. But there are certain preconditions. By some
accident, Flandry might yet escape, and he does carry military secrets. We must
therefore dispatch a fast courier to the nearest Terran regional headquarters,
with messages from us both. If Terra disowns him and cooperates with Merseia in
his capture or destruction, then Terra has proven her desire for peaceful
relations and the Grand Council of His Supremacy will be glad to adjust its
policies accordingly. Will you lend your efforts to this end?" "Of course, sir! Of
course!" "The Terran Empire
is far away, though," Brechdan continued. "I don't imagine Flandry
would make for it. Our patrols will cover the likeliest routes, as insurance.
But the nearest human installation is on Starkad, and if somehow he eludes our
destroyer, I think it probable he will go either there or to Betelgeuse. The
region is vast and little known. Thus our scouts would have a very poor chance
of intercepting him—until he is quite near his destination. Hence, if he should
escape, I shall wish to guard the approaches. But as my government has no more
desire than yours to escalate the conflict, your commandant on Starkad must be
told that these units are no menace to him and he need not send for
reinforcements. Rather, he must cooperate. Will you prepare such orders for
him?" "At once,
sir," Hauksberg said. Hope was revitalizing him. He paid no attention to
Abrams' stare. "Belike this will
all prove unnecessary," Brechdan said. "The destroyer estimated she
would overtake Flandry in three days. She will need little longer to report
back. At such time we can feel easy, and so can his Majesty's government. But
for certainty's sake, we had best get straight to work. Please accompany me to
the adjacent office." He rose. For a second he locked eyes with Abrams.
"Commander," he said, "your young man makes me proud to be a sentient
creature. What might our united races not accomplish? Hunt well." Abrams could not speak.
His throat was too thick with unshed tears. He bowed and left. At the door,
Merseian guards fell in, one on either side of him. Stars crowded the
viewscreens, unmercifully brilliant against infinite night. The spaceboat
thrummed with her haste. Flandry and Persis
returned from their labor. She had been giving him tools, meals, anything she
could that seemed to fit his request, "Just keep feeding me and fanning
me." In a shapeless coverall, hair caught under a scarf, a smear of grease
on her nose, she was somehow more desirable than ever before. Or was that
simply because death coursed near? The Merseian destroyer
had called the demand to stop long ago, an age ago, when she pulled within
range of a hyper-vibration 'cast. Flandry refused. "Then prepare your
minds for the God," said her captain, and cut off. Moment by moment, hour
by hour, he had crept in on the boat, until instruments shouted his presence. Persis caught Flandry's
hand. Her own touch was cold. "I don't understand," she said in a
thin voice. "You told me he can track us by our wake. But space is so big.
Why can't we go sublight and let him hunt for us?" "He's too
close," Flandry said. "He was already too close when we first knew he
was on our trail. If we cut the secondaries, he'd have a pretty good idea of
our location, and need only cast about a small volume of space till he picked
up the neutrino emission of our powerplant." "Couldn't we turn
that off too?" "We'd die inside a
day. Everything depends on it. Odds-on bet whether we suffocated or froze. If
we had suspended-animation equipment—But we don't. This is no warcraft, not
even an exploratory vessel. It's just the biggest lifeboat-cum-gig Queen Maggy
could tote." They moved toward the
control room. "What's going to happen?" she asked. "In theory, you
mean?" He was grateful for a chance to talk. The alternative would have
been that silence which pressed in on the hull. "Well, look. We travel
faster than light by making a great many quantum jumps per second, which don't
cross the intervening space. You might say we're not in the real universe most
of the time, though we are so often that we can't notice any difference. Our
friend has to phase in. That is, he has to adjust his jumps to the same
frequency and the same phase angle as ours. This makes each ship a completely
solid object to the other, as if they were moving sub-light, under ordinary
gravitic drive at a true velocity." "But you said
something about the field." "Oh, that. Well,
what makes us quantum-jump is a pulsating force-field generated by the
secondary engine. The field encloses us and reaches out through a certain
radius. How big a radius, and how much mass it can affect, depends on the
generator's power. A big ship can lay alongside a smaller one and envelop her
and literally drag her at a resultant pseudo-speed. Which is how you carry out
most capture and boarding operations. But a destroyer isn't that large in relation
to us. She does have to come so close that our fields overlap. Otherwise her
beams and artillery can't touch us." "Why don't we
change phase?" "Standard procedure
in an engagement. I'm sure our friends expect us to try it. But one party can
change as fast as another, and runs a continuous computation to predict the
pattern of the opposition's maneuvers. Sooner or later, the two will be back in
phase long enough for a weapon to hit. We're not set up to do it nearly as well
as he is. No, our solitary chance is the thing we've been working on." She pressed against him.
He felt how she trembled. "Nicky, I'm afraid." "Think I'm
not?" Both pairs of lips were dry when they touched. "Come on, let's
to our posts. We'll know in a few minutes. If we go out—Persis, I couldn't ask
for a better traveling companion." As they sat down, Flandry added,
because he dared not stay serious: "Though we wouldn't be together long.
You're ticketed for heaven, my destination's doubtless the other way." She gripped his hand
again. "Mine too. You won't escape me th-th-that easily." Alarms blared. A shadow
crossed the stars. It thickened as phasing improved. Now it was a torpedo
outline, still transparent; now the gun turrets and missile launchers showed
clear; now all but the brightest stars were occulted. Flandry laid an eye to
the crosshairs of his improvised fire-control scope. His finger rested on a
button. Wires ran aft from it. The Merseian destroyer
became wholly real to him. Starlight glimmered off metal. He knew how thin that
metal was. Force screens warded off solid matter, and nothing protected against
nuclear energies: nothing but speed to get out of their way, which demanded low
mass. Nevertheless he felt as if a dinosaur stalked him. The destroyer edged
nearer, swelling in the screens. She moved leisurely, knowing her prey was
weaponless, alert only for evasive tactics. Flandry's right hand went to the
drive controls. So … so … he was zeroed a trifle forward of
the section where he knew her engines must be. A gauge flickered.
Hyperfields were making their first tenuous contact. In a second it would be
sufficiently firm for a missile or a firebolt to cross from one hull to
another. Persis, reading the board as he had taught her, yelled, "Go!"
Flandry snapped on a braking vector. Lacking the instruments and computers of a
man-of-war, he had estimated for himself what the thrust should be. He pressed
the button. In the screen, the
destroyer shot forward in relation to him. From an open hatch in his boat plunged
the auxiliary's auxiliary, a craft meant for atmosphere but propellable
anywhere on gravity beams. Fields joined almost at the instant it transitted
them. At high relative velocity, both pseudo and kinetic, it smote. Flandry did not see what
happened. He had shifted phase immediately, and concentrated on getting the
hell out of the neighborhood. If everything worked as hoped, his airboat ripped
through the Merseian plates, ruinously at kilometers per second. Fragments
howled in air, flesh, engine connections. The destroyer was not destroyed.
Repair would be possible, after so feeble a blow. But before the ship was
operational again, he would be outside detection range. If he zigzagged, he
would scarcely be findable. He hurtled among the
stars. A clock counted one minute, two, three, five. He began to stop fighting
for breath. Persis gave way to tears. After ten minutes he felt free to run on
automatic, lean over and hold her. "We did it,"
he whispered. "Satan in Sirius! One miserable gig took a navy
vessel." Then he must leap from
his seat, caper and crow till the boat rang. "We won! Ta-ran-tu-la! We
won! Break out the champagne! This thing must have champagne among the rations!
God is too good for anything else!" He hauled Persis up and danced her
over the deck. "Come on, you! We won! Swing your lady! I gloat, I gloat, I
gloat!" Eventually he calmed
down. By that time Persis had command of herself. She disengaged from him so
she could warn: "We've a long way to Starkad, darling, and danger at the
end of the trip." "Ah," said
Ensign Dominic Flandry, "but you forget, this is the beginning of the
trip." A smile crept over her
mouth. "Precisely what do you mean, sir?" He answered with a leer.
"That it is a long way to Starkad." 15 Saxo glittered white
among the myriads. But it was still so far that others outshone it. Brightest
stood Betelgeuse. Flandry's gaze fell on that crimson spark and lingered. He
sat at the pilot board, chin in hand, for many minutes; and only the throb of
the engine and murmur of the ventilators were heard. Persis entered the
control room. During the passage she had tried to improvise a few glamorous
changes of garment from the clothes in stock, but they were too resolutely
utilitarian. So mostly, as now, she settled for a pair of shorts, and those
mostly for the pockets. Her hair swept loose, dark-bright as space; a lock
tickled him when she bent over his shoulder, and he sensed its faint sunny
odor, and her own. But this time he made no response. "Trouble,
darling?" she asked. " 'It ain't the
work, it's them damn decisions,' " he quoted absently. "You mean which way
to go?" "Yes. Here's where
we settle the question. Saxo or Betelgeuse?" He had threshed the
arguments out till she knew them by heart, but he went on anyhow: "Got to
be one or the other. We're not set up to lie doggo on some undiscovered planet.
The Empire's too far; every day of travel piles up chances for a Merseian to
spot our wake. They'll have sent couriers in all directions—every kind of ship
that could outrun our skulker's course—soon's they learned we escaped. Maybe
before, even. Their units must be scouring these parts. "Saxo's the closer.
Against heading there is the consideration they can keep a pretty sharp watch
on it without openly using warcraft in the system. Any big, fast merchantman
could gobble us, and the crew come aboard with sidearms. However, if we were in
call range, I might raise Terran HQ on Starkad and pass on the information
we're carrying. Then we might hope the Merseians would see no further gain in
damaging us. But the whole thing is awful iffy. "Now Betelgeuse is
an unaligned power, and very jealous of her neutrality. Foreign patrols will
have to keep their distance, spread so thin we might well slip through. Once on
Alfzar, we could report to the Terran ambassador. But the Betelgeuseans won't
let us enter their system secretly. They maintain their own patrols. We'd have
to go through traffic procedures, starting beyond orbital radius of the
outermost planet. And the Merseians can monitor those com channels. A raider
could dash in quick-like and blast us." "They wouldn't
dare," Persis said. "Sweetheart, they'd
dare practically anything, and apologize later. You don't know what's at
stake." She sat down beside him.
"Because you won't tell me." "Right." He had gnawed his way to
the truth. Hour upon hour, as they fled through Merseia's dominions, he hunched
with paper, penstyl, calculator, and toiled. Their flight involved nothing
dramatic. It simply meandered through regions where one could assume their
enemies rarely came. Why should beings with manlike biological requirements go
from a dim red dwarf star to a planetless blue giant to a dying Cepheid
variable? Flandry had ample time for his labors. Persis was complaining
about that when the revelation came. "You might talk to me." "I do," he
muttered, not lifting his eyes from the desk. "I make love to you as well.
Both with pleasure. But not right now, please!" She flopped into a seat.
"Do you recall what we have aboard for entertainment?" she said.
"Four animations: a Martian travelogue, a comedian routine, a speech by
the Emperor, and a Cynthian opera on the twenty-tone scale. Two novels: Outlaw
Blastman and Planet of Sin. I have them memorized. They come back to me in my
dreams. Then there's a flute, which I can't play, and a set of operation
manuals." "M-hm." He
tried putting Brechdan's figures in a different sequence. It had been easy to
translate from Merseian to Terran arithmetic. But what the devil did the
symbols refer to? Angles, times, several quantities with no dimensions
specified … rotation? Of what? Not of Brechdan; no such luck. A nonhuman could have
been similarly puzzled by something from Terra, such as a periodic table of
isotopes. He wouldn't have known which properties out of many were listed, nor
the standardized order in which quantum numbers were given, nor the fact that
logarithms were to the base ten unless e was explicit, nor a lot of other things
he'd need to know before he could guess what the table signified. "You don't have to
solve the problem," Persis sulked. "You told me yourself, an expert
can see the meaning at a glance. You're just having fun." Flandry raised his head,
irritated. "Might be hellish important for us to know. Give us some idea
what to expect. How in the name of Copros can Starkad matter so much? One
lonesome planet!" And the idea came to
him. He grew so rigid, he
stared so wildly out into the universe, that Persis was frightened.
"Nicky, what's wrong?" He didn't hear. With a convulsive motion, he
grabbed a fresh sheet of paper and started scrawling. Finished, he stared at
the result. Sweat stood on his brow. He rose, went into the control room,
returned with a reel which he threaded into his microreader. Again he wrote,
copying off numbers. His fingers danced on the desk computer. Persis held
herself moveless. Until at last he nodded.
"That's it," he said in a cold small voice. "Has to be." "What is?" she
could then ask. He twisted around in his
chair. His eyes took a second to focus on her. Something had changed in his
face. He was almost a stranger. "I can't tell
you," he said. "Why not?" "We might get
captured alive. They'd probe you and find you knew. If they didn't murder you
out of hand, they'd wipe your brain—which to my taste is worse." He took a lighter from
his pocket and burned every paper on the desk and swept the ashes into a
disposal. Afterward he shook himself, like a dog that has come near drowning,
and went to her. "Sorry," he
smiled. "Kind of a shock for me there. But I'm all right now. And I really
will pay attention to you, from here on in." She enjoyed the rest of
the voyage, even after she had identified the change in him, the thing which
had gone and would never quite come back. Youth. The detector alarm
buzzed. Persis drew a gasp and caught Flandry's arm. He tore her loose,
reaching for the main hyper-drive switch. But he didn't pull it,
returning them to normal state and kinetic velocity. His knuckles stood white
on the handle. A pulse fluttered in his throat. "I forgot what I'd already
decided," he said. "We don't have an especially good detector. If
she's a warship, we were spotted some time ago." "But this time she
can't be headed straight at us." Her tone was fairly level. She had grown
somewhat used to being hunted. "We have a big sphere to hide in." "Uh-huh. We'll try
that if necessary. But first let's see which way yonder fellow is bound."
He changed course. Stars wheeled in the viewports, otherwise there was no
sensation. "If we can find a track on which the intensity stays constant,
we'll be running parallel to him and he isn't trying to intercept." Saxo
burned dead ahead. "S'pose he's going there—" Minutes crawled. Flandry
let himself relax. His coverall was wet. "Whew! What I hoped. Destination,
Saxo. And if he's steered on a more or less direct line, as is probable, then
he's come from the Empire." He got busy,
calculating, grumbling about rotten civilian instrumentation. "Yes, we can
meet him. Let's go." "But he could be
Merseian," Persis objected. "He needn't have come from a Terran
planet." "Chance we take.
The odds aren't bad. He's slower than us, which suggests a merchant
vessel." Flandry set the new path, leaned back and stretched. A grin
spread across his features. "My dilemma's been
solved for me. We're off to Starkad." "Why? How?" "Didn't mention it
before, for fear of raising false hopes in you. When I'd rather raise something
else. But I came here first, instead of directly to Saxo or Betelgeuse, because
this is the way Terran ships pass, carrying men and supplies to Starkad and
returning home. If we can hitch a ride … you see?" Eagerness blossomed in
her and died again. "Why couldn't we have found one going home?" "Be glad we found
any whatsoever. Besides, this way we deliver our news a lot sooner."
Flandry rechecked his figures. "We'll be in call range in an hour. If he
should prove to be Merseian, chances are we can outspeed and lose him." He
rose. "I decree a good stiff drink." Persis held her hands
up. They trembled. "We do need something for our nerves," she agreed,
"but there are psycho-chemicals aboard." "Whisky's more fun.
Speaking of fun, we have an hour." She rumpled his hair.
"You're impossible." "No," he said.
"Merely improbable." The ship was the
freighter Rieskessel, registered on Nova Germania but operating out of the
Imperial frontier world Irumclaw. She was a huge, potbellied, ungainly and
unkempt thing, with a huge, potbellied, ungainly and unkempt captain. He
bellowed a not quite sober welcome when Flandry and Persis came aboard. "Oh, ho, ho, hoi
Humans! So soon I did not expect seeing humans. And never this gorgeous." One
hairy hand engulfed Flandry's, the other chucked Persis under the chin.
"Otto Brummelmann is me." Flandry looked past the
bald, wildly bearded head, down the passageway from the airlock. Corroded metal
shuddered to the drone of an ill-tuned engine. A pair of multi-limbed beings
with shiny blue integuments stared back from their labor; they were actually
swabbing by hand. The lights were reddish orange, the air held a metallic tang
and was chilly enough for his breath to smoke. "Are you the only Terran,
sir?" he asked. "Not Terran. Not
me. Germanian. But for years now on Irumclaw. My owners want Irumclagian
spacehands, they come cheaper. No human language do I hear from end to end of a
trip. They can't pronounce." Brummelmann kept his little eyes on Persis,
who had donned her one gown, and tugged at his own soiled tunic in an effort at
getting some wrinkles out. "Lonely, lonely. How nice to find you. First we
secure your boat, next we go for drinks in my cabin, right?" "We'd better have a
private talk immediately, sir," Flandry said. "Our boat—no, let's
wait till we're alone." "You wait. I be
alone with the little lady, right? Ho, ho, hoi" Brummelmann swept a paw
across her. She shrank back in distaste. On the way, the captain
was stopped by a crew member who had some question. Flandry took the chance to
hiss in Persis' ear: "Don't offend him. This is fantastic luck." "This?" Her
nose wrinkled. "Yes. Think. No
matter what happens, none of these xenos'll give us away. They can't. All we
have to do is stay on the good side of the skipper, and that shouldn't be
hard." He had seen pigpens, in
historical dramas, better kept up than Brummelmann's cabin. The Germanian
filled three mugs, ignoring coffee stains, with a liquid that sank fangs into
stomachs. His got half emptied on the first gulp. "So!" he belched.
"We talk. Who sent you to deep space in a gig?" Persis took the remotest
corner. Flandry stayed near Brummelmann, studying him. The man was a failure, a
bum, an alcoholic wreck. Doubtless he kept his job because the owners insisted
on a human captain and couldn't get anyone else at the salary they wanted to
pay. Didn't matter greatly, as long as the mate had some competence. For the
most part, antiquated though her systems must be, the ship ran herself. "You are bound for
Starkad, aren't you, sir?" Flandry asked. "Yes, yes. My
company has a Naval contract. Irumclaw is a transshipment point. This trip we
carry food and construction equipment. I hope we go on another run soon. Not
much pleasure in Highport. But we was to talk about you." "I can't say
anything except that I'm on a special mission. It's vital for me to reach
Highport secretly. If Donna d'Io and I can ride down with you, and you haven't
radioed the fact ahead, you'll have done the Empire a tremendous service." "Special
mission … with a lady?" Brummelmann dug a blackrimmed thumb into
Flandry's ribs. "I can guess what sort of mission. Ho, ho, ho!" "I rescued
her," Flandry said patiently. "That's why we were in a boat. A Merseian
attack. The war's sharpening. I have urgent information for Admiral
Enriques." Brummelmann's laughter
choked off. Behind the matted whiskers, that reached to his navel, he
swallowed. "Attack, you said? But no, the Merseians, they have never
bothered civilian ships." "Nor should they
bother this one, Captain. Not if they don't know I'm aboard." Brummelmann wiped his
pate. Probably he thought of himself as being in the high, wild tradition of
early spacefaring days. But now his daydreams had orbited. "My
owners," he said weakly. "I have obligation to my owners. I am
responsible for their ship." "Your first duty is
to the Empire." Flandry considered taking over at blaster point. No; not
unless he must; too chancy. "And all you need do is approach Starkad in
the usual fashion, make your usual landing at Highport, and let us off. The
Merseians will never know, I swear." "I—but I—" Flandry snatched an idea
from the air. "As for your owners," he said, "you can do them a
good turn as well. Our boat had better be jettisoned out here. The enemy has
her description. But if we take careful note of the spot, and leave her
power-plant going for neutrino tracing, you can pick her up on your way home
and sell her there. She's worth as much as this entire ship, I'll bet." He
winked. "Of course, you'll inform your owners." Brummelmann's eyes
gleamed. "Well. So. Of course." He tossed off the rest of his drink.
"By God, yes! Shake!" He insisted on shaking
hands with Persis also. "Ugh," she said to Flandry when they were
alone, in an emptied locker where a mattress had been laid. She had refused the
captain's offer of his quarters. "How long to Starkad?" "Couple days."
Flandry busied himself checking the spacesuits he had removed from the boat
before she was cast adrift. "I don't know if I
can stand it." "Sorry, but we've
burned our britches. Myself, I stick by my claim that we lucked out." "You have the
strangest idea of luck," she sighed. "Oh, well, matters can't get any
worse." They could. Fifteen hours later,
Flandry and Persis were in the saloon. Coveralled against the chill but
nonetheless shivering, mucous membranes aching from the dryness, they tried to
pass time with a game of rummy. They weren't succeeding very well. Brummelmann's voice
boomed hoarse from the intercom: "You! Ensign Flandry! To the
bridge!" "Huh?" He
sprang up. Persis followed his dash, down halls and through a companionway.
Stars glared from the viewports. Because the optical compensator was out of
adjustment, they had strange colors and were packed fore and aft, as if the
ship moved through another reality. Brummelmann held a
wrench. Beside him, his first mate aimed a laser torch, a crude substitute for
a gun but lethal enough at short range. "Hands high!" the captain
shrilled. Flandry's arms lifted.
Sickness caught at his gullet. "What is this?" "Read."
Brummelmann thrust a printout at him. "You liar, you traitor, thought you
could fool me? Look what came." It was a standard form,
transcribed from a hypercast that must have originated in one of several
automatic transmitters around Saxo. Office of Vice Admiral Juan Enriques,
commanding Imperial Terrestrial Naval forces in region—Flandry's glance flew to
the text. General directive issued
under martial law: By statement of his Excellency Lord Markus Hauksberg,
Viscount of Ny Kalmar on Terra, special Imperial delegate to the Roidhunate of
Merseia … Ensign Dominic Flandry, an officer of his Majesty's Navy
attached to the delegation … mutinied and stole a spaceboat belonging
to the realm of Ny Kalmar; description as follows … charged with high
treason … Pursuant to interstellar law and Imperial policy, Ensign
Flandry is to be apprehended and returned to his superiors on
Merseia … All ships, including Terran, will be boarded by Merseian
inspectors before proceeding to Starkad … Terrans who may apprehend
this criminal are to deliver him promptly, in their own persons, to the nearest
Merseian authority … secrets of state— Persis closed her eyes
and strained fingers together. The blood had left her face. "Well?"
Brummelmann growled. "Well, what have you to say for yourself?" Flandry leaned against
the bulkhead. He didn't know if his legs would upbear him.
"I … can say … that bastard Brechdan thinks of
everything." "You expected you
could fool me? You thought I would do your traitor's work? No, no!" Flandry looked from him,
to the mate, to Persis. Weakness vanished in rage. But his brain stayed machine
precise. He lowered the hand which held the flimsy. "I'd better tell you
the whole truth," he husked. "No, I don't want
to hear, I want no secrets." Flandry let his knees
go. As he fell, he yanked out his blaster. The torch flame boomed blue where he
had been. His own snap shot flared off that tool. The mate yowled and dropped
the red-hot thing. Flandry regained his feet. "Get rid of your
wrench," he said. It clattered on the
deck. Brummelmann backed off, past his mate who crouched and keened in pain.
"You cannot get away," he croaked. "We are detected by now.
Surely we are. You make us turn around, a warship comes after." "I know,"
Flandry said. His mind leaped as if across ice floes. "Listen. This is a
misunderstanding. Lord Hauksberg's been fooled. I do have information, and it
does have to reach Admiral Enriques. I want nothing from you but transportation
to Highport. I'll surrender to the Terrans. Not to the Merseians. The Terrans.
What's wrong with that? They'll do what the Emperor really wants. If need be,
they can turn me over to the enemy. But not before they've heard what I have to
tell. Are you a man, Captain? Then behave like one!" "But we will be
boarded," Brummelmann wailed. "You can hide me. A thousand possible
places on a ship. If they have no reason to suspect you, the Merseians won't
search everywhere. That could take days. Your crew won't blab. They're as alien
to the Merseians as they are to us. No common language, gestures, interests,
anything. Let the greenskins come aboard. I'll be down in the cargo or
somewhere. You act natural. Doesn't matter if you show a bit of strain. I'm
certain everybody they've checked has done so. Pass me on to the Terrans. A
year from now you could have a knighthood." Brummelmann's eyes
darted back and forth. The breath rasped sour from his mouth. "The alternative,"
Flandry said, "is that I lock you up and assume command." "I … no—"
Tears started forth, down into the dirty beard. "Please. Too much
risk—" Abruptly, slyly, after a breath: "Why, yes. I will. I can find
a good hiding spot for you." And tell them when they
arrive, Flandry thought. I've got the upper hand and it's worthless. What am I
to do? Persis stirred. She
approached Brummelmann and took his hands in hers. "Oh, thank you,"
she caroled. "Eh? Ho?" He gawped at her. "I knew you were a
real man. Like the old heroes of the League, come back to life." "But
you—lady—" "The message
doesn't include a word about me," she purred. "I don't feel like
sitting in some dark hole." "You … you
aren't registered aboard. They will read the list. Won't they?" "What if they do?
Would I be registered?" Hope rushed across
Flandry. He felt giddy with it. "There are some immediate rewards, you
see," he cackled. "I—why, I—"
Brummelmann straightened. He caught Persis to him. "So there are. Oh, ho,
ho! So there are!" She threw Flandry a look
he wished he could forget. He crept from the
packing case. The hold was gut-black. The helmet light of his spacesuit cast a
single beam to guide him. Slowly, awkward in armor, he wormed among crates to
the hatch. The ship was quiet.
Nothing spoke but powerplant, throttled low, and ventilators. Shadows bobbed
grotesque where his beam cut a path. Orbit around Starkad, awaiting clearance
to descend—must be. He had survived. The Merseians had passed within meters of
him, he heard them talk and curled finger around trigger; but they had gone
again and the Rieskessel resumed acceleration. So Persis had kept Brummelmann
under control; he didn't like to think how. The obvious course was
to carry on as he had outlined, let himself be taken planetside and turn
himself in. Thus he would be certain to get his message through, the word which
he alone bore. (He had wondered whether to give Persis those numbers, but
decided against it. A list for her made another chance of getting caught; and
her untrained mind might not retain the figures exactly, even in the
subconscious for narcosynthesis to bring forth.) But he didn't know how
Enriques would react. The admiral was no robot; he would pass the information
on to Terra, one way or another. But he might yield up Flandry. He would most
likely not send an armed scout to check and confirm, without authorization from
headquarters. Not in the face of Hauksberg's message, or the command laid on
him that he must take no escalating action save in response to a Merseian
initiative. So at best, the obvious
course entailed delay, which the enemy might put to good use. It entailed a
high probability of Brechdan Ironrede learning how matters stood. Max Abrams
(Are you alive yet, my father?) had said, "What helps the other fellow
most is knowing what you know." And, finally, Dominic Flandry wasn't about
to become a God damned pawn again! He opened the hatch. The
corridor stretched empty. Unhuman music squealed from the forecastle. Captain
Brummelmann was in no hurry to make planetfall, and his crew was taking the
chance to relax. Flandry sought the
nearest lifeboat. If anyone noticed, well, all right, he'd go to Highport. But
otherwise, borrowing a boat would be the smallest crime on his docket. He
entered the turret, dogged the inner valve, closed his faceplate, and worked
the manual controls. Pumps roared, exhausting air. He climbed into the boat and
secured her own airlock. The turret's outer valve opened automatically. Space blazed at him. He
nudged through on the least possible impetus. Starkad was a huge wheel of
darkness, rimmed with red, day blue on one edge. A crescent moon glimmered
among the stars. Weightlessness caught Flandry in an endless falling. It vanished as he turned
on interior gravity and applied a thrust vector. He spiraled downward. The
planetary map was clear in his recollection. He could reach Ujanka without
trouble—Ujanka, the city he had saved. 16 Dragoika flowed to a
couch, reclined on one elbow, and gestured at Flandry. "Don't pace in that
caged way, Domma-neek," she urged. "Take ease by my side. We have
scant time alone together, we two friends." Behind her throaty
voice, up through the window, came the sounds of feet shuffling about, weapons
rattling, a surflike growl. Flandry stared out. Shiv Alley was packed with
armed Kursovikians. They spilled past sight, among gray walls, steep red roofs,
carved beams: on into the Street Where They Fought, a cordon around this house.
Spearheads and axes, helmets and byrnies flashed in the harsh light of Saxo;
banners snapped to the wind, shields bore monsters and thunderbolts luridly
colored. It was no mob. It was the fighting force of Ujanka, summoned by the
Sisterhood. Warriors guarded the parapets on Seatraders' Castle and the ships
lay ready in Golden Bay. Lucifer! Flandry
thought, half dismayed. Did I start this? He looked back at
Dragoika. Against the gloom of the chamber, the barbaric relics which crowded
it, her ruby eyes and the striped orange-and-white fur seemed to glow, so that
the curves of her body grew disturbingly rich. She tossed back her blonde mane,
and the half-human face broke into a smile whose warmth was not lessened by the
fangs. "We were too busy since you came," she said. "Now, while
we wait, we can talk. Come." He crossed the floor,
strewn with aromatic leaves in his honor, and took the couch by hers. A small
table in the shape of a flower stood between, bearing a ship model and a
flagon. Dragoika sipped. "Will you not share my cup, Dom-maneek?" "Well … thanks."
He couldn't refuse, though Starkadian wine tasted grim on his palate. Besides,
he'd better get used to native viands; he might be living off them for a long
while. He fitted a tube to his chowlock and sucked up a bit. It was good to wear a
regular sea-level outfit again, air helmet, coverall, boots, after being penned
in a spacesuit. The messenger Dragoika sent for him, to the Terran station in
the High Housing, had insisted on taking back such a rig. "How have you
been?" Flandry asked lamely. "As always. We
missed you, I and Ferok and your other old comrades. How glad I am the Archer
was in port." "Lucky for
me!" "No, no, anyone
would have helped you. The folk down there, plain sailors, artisans, merchants,
ranchers, they are as furious as I am." Dragoika erected her tendrils. Her
tail twitched, the winglike ears spread wide. "That those vaz-gira-dek
would dare bite you!" "Hoy," Flandry
said. "You have the wrong idea. I haven't disowned Terra. My people are
simply the victims of a lie and our task is to set matters right." "They outlawed you,
did they not?" "I don't know what
the situation is. I dare not communicate by radio. The vaz-Merseian could
overhear. So I had your messenger give our men a note which they were asked to
fly to Admiral Enriques. The note begged him to send a trustworthy man
here." "You told me that
already. I told you I would make quite plain to the vaz-Terran, they will not
capture my Domma-neek. Not unless they want war." "But—" "They don't. They
need us worse than we need them, the more so when they failed to reach an
accord with the vaz-Siravo of the Zletovar." "They did?"
Flandry's spirit drooped. "Yes, as I always
said would happen. Oh, there have been no new Merseian submarines. A Terran
force blasted the Siravo base, when we vaz-Kursovikian were unable to. The
vaz-Merseian fought them in the air. Heaven burned that night. Since then, our
ships often meet gunfire from swimmers, but most of them get through. They tell
me combat between Terran and Merseian has become frequent—elsewhere in the
world, however." Another step up the
ladder, Flandry thought. More men killed, Tigeries, seajolk. By now, I suppose,
daily. And in a doomed cause. "But you have given
me small word about your deeds," Dragoika continued. "Only that you
bear a great secret. What?" "I'm sorry."
On an impulse, Flandry reached out and stroked her mane. She rubbed her head
against his palm. "I may not tell even you." She sighed. "As you
wish." She picked up the model galley. Her fingers traced spars and
rigging. "Let me fare with you a ways. Tell me of your journey." He tried. She struggled
for comprehension. "Strange, that yonder," she said. "The little
stars become suns, this world of ours shrunk to a dustmote; the weirdness of
other races, the terrible huge machines—" She clutched the model tight.
"I did not know a story could frighten me." "You will learn to
live with a whole heart in the universe." You must. "Speak on,
Domma-neek." He did, censoring a
trifle. Not that Dragoika would mind his having traveled with Persis; but she
might think he preferred the woman to her as a friend, and be hurt. "—trees on Merseia
grow taller than here, bearing a different kind of leaf—" His wristcom buzzed. He
stabbed the transmitter button. "Ensign Flandry." His voice sounded
high in his ears. "Standing by." "Admiral
Enriques," from the speaker. "I am approaching in a Boudreau X-7 with
two men. Where shall I land?" Enriques in person? My
God, have I gotten myself caught in the gears! "A-a-aye, aye, sir." "I asked where to
set down, Flandry." The ensign stammered out
directions. A flitter, as his letter had suggested, could settle on the "Your doing?" "No, sir. I mean,
not really. But, well, you'll see everyone gathered. In combat order. They
don't want to surrender me to … uh … to anyone they think
is hostile to me. They threaten, uh, attack on our station if—Honest, sir, I
haven't alienated an ally. I can explain." "You'd
better," Enriques said. "Very well, you are under arrest but we won't
take you into custody as yet. We'll be there in about three minutes. Out." "What did he
say?" Dragoika hissed. Her fur stood on end. Flandry translated. She
glided from her couch and took a sword off the wall. "I'll call a few
warriors to make sure he keeps his promise." "He will. I'm
certain he will. Uh … the sight of his vehicle might cause
excitement. Can we tell the city not to start fighting?" "We can."
Dragoika operated a communicator she had lately acquired and spoke with the
Sisterhood centrum across the river. Bells pealed forth, the Song of Truce. An
uneasy mutter ran through the Tigeries, but they stayed where they were. Flandry headed for the
door. "I'll meet them on the tower," he said. "You will
not," Dragoika answered. "They are coming to see you by your gracious
permission. Lirjoz is there, he'll escort them down." Flandry seated himself,
shaking his head in a stunned fashion. He rocketed up to salute
when Enriques entered. The admiral was alone, must have left his men in the
flitter. At a signal from Dragoika, Lirjoz returned to watch them. Slowly, she
laid her sword on the table. "At ease,"
Enriques clipped. He was gray, bladenosed, scarecrow gaunt. His uniform hung
flat as armor. "Kindly present me to my hostess." "Uh … Dragoika,
captain-director of the Janjevar va-Radovik … Vice Admiral Juan
Enriques of the Imperial Terrestrial Navy." The newcomer clicked his
heels, but his bow could have been made to the Empress. Dragoika studied him a
moment, then touched brow and breasts, the salute of honor. "I feel more
hope," she said to Flandry. "Translate,"
Enriques ordered. That narrow skull held too much to leave room for many
languages. "She … uh … likes
you, sir," Flandry said. Behind the helmet, a
smile ghosted at one corner of Enriques' mouth. "I suspect she is merely
prepared to trust me to a clearly defined extent." "Won't the Admiral
be seated?" Enriques glanced at
Dragoika. She eased to her couch. He took the other one, sitting straight.
Flandry remained on his feet. Sweat prickled him. "Sir," he
blurted, "please, is Donna d'Io all right?" "Yes, except for
being in a bad nervous state. She landed soon after your message arrived. The
Rieskessel's captain had been making one excuse after another to stay in orbit.
When we learned from you that Donna d'Io was aboard, we said we would loft a
gig for her. He came down at once. What went on there?" "Well, sir—I mean,
I can't say. I wasn't around, sir. She told you about our escape from
Merseia?" "We had a private
interview at her request. Her account was sketchy. But it does tend to bear out
your claims." "Sir, I know what the
Merseians are planning, and it's monstrous. I can prove—" "You will need
considerable proof, Ensign," Enriques said bleakly. "Lord Hauksberg's
communication laid capital charges against you." Flandry felt nervousness
slide from him. He doubled his fists and cried, with tears of rage stinging his
eyes: "Sir, I'm entitled to a court-martial. By my own people. And you'd
have let the Merseians have me!" The lean visage beneath
his hardly stirred. The voice was flat. "Regulations provide that
personnel under charges are to be handed over to their assigned superiors if
this is demanded. The Empire is too big for any other rule to work. By virtue
of being a nobleman, Lord Hauksberg holds a reserve commission, equivalent rank
of captain, which was automatically activated when Commander Abrams was posted
to him. Until you are detached from your assignment, he is your senior
commanding officer. He declared in proper form that state secrets and his
mission on behalf of the Imperium have been endangered by you. The Merseians
will return you to him for examination. It is true that courts-martial must be
held on an Imperial ship or planet, but the time for this may be set by him
within a one-year limit." "Will be never!
Sir, they'll scrub my brain and kill me!" "Restrain yourself,
Ensign." Flandry gulped. Dragoika
bared teeth but stayed put. "May I hear the exact charges against me,
sir?" Flandry asked. "High
treason," Enriques told him. "Mutiny. Desertion. Kidnapping. Threat
and menace. Assault and battery. Theft. Insubordination. Shall I recite the
entire bill? I thought not. You have subsequently added several items. Knowing
that you were wanted, you did not surrender yourself. You created dissension
between the Empire and an associated country. This, among other things,
imperils his Majesty's forces on Starkad. At the moment, you are resisting
arrest. Ensign, you have a great deal to answer for." "I'll answer to
you, sir, not to … to those damned gatortails. Nor to a Terran who's
so busy toadying to them he doesn't care what happens to his fellow human
beings. My God, sir, you let Merseians search Imperial ships!" "I had my
orders," Enriques replied. "But Hauksberg, you
rank him!" "Formally and in
certain procedural matters. He holds a direct Imperial mandate, though. It
empowers him to negotiate temporary agreements with Merseia, which then become
policy determinants." Flandry heard the least
waver in those tones. He pounced. "You protested your orders, sir. Didn't
you?" "I sent a report on
my opinion to frontier HQ. No reply has yet been received. In any event, there
are only six Merseian men-of-war here, none above Planet class, plus some
unarmed cargo carriers told off to help them." Enriques smacked hand on
knee. "Why am I arguing with you? At the very least, if you wanted to see
me, you could have stayed aboard the Rieskessel." "And afterward been
given to the Merseians, sir?" "Perhaps. The
possibility should not have influenced you. Remember your oath." Flandry made a circle
around the room. His hands writhed behind his back. Dragoika laid fingers on
sword hilt. "No," he said to her in Kursovikian. "No matter what
happens." He spun on his heel and
looked straight at Enriques. "Sir, I had another reason. What I brought
from Merseia is a list of numbers. You'd undoubtedly have passed them on. But
they do need a direct check, to make sure I'm right about what they mean. And
if I am right, whoever goes to look may run into a fight. A space battle.
Escalation, which you're forbidden to practice. You couldn't order such a
mission the way things have been set up to bind you. You'd have to ask for the
authority. And on what basis? On my say-so, me, a baby ex-cadet, a mutineer, a
traitor. You can imagine how they'd buckpass. At best, a favorable decision
wouldn't come for weeks. Months, more likely. Meanwhile the war would drag on.
Men would get killed. Men like my buddy, Jan van Zuyl, with his life hardly
begun, with forty or fifty years of Imperial service in him." Enriques spoke so softly
that one heard the wind whittering off the sea, through the ancient streets
outside. "Ensign van Zuyl was killed in action four days ago." "Oh, no."
Flandry closed his eyes. "Conflict has
gotten to the point where—we and the Merseians respect each other's base areas,
but roving aircraft fight anyplace else they happen to meet." "And still you let
them search us." Flandry paused. "I'm sorry, sir. I know you hadn't
any choice. Please let me finish. It's even possible my information would be
discredited, never acted on. Hard to imagine, but … well, we have so
many bureaucrats, so many people in high places like Lord Hauksberg who insists
the enemy doesn't really mean harm … and Brechdan Ironrede, God, but
he's clever … I couldn't risk it. I had to work things so you, sir,
would have a free choice." "You?"
Enriques raised his brows. "Ensign Dominic Flandry, all by himself?" "Yes, sir. You have
discretionary power, don't you? I mean, when extraordinary situations arise,
you can take what measures are indicated, without asking HQ first. Can't
you?" "Of course. As
witness these atmospheric combats." Enriques leaned forward, forgetting to
stay sarcastic. "Well, sir, this is
an extraordinary situation. You're supposed to stay friends with the
Kursovikians. But you can see I'm the Terran they care about. Their minds work
that way. They're barbaric, used to personal leadership; to them, a distant
government is no government; they feel a blood obligation to me—that sort of
thing. So to preserve the alliance, you must deal with me. I'm a renegade, but
you must." "And so?" "So if you don't
dispatch a scout into space, I'll tell the Sisterhood to dissolve the
alliance." "What?"
Enriques started. Dragoika bristled. "I'll sabotage the
whole Terran effort," Flandry said. "Terra has no business on
Starkad. We've been trapped, conned, blued and tattooed. When you present
physical evidence, photographs, measurements, we'll all go home. Hell, I'll
give you eight to one the Merseians go home as soon as you tell old Runei what
you've done. Get your courier off first, of course, to make sure he doesn't use
those warships to blast us into silence. But then call him and tell him." "There are no
Terran space combat units in this system." Flandry grinned. The
blood was running high in him. "Sir, I don't believe the Imperium is that
stupid. There has to be some provision against the Merseians suddenly
marshaling strength. If nothing else, a few warcraft orbiting 'way outside. We
can flit men to them. A roundabout course, so the enemy'll think it's only
another homebound ship. Right?" "Well—"
Enriques got up. Dragoika stayed where she was, but closed hand on hilt.
"You haven't yet revealed your vast secret," the admiral declared. Flandry recited the
figures. Enriques stood
totem-post erect. "Is that everything?" "Yes, sir.
Everything that was needed." "How do you
interpret it?" Flandry told him. Enriques was still for a
long moment. The Tigeries growled in Shiv Alley. He turned, went to the window,
stared down and then out at the sky. "Do you believe
this?" he asked most quietly. "Yes, sir,"
Flandry said. "I can't think of anything else that fits, and I had plenty
of time to try. I'd bet my life on it." Enriques faced him
again. "Would you?" "I'm doing it,
sir." "Maybe. Suppose I
order a reconnaissance. As you say, it's not unlikely to run into Merseian
pickets. Will you come along?" A roar went through
Flandry's head. "Yes, sir!" he yelled. "Hm. You trust me
that much, eh? And it would be advisable for you to go: a hostage for your
claims, with special experience which might prove useful. Although if you
didn't return here, we could look for trouble." "You wouldn't need
Kursoviki any longer," Flandry said. He was beginning to tremble. "If you are
truthful and correct in your assertion." Enriques was motionless a while
more. The silence grew and grew. All at once the admiral
said, "Very good, Ensign Flandry. The charges against you are held in
abeyance and you are hereby re-attached temporarily to my command. You will
return to Highport with me and await further orders." Flandry saluted. Joy
sang in him. "Aye, aye, sir!" Dragoika rose.
"What were you saying, Domma-neek?" she asked anxiously. "Excuse me, sir, I
have to tell her." In Kursovikian: "The misunderstanding has been
dissolved, for the time being anyhow. I'm leaving with my skipper." "Hr-r-r." She
looked down. "And then what?" "Well, uh, then
we'll go on a flying ship, to a battle which may end this whole war." "You have only his
word," she objected. "Did you not judge
him honorable?" "Yes. I could be
wrong. Surely there are those in the Sisterhood who will suspect a ruse, not to
speak of the commons. Blood binds us to you. I think it would look best if I
went along. Thus there is a living pledge." "But—but—" "Also,"
Dragoika said, "this is our war too. Shall none of us take part?" Her
eyes went back to him. "On behalf of the Sisterhood and myself, I claim a
right. You shall not leave without me." "Problems?"
Enriques barked. Helplessly, Flandry
tried to explain. 17 The Imperial squadron
deployed and accelerated. It was no big force to cast out in so much blackness.
True, at the core was the Sabik, a Star-class, what some called a pocket
battleship; but she was old and worn, obsolete in several respects, shunted off
to Saxo as the last step before the scrap orbit. No one had really expected her
to see action again. Flanking her went the light cruiser Umbriel, equally
tired, and the destroyers At first the squadron
moved on gravities. It would not continue thus. The distance to be traversed
was a few light-days, negligible under hyperdrive, appalling under true
velocity. However, a sudden burst of wakes, outbound from a large orbit, would
be detected by the Merseians. Their suspicions would be excited. And their
strength in the Saxonian System, let alone what else they might have up ahead,
was fully comparable to Captain Einarsen's command. He wanted to enter this
water carefully. It was deep. But when twenty-four
hours had passed without incident, he ordered the New Brazil to proceed at
superlight toward the destination. At the first sign of an enemy waiting there,
she was to come back. Flandry and Dragoika sat
in a wardroom of the Sabik with Lieutenant (j.g.) Sergei Karamzin, who happened
to be off watch. He was as frantic to see new faces and hear something new from
the universe as everyone else aboard. "Almost a year on station," he
said. "A year out of my life, bang, like that. Only it wasn't sudden, you
understand. Felt more like a decade." Flandry's glance
traveled around the cabin. An attempt had been made to brighten it with
pictures and home-sewn draperies. The attempt had not been very successful.
Today the place had come alive with the thrum of power, low and bone-deep. A
clean tang of oil touched air which circulated briskly again. But he hated to
think what this environment had felt like after a year of absolutely eventless
orbit. Dragoika saw matters otherwise, of course; the ship dazzled, puzzled,
frightened, delighted, enthralled her, never had she known such wonder! She
poised in her chair with fur standing straight and eyes bouncing around. "You had your
surrogates, didn't you?" Flandry asked. "Pseudosensory inputs and the
rest." "Sure,"
Karamzin said. "The galley's good, too. But those things are just
medicine, to keep you from spinning off altogether." His young features
hardened. "I hope we meet some opposition. I really do." "Myself,"
Flandry said, "I've met enough opposition to last me for quite a
while." His lighter kindled a
cigaret. He felt odd, back in horizon blue, jetflares on his shoulders and no
blaster at his waist: back in a ship, in discipline, in tradition. He wasn't
sure he liked it. At least his position
was refreshingly anomalous. Captain Einarsen had been aghast when Dragoika
boarded—an Iron Age xeno on his vessel? But the orders from Enriques were
clear. This was a vip who insisted on riding along and could cause trouble if
she wasn't humored. Thus Ensign Flandry was appointed "liaison officer,"
the clause being added in private that he'd keep his pet savage out of the way
or be busted to midshipman. (Nothing was said on either side about his being
technically a prisoner. Einarsen had received the broadcast, but judged it
would be dangerous to let his men know that Merseians were stopping Terran
craft. And Enriques' message had clarified his understanding.) At the age of
nineteen, how could Flandry resist conveying the impression that the vip really
had some grasp of astronautics and must be kept posted on developments? So he
was granted communication with the bridge. Under all cheer and
excitement, a knot of tension was in him. He figured that word from the New
Brazil would arrive at any minute. "Your pardon,"
Dragoika interrupted. "I must go to the—what you say—the head." She
thought that installation the most amusing thing aboard. Karamzin watched her
leave. Her supple gait was not impeded by the air helmet she required in a
Terran atmosphere. The chief problem had been coiling her mane to fit inside.
Otherwise her garments consisted of a sword and a knife. "Way-hay,"
Karamzin murmured. "What a shape! How is she?" "Be so good as not
to talk about her like that," Flandry rapped. "What? I didn't
mean any harm. She's only a xeno." "She's my friend.
She's worth a hundred Imperial sheep. And what she's got to face and survive,
the rest of her life—" Karamzin leaned across
the table. "How's that? What sort of cruise are we on, anyway? Supposed to
check on something the gatortails might have out in space; they didn't tell us
more." "I can't,
either." "I wasn't ordered
to stop thinking. And you know, I think this Starkad affair is a blind. They'll
develop the war here, get our whole attention on this sinkhole, then bang,
they'll hit someplace else." Flandry blew a smoke
ring. "Maybe." I wish I could tell you. You have no military right to
know, but haven't you a human right? "What's Starkad
like, anyway? Our briefing didn't say much." "Well—"
Flandry hunted for words. They were bloodless things at best. You could
describe, but you could not make real: dawn white over a running sea, slow
heavy winds that roared on wooded mountainsides, an old and proud city,
loveliness on a shadowy ocean floor, two brave races, billions of years since
first the planet coalesced, the great globe itself … He was still
trying when Dragoika returned. She sat down quietly and watched him. "—and, uh, a very
interesting paleolithic culture on an island they call Rayadan—" Alarms hooted. Karamzin was through the
door first. Feet clattered, metal clanged, voices shouted, under the shrill
woop-woop-woop that echoed from end to end of the long hull. Dragoika snatched
the sword off her shoulder. "What's happening?" she yelled. "Battle
stations." Flandry realized he had spoken in Anglic. "An enemy has
been … sighted." "Where is he?" "Out there. Put
away that steel. Strength and courage won't help you now. Come." Flandry
led her into the corridor. They wove among men who
themselves pelted toward their posts. Near the navigation bridge was a
planetary chartroom equipped for full audiovisual intercom. The exec had
decided this would serve the vip and her keeper. Two spacesuits hung ready. One
was modified for Starkadian use. Dragoika had gotten some drill with it en
route to the squadron, but Flandry thought he'd better help her before armoring
himself. "Here; this fastens so. Now hold your breath till we change
helmets on you … Why did you come?" "I would not let
you fare alone on my behalf," Dragoika said after her faceplate was
closed. Flandry left his own
open, but heard her in his radio earplugs. The alarm penetrated them; and,
presently, a voice: "Now hear this. Now
hear this. Captain to all officers and men. The New Brazil reports two hyperdrives
activated as she approached destination. She is returning to us and the bogies
are in pursuit. We shall proceed. Stand by for hyper-drive. Stand by for
combat. Glory to the Emperor." Flandry worked the com
dials. Tuning in on a bridge view-screen, he saw space on his own panel, black
and star-strewn. Briefly, as the quantum field built up, the cosmos twisted.
Compensators clicked in and the scene grew steady; but now Sabik outran light
and kilometers reeled aft more swiftly than imagination could follow. The power
throb was a leonine growl through every cell of his body. "What does this
mean?" Dragoika pressed close to him, seeking comfort. Flandry switched to a
view of the operations tank. Seven green dots of varying size moved against a
stellar background. "See, those are our ships. The big one, that's
this." Two red dots appeared. "Those are the enemy, as near as we can
tell his positions. Um-m-m, look at their size. That's because we detect very
powerful engines. I'd say one is roughly equal to ours, though probably newer
and better armed. The other seems to be a heavy destroyer." Her gauntlets clapped
together. "But this is like magic!" she cried with glee. "Not much use,
actually, except to give a quick overall picture. What the captain uses is
figures and calculations from our machines." Dragoika's enthusiasm
died. "Always machines," she said in a troubled voice. "Glad I
am not to live in your world, Dom-maneek." You'll have to, I'm
afraid, he thought. For a while, anyway. If we live. He scanned the
communications office. Men sat before banks of meters, as if hypnotized.
Occasionally someone touched a control or spoke a few words to his neighbor.
Electromagnetic radio was mute beyond the hull. But with hyperdrive going, a slight
modulation could be imposed on the wake to carry messages. Sabik could transmit
instantaneously, as well as receive. As Flandry watched, a
man stiffened in his seat. His hands shook a little when he ripped off a
printout and gave it to his pacing superior. That officer strode to an intercom
and called the command bridge. Flandry listened and nodded. "Tell me,"
Dragoika begged. "I feel so alone here." "Shhh!" Announcement: "Now
hear this. Now hear this. Captain to all officers and men. It is known that
there are six Merseian warships in Saxo orbit. They have gone hyper and are
seeking junction with the two bogies in pursuit of New Brazil. We detect
scrambled communication between these various units. It is expected they will
attack us. First contact is estimated in ten minutes. Stand by to open fire
upon command. The composition of the hostiles is—" Flandry showed Dragoika
the tank. Half a dozen sparks drove outward from the luminous globelet which
represented her sun. "They are one light cruiser, about like our Umbriel,
and five destroyers. Then ahead, remember, we have a battleship and a quite
heavy destroyer." "Eight against five
of us." Tendrils rose behind the faceplate, fur crackled, the lost child
dropped out of her and she said low and resonant: "But we will catch those
first two by themselves." "Right. I
wonder … " Flandry tried a different setting. It should have
been blocked off, but someone had forgotten and he looked over Captain
Einarsen's shoulder. Yes, a Merseian in the
outercom screen! And a high-ranking one, too. "—interdicted
region," he said in thickly accented Anglic. "Turn back at
once." "His Majesty's
government does not recognize interdictions in unclaimed space," Einarsen
said. "You will interfere with us at your peril." "Where are you
bound? What is your purpose?" "That is of no
concern to you, Fodaich. My command is bound on its lawful occasions. Do we
pass peacefully or must we fight?" Flandry translated for
Dragoika as he listened. The Merseian paused, and she whispered: "He will
say we can go on, surely. Thus he can join the others." Flandry wiped his brow.
The room felt hot, and he stank with perspiration in his suit. "I wish
you'd been born in our civilization," he said. "You have a Navy
mind." "Pass, then,"
the Merseian said slowly. "Under protest, I let you by." Flandry leaned forward,
gripping a table edge, struggling not to shout what Einarsen must do. The Terran commander
said, "Very good. But in view of the fact that other units are moving to
link with yours, I am forced to require guarantees of good faith. You will
immediately head due galactic north at full speed, without halt until I return
to Saxo." "Outrageous! You
have no right—" "I have the right
of my responsibility for this squadron. If your government wishes to protest to
mine, let it do so. Unless you withdraw as requested, I shall consider your
intentions hostile and take appropriate measures. My compliments to you, sir.
Good day." The screen was blanked. Flandry switched away
from Einarsen's expressionless countenance and stood shaking. There trickled
through the turmoil in him, I guess an old-line officer does have as much sense
as a fresh-caught ensign. When he brought Dragoika
up to date, she said coolly, "Let us see that tank again." The Merseians ahead were
not heeding the Terran order. They were, though, sheering off, one in either
direction, obviously hoping to delay matters until help arrived. Einarsen
didn't cooperate. Like a wolf brought to bay, New Brazil turned on her lesser
pursuer. Murdoch's Land hurried to her aid. On the other side, Umbriel and
Sabik herself accelerated toward the Merseian battlewagon. "Here we go,"
Flandry said between clenched jaws. His first space battle, as terrifying,
bewildering, and exalting as his first woman. He lusted to be in a gun turret.
After dogging his faceplate, he sought an exterior view. For a minute, nothing
was visible but stars. Then the ship boomed and shuddered. She had fired a
missile salvo: the monster missiles which nothing smaller than a battleship
could carry, which had their own hyperdrives and phase-in computers. He could
not see them arrive. The distance was as yet too great. But close at hand,
explosions burst in space, one immense fireball after another, swelling,
raging, and vanishing. Had the screen carried their real intensity, his
eyeballs would have melted. Even through airlessness, he felt the buffet of
expanding gases; the deck rocked and the hull belled. "What was
that?" Dragoika cried. "The enemy shot at
us. We managed to intercept and destroy his missiles with smaller ones. Look
there." A lean metal thing prowled across the screen. "It seeks its
own target. We have a cloud of them out." Again and again energies
ran wild. One blast almost knocked Flandry off his feet. His ears buzzed from
it. He tuned in on damage control. The strike had been so near that the hull was
bashed open. Bulkheads sealed off that section. A gun turret was wrecked, its
crew blown to fragments. But another nearby reported itself still functional.
Behind heavy material and electromagnetic shielding, its men had not gotten a
lethal dose of radiation: not if they received medical help within a day. They
stayed at their post. Flandry checked the tank
once more. Faster than either battleship, Umbriel had overhauled her giant foe.
When drive fields touched, she went out of phase, just sufficient to be
unhittable, not enough that her added mass did not serve as a drag. The
Merseian must be trying to get in phase and wipe her out before—No, here Sabik
came! Generators that powerful
extended their fields for a long radius. When she first intermeshed, the enemy
seemed a toy, lost among so many stars. But she grew in the screen, a shark, a
whale, Leviathan in steel, bristling with weapons, livid with lightnings. The combat was not waged
by living creatures. Not really. They did nothing but serve guns, tend
machines, and die. When such speeds, masses, intensities met, robots took over.
Missile raced at missile; computer matched wits with computer in the weird
dance of phasing. Human and Merseian hands did operate blaster cannon, probing,
searing, slicing through metal like a knife through flesh. But their chance of
doing important harm, in the short time they had, was small. Fire sheeted across
space. Thunder brawled in hulls. Decks twisted, girders buckled, plates melted.
An explosion pitched Flandry and Dragoika down. They lay in each other's arms,
bruised, bleeding, deafened, while the storm prevailed. And passed. Slowly, incredulously,
they climbed to their feet. Shouts from outside told them their eardrums were
not ruptured. The door sagged and smoke curled through. Chemical extinguishers
rumbled. Someone called for a medic. The voice was raw with pain. The screen still worked.
Flandry glimpsed Umbriel before relative speed made her unseeable. Her bows
gaped open, a gun barrel was bent in a quarter circle, plates resembled
sea-foam where they had liquefied and congealed. But she ran yet. And so did
Sabik. He looked and listened
awhile before he could reconstruct the picture for Dragoika. "We got them.
Our two destroyers took care of the enemy's without suffering much damage.
We're hulled in several places ourselves, three turrets and a missile launcher
are knocked out, some lines leading from the main computer bank are cut, we're
using auxiliary generators till the engineers can fix the primary one, and the
casualties are pretty bad. We're operational, though, sort of." "What became of the
battleship we fought?" "We sank a warhead
in her midriff. One megaton, I believe … no, you don't know about
that, do you? She's dust and gas." The squadron reunited
and moved onward. Two tiny green flecks in the tank detached themselves and
hastened ahead. "See those? Our scoutboats. We have to screen them while
they perform their task. This means we have to fight those Merseians from
Saxo." "Six of them to
five of us," Dragoika counted. "Well, the odds are improving. And
then, we have a bigger ship, this one, than remains to them." Flandry watched the
green lights deploy. The objective was to prevent even one of the red sparks
from getting through and attacking the scouts. This invited annihilation in
detail, but—Yes, evidently the Merseian commander had told off one of his
destroyers to each of Einarsen's. That left him with his cruiser and two
destroyers against Sabik and Umbriel, which would have been fine were the
latter pair not half crippled. "I'd call the odds even, myself,"
Flandry said. "But that may be good enough. If we stand off the enemy
for … a couple of hours, I'd guess … we've done what we
were supposed." "But what is that,
Domma-neek? You spoke only of some menace out here." Dragoika took him by
the shoulders and regarded him levelly. "Can you not tell me?" He could, without
violating any secrecy that mattered any longer. But he didn't want to. He tried
to stall, and hoped the next stage of combat would begin before she realized
what he was doing. "Well," he said, "we have news about, uh, an
object. What the scouts must do is go to it, find out what it is like, and plot
its path. They'll do that in an interesting way. They'll retreat from it,
faster than light, so they can take pictures of it not where it is at this
moment but where it was at different times in the past. Since they know where
to look, their instruments can pinpoint it at more than a light-year. That is,
across more than a year of time. On such basis, they can easily calculate how
it will move for the next several years to come." Again dread stirred
behind her eyes. "They can reach over time itself?" she whispered.
"To the past and its ghosts? You dare too much, you vaz-Terran. One night
the hidden powers will set free their anger on you." He bit his lip—and
winced, for it was swollen where his face had been thrown against a
mouth-control radio switch. "I often wonder if that may not be so,
Dragoika. But what can we do? Our course was set for us ages agone, before ever
we left our home world, and there is no turning back." "Then … you
fare bravely." She straightened in her armor. "I may do no less. Tell
me what the thing is that you hunt through time." "It—" The ship
recoiled. A drumroll ran. "Missiles fired off! We're engaging!" Another salvo and
another. Einarsen must be shooting off every last hyperdrive weapon in his
magazines. If one or two connected, they might decide the outcome. If not, then
none of his present foes could reply in kind. Flandry saw, in the
tank, how the Merseian destroyers scattered. They could do little but try to
outdodge those killers, or outphase them if field contact was made. As
formation broke up, Murdoch's Land and The volleys ended.
Dragoika howled. "Look, Domma-neek! A red light went out! There! First
blood for us!" "Yes … yes,
we did get a destroyer. Whoopee!" The exec announced it on the intercom,
and cheers sounded faintly from those who still had their faceplates open. The
other missiles must have been avoided or parried, and by now were destroying
themselves lest they become threats to navigation. Max Abrams would have called
that rule a hopeful sign. Another Merseian ship
sped to assist the one on which the two Terrans were converging, while New
Brazil and a third enemy stalked each other. Umbriel limped on an intercept
course for the heavy cruiser and her attendant. Those drove straight for Sabik,
which lay in wait licking her wounds. The lights flickered and
died. They came back, but feebly. So there was trouble with the spare
powerplant, too. And damn, damn, damn, Flandry couldn't do a thing except watch
that tank! The cruiser's escort
detached herself and ran toward Umbriel to harry and hinder. Flandry clenched
his teeth till his jaws ached. "The greenskins can see we have problems
here," he said. "They figure a cruiser can take us. And they may be
right." Red crept up on green.
"Stand by for straight-phase engagement," said the intercom. "What did that
mean?" Dragoika asked. "We can't dodge
till a certain machine has been fixed." It was as near as Flandry could
come to saying in Kursovikian that phase change was impossible. "We shall
have to sit and shoot." Sabik wasn't quite a
wingless duck. She could revert to sub-light, though that was a desperation
maneuver. At superlight, the enemy must be in phase with her to inflict damage,
and therefore equally vulnerable. But the cruiser did, now, possess an extra
capability of eluding her opponent's fire. Sabik had no shield except her
antimissiles. To be sure, she was better supplied with those. It looked as if a
toe-to-toe match was coming. "Hyperfield contact
made," said the intercom. "All units fire at will." Flandry switched to
exterior view. The Merseian zigzagged among the stars. Sometimes she vanished,
always she reappeared. She was a strictly spacegoing vessel, bulged at the
waist like a double-ended pear. Starlight and shadow picked out her armament.
Dragoika hissed in a breath. Again fire erupted. A titan's fist smote. A
noise so enormous that it transcended noise bellowed through the hull.
Bulkheads split asunder. The deck crashed against Flandry. He whirled into
night. Moments later he
regained consciousness. He was falling, falling forever, and
blind … no, he thought through the ringing in his head, the lights
were out, the gravs were out, he floated free admidst the moan of escaping air.
Blood from his nose formed globules which, weightless, threatened to strangle
him. He sucked to draw them down his throat. "Dragoika!" he rasped.
"Dragoika!" Her helmet beam sprang
forth. She was a shadow behind it, but the voice came clear and taut:
"Domma-neek, are you hale? What happened? Here, here is my hand." "We took a direct
hit." He shook himself, limb by limb, felt pain boil in his body but
marveled that nothing appeared seriously injured. Well, space armor was
designed to take shocks. "Nothing in here is working, so I don't know what
the ship's condition is. Let's try to find out. Yes, hang onto me. Push against
things, not too hard. It's like swimming. Do you feel sick?" "No. I feel as in a
dream, nothing else." She got the basic technique of null-gee motion fast. They entered the
corridor. Undiffused, their lamplight made dull puddles amidst a crowding murk.
Ribs thrust out past twisted, buckled plates. Half of a spacesuited man drifted
in a blood-cloud which Flandry must wipe off his helmet. No radio spoke. The
silence was of a tomb. The nuclear warhead that
got through could not have been very large. But where it struck, ruin was
total. Elsewhere, though, forcefields, bulkheads, baffles, breakaway lines had
given what protection they could. Thus Flandry and Dragoika survived. Did
anyone else? He called and called, but got no answer. A hole filled with stars
yawned before him. He told her to stay put and flitted forth on impellers.
Saxo, merely the brightest of the diamond points around him, transitted the
specter arch of the Milky Way. It cast enough light for him to see. The
fragment of ship from which he had emerged spun slowly—luck, that, or Coriolis
force would have sickened him and perhaps her. An energy cannon turret looked
intact. Further off tumbled larger pieces, ugly against cold serene heaven. He tried his radio
again, now when he was outside screening metal. With her secondary engines
gone, the remnants of Sabik had reverted to normal state. "Ensign Flandry
from Section Four. Come in, anyone. Come in!" A voice trickled
through. Cosmic interference seethed behind it. "Commander Ranjit Singh in
Section Two. I am assuming command unless a superior officer turns out to be
alive. Report your condition." Flandry did. "Shall
we join you, sir?" he finished. "No. Check that
gun. Report whether it's in working order. If so, man it." "But sir, we're
disabled. The cruiser's gone on to fight elsewhere. Nobody'll bother with
us." "That remains to be
seen, Ensign. If the battle pattern should release a bogie, he may decide he'll
make sure of us. Go to your gun." "Aye, aye,
sir." Dead bodies floated in
the turret. They were not mutilated; but two or three thousand roentgens must
have sleeted through all shielding. Flandry and Dragoika hauled them out and
cast them adrift. As they dwindled among the stars, she sang to them the Song of
Mourning. I wouldn't mind such a send-off, he thought. The gun was useable.
Flandry rehearsed Dragoika in emergency manual control. They'd alternate at the
hydraulic aiming system and the handwheel which recharged the batteries that
drove it. She was as strong as he. Thereafter they waited.
"I never thought to die in a place like this," she said. "But my
end will be in battle, and with the finest of comrades. How we shall yarn, in
the Land of Trees Beyond!" "We might survive
yet," he said. Starlight flashed off the teeth in his bruised and
blood-smeared face. "Don't fool
yourself. Unworthy of you." "Unworthy my left
one! I plain don't intend to quit till I'm dead." "I see. Maybe that
is what has made you vaz-Terran great." The Merseian came. She was a destroyer.
Umbriel, locked in combat with the badly hurt enemy cruiser, had inflicted
grave harm on her, too. Murdoch's Land was shattered, Antarctica out of action
until repairs could be made, but they had accounted for two of her fellows. New
Brazil dueled yet with the third. This fourth one suffered from a damaged
hyperdrive alternator. Until her sweating engineers could repair it, which
would take an hour or so, her superlight speed was a crawl; any vessel in
better shape could wipe her from the universe. Her captain resolved he would go
back to where the remnants of Sabik orbited and spend the interim cleaning them
out. For the general order was that none but Merseians might enter this region
and live. She flashed into
reality. Her missiles were spent, but guns licked with fire-tongues and shells.
The main part of the battleship's dismembered hulk took their impact, glowed,
broke, and returned the attack. "Yow-w-w!"
Dragoika's yell was pure exultation. She spun the handwheel demoniacally fast.
Flandry pushed himself into the saddle. His cannon swung about. The bit of hull
counter-rotated. He adjusted, got the destroyer's after section in his
cross-hairs, and pulled trigger. Capacitors discharged.
Their energy content was limited; that was why the gun must be laid by hand, to
conserve every last erg for revenge. Flame spat across kilometers. Steel
sublimed. A wound opened. Air gushed forth, white with condensing water vapor. The destroyer applied
backward thrust. Flandry followed, holding his beam to the same spot, driving
inward and inward. From four other pieces of Sabik, death vomited. "Man," Flandry
chanted, "but you've got a Tigery by the tail!" Remorselessly, spin took
him out of sight. He waited, fuming. When he could again aim, the destroyer was
further away, and she had turned one battleship section into gas. But the rest
fought on. He joined his beam to theirs. She was retreating under gravities.
Why didn't she go hyper and get the hell out of here? Maybe she couldn't. He
himself had been shooting to disable her quantum-field generator. Maybe he'd
succeeded. "Kursoviki!"
Dragoika shrieked at the wheel. "Archers all! Janjevar va-Radovik for aye!" A gun swiveled toward
them. He could see it, tiny at its distance, thin and deadly. He shifted aim.
His fire melted the muzzle shut. The destroyer scuttled
away. And then, suddenly, there was New Brazil. Flandry darted from his seat,
caught Dragoika to him, held her faceplate against his breast and closed his
own eyes. When they looked again, the Merseian was white-hot meteorites. They
hugged each other in their armor. Umbriel, Antarctica, and
New Brazil: torn, battered, lame, filled with the horribly wounded, haunted by
their dead, but victorious, victorious—neared the planet. The scoutships had
long since finished their work and departed Empire-ward. Yet Ranjit Singh would
give his men a look at the prize they had won. On the cruiser's bridge,
Flandry and Dragoika stood with him. The planet filled the forward viewscreen.
It was hardly larger than Luna. Like Terra's moon, it was bereft of air, water,
life; such had bled away to space over billions of years. Mountains bared fangs
at the stars, above ashen plains. Barren, empty, blind as a skull, the rogue
rushed on to its destiny. "One planet,"
the acting captain breathed. "One wretched sunless planet." "It's enough,
sir," Flandry said. Exhaustion pulsed through him in huge soft waves. To
sleep … to sleep, perchance to dream … "On a collision
course with Saxo. It'll strike inside of five years. That much mass, simply
falling from infinity, carries the energy of three years' stellar radiation.
Which will have to be discharged somehow, in a matter of seconds. And Saxo is
an F5, shortlived, due to start expanding in less than a begayear. The
instabilities must already be building up. The impact—Saxo will go nova.
Explode." "And our
fleet—" "Yes, sir. What
else? The thing's wildly improbable. Interstellar distances are so big. But the
universe is bigger still. No matter how unlikely, anything which is possible
must happen sometime. This is one occasion when it does. Merseian explorers
chanced on the datum. Brechdan saw what it meant. He could develop the conflict
on Starkad, step by step, guiding it, nursing it, keeping it on
schedule … till our main strength was marshaled there, just before
the blowup came. We wouldn't be likely to see the invader. It's coming in 'way
off the ecliptic, and has a very low albedo, and toward the end would be lost
in Saxo's glare and traveling at more than 700 kilometers per second. Nor would
we be looking in that direction. Our attention would be all on Brechdan's
forces. They'd be prepared, after the captains opened their sealed orders.
They'd know exactly when to dash away on hyperdrive. Ours—well, the initial
radiation will move at the speed of light. It would kill the crews before they
knew they were dead. An hour or so later, the first wave of gases would vaporize
their ships. The Empire would be crippled and the Merseians could move in.
That's why there's war on Starkad." Ranjit Singh tugged his
beard. The pain seemed to strengthen him. "Can we do anything? Plant bombs
to blow this object apart, maybe?" "I don't know, sir.
Offhand, I doubt it. Too many fragments would stay on essentially the same
path, I believe. Of course, we can evacuate Starkad. There are other
planets." "Yes. We can do
that." "Will you tell me
now?" Dragoika asked. Flandry did. He had not
known she could weep. 18 Highport lay quiet. Men
filled the ugly barracks, drifted along the dusty streets, waited for orders
and longed for home. Clamor of construction work, grumble of traffic, whine of
aircraft bound to battle, were ended. So likewise, after the first tumultuous
celebrations, was most merrymaking. The war's conclusion had left people too
dazed. First, the curt announcement that Admiral Enriques and Fodaich Runei
were agreed on a cease-fire while they communicated with their respective
governments. Then, day after day of not knowing. Then the arrival of ships; the
proclamation that, Starkad being doomed, Empire and Roidhunate joined in hoping
for a termination of the interracial conflict; the quick departure of the
Merseians, save for a few observers; the imminent departure of most Imperial
Navy personnel; the advent of civilian experts to make preliminary studies for
a massive Terran project of another sort. And always the rumors, scuttlebutt,
so-and-so knew somebody who knew for a fact that—How could you carry on as if
this were ordinary? Nothing would ever again be quite ordinary. At night, you
saw the stars and shivered. Dominic Flandry walked
in silence. His boots made a soft, rhythmic thud. The air was cool around him.
Saxo spilled radiance from an enormous blue sky. The peaks beyond Mount Narpa
thrust snowfields toward the ghost of a moon. Never had the planet looked so
fair. The door was ajar to the
xenological office. He entered. Desks stood vacant. John Ridenour's staff was
in the field. Their chief stayed behind, replacing sleep with stimulants as he
tried to coordinate their efforts around an entire world. He was in
conversation with a visitor. Flandry's heart climbed into his throat. Lord
Hauksberg! Everyone knew Dronning
Margrete had arrived yesterday, in order that his Majesty's delegate might make
a final inspection tour. Flandry had planned on keeping far out of sight. He
snapped to a salute. "Well, well."
The viscount did not rise from his chair. Only the blond sharp face turned. The
elegantly clad body stayed relaxed, the voice was amused. "What have we
here?" "Ensign Flandry,
sir. I—I beg pardon. Didn't mean to interrupt. I'll go." "No. Sit. Been
meanin' to get hold of you. I do remember your name, strange as that may
seem." Hauksberg nodded at Ridenour. "Go ahead. Just what is this
difficulty you mention?" The xenologist scarcely
noticed the newcomer, miserable on a chair. Weariness harshened his tone.
"Perhaps I can best illustrate with a typical scene, my lord, taken last
week. Here's the Sisterhood HQ in Ujanka." A screen showed a room
whose murals related ancient glories. A Terran and several Tigery females in
the plumes and striped cloaks of authority sat in front of a vidiphone. Flandry
recognized some. He cursed the accident which brought him here at this minute.
His farewells in the city had hurt so much. Ostrova, the mistress,
glared at the piscine face projected before her. "Never," she
snapped. "Our rights and needs remain with us. Better death than surrender
what our mothers died to gain." The view shifted, went
underwater, where also a human team observed and recorded. Again Flandry saw
the Temple of Sky, from within. Light pervaded the water, turned it into one
emerald where the lords of the Seafolk floated free. They had summoned
Isinglass and Evenfall for expert knowledge. Those I never did get a chance to
say good-bye to, Flandry thought, and now I never will. Through the colonnade
he looked down on elfin Shellgleam. "You would steal
everything, then, through the whole cycle, as always you have done," said
he who spoke for them. "It shall not be. We must have those resources,
when great toil is coming upon us. Do not forget, we keep our guns." The record included the
back-and-forth interpretation of Ridenour's men at either end, so Flandry
followed the bitter argument in Kursovikian. Hauksberg could not, and grew
restless. After a few minutes, he said, "Most int'restin', but s'pose you
tell me what's goin' on." "A summary was
prepared by our station in the Chain," Ridenour said. He nicked a switch.
In the screen appeared a lagoon where sunlight glittered on wavelets and trees
rustled behind a wide white beach: heartbreakingly beautiful. It was seen from
the cabin of a waterboat, where a man with dark-rimmed eyes sat. He gave date
and topic, and stated: "Both factions
continue to assert exclusive rights to the archipelago fishing grounds. Largely
by shading their translations, our teams have managed to prevent irrevocable
loss of temper, but no compromise is yet in sight. We shall continue to press
for an equitable arrangement. Success is anticipated, though not for a
considerable time." Ridenour switched off.
"You see, my lord?" he said. "We can't simply load these people
aboard spaceships. We have to determine which of several possible planets are
most suitable for them; and we have to prepare them, both in organization and
education. Under ideal conditions, the psychic and cultural shock will still be
terrible. Groundlaying will take years. Meanwhile, both races have to maintain
themselves." "Squabblin' over
somethin' that'll be a whiff of gas in half a decade? Are such idiots worth
savin'?" "They're not
idiots, my lord. But our news, that their world is under a death sentence, has
been shattering. Most of them will need a long while to adapt, to heal the
wound, before they can think about it rationally. Many never will. And my lord,
no matter how logical one believes he is, no matter how sophisticated he claims
to be, he stays an animal. His forebrain is nothing but the handmaiden of
instinct. Let's not look down on these Starkadians. If we and the Merseians, we
big flashy space-conquering races, had any better sense, there'd be no war
between us." "There isn't,"
Hauksberg said. "That remains to be
seen, my lord." Hauksberg flushed.
"Thank you for your show," he said coldly. "I'll mention it in
my report." Ridenour pleaded.
"If your Lordship would stress the need for more trained personnel
here—You've seen a little bit of what needs doing in this little bit of the
planet. Ahead of us is the whole sphere, millions of individuals, thousands of
societies. Many aren't even known to us, not so much as names, only blank spots
on the map. But those blank spots are filled with living, thinking, feeling
beings. We have to reach them, save them. We won't get them all, we can't, but
each that we do rescue is one more justification for mankind's existence. Which
God knows, my lord, needs every justification it can find." "Eloquent,"
Hauksberg said. "His Majesty's government'll have to decide how big a
bureaucratic empire it wants to create for the benefit of some primitives. Out
o' my department." He got up. Ridenour did too. "Good day." "Good day, my
lord," the xenologist said. "Thank you for calling. Oh. Ensign
Flandry. What'd you want?" "I came to say
good-bye, sir." Flandry stood at attention. "My transport leaves in a
few hours." "Well, good-bye,
then. Good luck." Ridenour went so far as to come shake hands. But even
before Hauksberg, with Flandry behind, was out the door, Ridenour was back at
his desk. "Let's take a
stroll beyond town," Hauksberg said. "Want to stretch my legs. No,
beside me. We've things to discuss boy." "Yes, sir." Nothing further was said
until they halted in a meadow of long silvery quasigrass. A breeze slid from
the glaciers where mountains dreamed. A pair of wings cruised overhead. Were
every last sentient Starkadian rescued, Flandry thought, they would be no more
than the tiniest fraction of the life which joyed on this world. Hauksberg's cloak
flapped. He drew it about him. "Well," he said, looking steadily at
the other. "We meet again, eh?" Flandry made himself
give stare for stare. "Yes sir I trust the remainder of my lord's stay on
Merseia was pleasant." Hauksberg uttered a
laugh. "You are shameless! Will go far indeed, if no one shoots you first.
Yes, I may say Councillor Brechdan and I had some rather int'restin' talks
after the word came from here." "I … I
understand you agreed to, uh, say the space battle was only due to both
commanders mistaking their orders." "Right. Merseia was
astonished as us to learn about the rogue after our forces found it by
accident." Hauksberg's geniality vanished. He seized Flandry's arm with
unexpected force and said sternly: "Any information to the contrary is a
secret of state. Revealin' it to anyone, ever so much as hintin' at it, will be
high treason. Is that clear?" "Yes, my lord. I've
been briefed." "And's to your
benefit, too," Hauksberg said in a milder voice. "Keepin' the secret
necessarily involves quashin' the charges against you. The very fact that they
were ever brought, that anything very special happened after we reached
Merseia, goes in the ultrasecret file also. You're safe, my boy." Flandry put his hands
behind his back, to hide how they doubled into fists. He'd have given ten
years, off this end of his life, to smash that smiling face. Instead he must
say, "Is my lord so kind as to add his personal pardon?" "Oh, my, yes!"
Hauksberg beamed and clapped his shoulder. "You did absolutely right. For
absolutely the wrong reasons, to be sure, but by pure luck you accomplished my
purpose for me, peace with Merseia. Why should I carry a grudge?" He winked.
"Regardin" a certain lady, nothin' between friends, eh?
Forgotten." Flandry could not play
along. "But we have no peace!" he exploded. "Hey? Now, now,
realize you've been under strain and so forth, but—" "My lord, they were
planning to destroy us. How can we let them go without even a scolding?" "Ease down. I'm
sure they'd no such intention. It was a weapon to use against us if we forced
'em to. Nothin' else. If we'd shown a genuine desire to cooperate, they'd've
warned us in ample time." "How can you say
that?" Flandry choked. "Haven't you read any history? Haven't you
listened to Merseian speeches, looked at Merseian books, seen our dead and
wounded come back from meeting Merseians in space? They want us out of the
universe!" Hauksberg's nostrils
dilated. "That will do, Ensign. Don't get above yourself. And spare me the
spewed-back propaganda. The full story of this incident is bein' suppressed
precisely because it'd be subject to your kind of misinterpretation and so
embarrass future relations between the governments. Brechdan's already shown
his desire for peace, by withdrawin' his forces in toto from Starkad." "Throwing the whole
expensive job of rescue onto us. Sure." "I told you to
control yourself, Ensign. You're not quite old enough to set Imperial
policy." Flandry swallowed a foul
taste. "Apologies, my lord." Hauksberg regarded him
for a minute. Abruptly the viscount smiled. "No. Now I was gloatin'.
Apologies to you. Really, I'm not a bad sort. And you mean well too. One day
you'll be wiser. Let's shake on that." Flandry saw no choice. Hauksberg winked again.
"B'lieve I'll continue my stroll alone. If you'd like to say good-bye to
Donna d'Io, she's in the guest suite." Flandry departed with
long strides. By the time he had
reached HQ and gone through the rigamarole of gaining admittance, fury had
faded. In its place lay emptiness. He walked into the living room and stopped.
Why go further? Why do anything? Persis ran to him. She
wore a golden gown and diamonds in her hair. "Oh, Nicky, Nicky!" She
laid her head on his breast and sobbed. He consoled her in a
mechanical fashion. They hadn't had many times together since he came back from
the rogue. There had been too much work for him, in Ujanka on Ridenour's
behalf. And that had occupied him so greatly that he almost resented the
occasions when he must return to Highport. She was brave and intelligent and
fun, and twice she had stepped between him and catastrophe, but she did not
face the end of her world. Nor was her own world the same as his: could never
be. They sat down on a
divan. He had an arm around her waist, a cigaret in his free hand. She looked
at the floor. "Will I see you on Terra?" she asked dully. "I don't
know," he said. "Not for some time anyway, I'm afraid. My orders have
come through officially, I'm posted to the Intelligence academy for training,
and Commander Abrams warns me they work the candidates hard." "You couldn't
transfer out again? I'm sure I could arrange an assignment—" "A nice, cushy
office job with regular hours? No, thanks, I'm not about to become anyone's
kept man." She stiffened as if he
had struck her. "I'm sorry," he floundered. "Didn't mean that.
It's only, well, here's a job I am fitted for, that serves a purpose. If I don't
take it, what meaning has life got?" "I could answer
that," she said low, "but I guess you wouldn't understand." He wondered what the
devil to say. Her lips brushed his
cheek. "Go ahead, then," she said. "Fly." "Uh … you're
not in trouble, Persis?" "No, no. Mark's a
most civilized man. We might even stay together a while longer, on Terra. Not
that that makes any big difference. No matter how censored, some account of my
adventures is bound to circulate. I'll be quite a novelty, quite in demand.
Don't worry about me. Dancers know how to land on their feet." A slight gladness
stirred in him, largely because he was relieved of any obligation to fret about
her. He kissed her farewell with a good imitation of warmth. It was so good, in fact,
that his loneliness returned redoubled once he was in the street again. He fled
to Max Abrams. The commander was in his
office, straightening out details before leaving on the same transport that
would bear Flandry home. From Terra, though, he would go on furlough to Dayan.
His stocky frame leaned back as Flandry burst through the doorway. "Well,
hello, hero," he said. "What ails you?" The ensign flung himself
into a chair. "Why do we keep trying?" he cried. "What's the
use?" "Hey-hey. You need
a drink." Abrarns took a bottle from a drawer and poured into two glasses.
"Wouldn't mind one myself. Hardly set foot on Starkad before they tell me
I'm shipping out again." He lifted his tumbler. "Shalom." Flandry's hand shook. He
drained his whisky at a gulp. It burned on the way down. Abrams made a production
of lighting a cigar. "All right, son," he said. "Talk." "I've seen
Hauksberg," jerked from Flandry. "Nu? Is he that
hideous?" "He … he … the
bastard gets home free. Not a stain on his bloody damned escutcheon. He'll
probably pull a medal. And still he quacks about peace!" "Whoa. He's no
villain. He merely suffers from a strong will to believe. Of course, his
political career is bound up with the position he's taken. He can't afford to
admit he was wrong. Not even to himself, I imagine. Wouldn't be fair to destroy
him, supposing we could. Nor expedient. Our side needs him." "Sir?" "Think. Never mind
what the public hears. Consider what they'll hear on the Board. How they'll
regard him. How neatly he can be pressured if he should get a seat on it, which
I hope he does. No blackmail, nothing so crude, especially when the truth can't
be told. But an eyebrow lifted at a strategic moment. A recollection, each time
he opens his mouth, of what he nearly got us into last time around. Sure, he'll
be popular with the masses. He'll have influence. So, fine. Better him than
somebody else, with the same views, that hasn't yet bungled. If you had any charity
in you, young man—which no one does at your age—you'd feel sorry for Lord
Hauksberg." "But … I … well—" Abrams frowned into a
cloud of smoke. "Also," he said, "in the longer view, we need
the pacifists as a counterweight to the armchair missileers. We can't make
peace, but we can't make real war either. All we can do is hold the line. And
man is not an especially patient animal by nature." "So the entire
thing is for zero?" Flandry nigh screamed. "Only to keep what little
we have?" The grizzled head bent.
"If the Lord God grants us that much," Abrams said, "He is more
merciful than He is just." "Starkad,
though—Death, pain, ruin, and at last, the rotten status quo! What were we
doing here?" Abrams caught Flandry's
gaze and would not let go. "I'll tell you," he said. "We had to
come. The fact that we did, however futile it looked, however distant and alien
and no-business-of-ours these poor people seemed, gives me a little hope for my
grandchildren. We were resisting the enemy, refusing to let any aggression
whatsoever go unpunished, taking the chance he presented us to wear him down.
And we were proving once more to him, to ourselves, to the universe, that we
will not give up to him even the least of these. Oh, yes, we belonged
here." Flandry swallowed and
had no words. "In this particular
case," Abrams went on, "because we came, we can save two whole
thinking races and everything they might mean to the future. We'd no way of
knowing that beforehand; but there we were when the time arrived. Suppose we
hadn't been? Suppose we'd said it didn't matter what the enemy did in these
marches. Would he have rescued the natives? I doubt it. Not unless there
happened to be a political profit in it. He's that kind of people." Abrams puffed harder.
"You know," he said, "ever since Akhnaton ruled in "No, son, we're
mortal—which is to say, we're ignorant, stupid, and sinful—but those are only
handicaps. Our pride is that nevertheless, now and then, we do our best. A few
times we succeed. What more dare we ask for?" Flandry remained silent. Abrams chuckled and
poured two fresh drinks. "End of lecture," he said. "Let's
examine what's waiting for you. I wouldn't ordinarily say this to a fellow at
your arrogant age, but since you need cheering up … well, I will say,
once you hit your stride, Lord help the opposition!" He talked for an hour
longer. And Flandry left the office whistling.
About the Author About the time Poul
Anderson graduated with honors in physics from the He is a member of both
the American Association for the Advancement of Science and The Mystery Writers
of America. His other interests include history and politics, travel,
outdoorsmanship, and, especially, a daughter named—appropriately enough—Astrid. ENSIGN FLANDRY Poul Anderson —To Frank and Beverly
Herbert Excerpts (with some
expansion of symbols) from Pilot's Manual and Ephemeris, Cis-Betelgeusean
Orionis Sector, 53rd ed., Reel III, frame 28: IGC S-52,727,061. Saxo. F5, mass
1.75 Sol, luminosity 5.4 Sol, photosphere diameter 1.2
Sol … Estimated remaining time on main sequence, 0.9
begayear … Planetary system: Eleven major
bodies … V, Starkad. Mean orbital radius, 3.28 a.u., period 4.48
years … Mass, 1.81 Terra. Equatorial diameter, 15,077 Km. Mean
surface gravity, 1.30 g. Rotation period, 16h 31m 2.75s. Axial inclination, 25°
50'4.9" … Surface atmospheric pressure, ca. 7000 mm. Percentage
composition, N2 77.92, O2 21.01, A 0.87, CO2 0.03 … Remarks: Though 254 light-years from
Sol, the system was discovered early, in the course of the first Grand Survey.
Thus the contemporary practice of bestowing literary-mythological names on
humanly interesting objects was followed. Only marginally man-habitable,
Starkad attracted a few xenological expeditions by its unusual
autochthons … These studies were not followed up, since funds went to
still more rewarding projects and, later, the Polesotechnic League saw no
profit potential. After the Time of Troubles, it lay outside the Imperial
sphere and remained virtually unvisited until now, when a mission has been sent
for political reasons. The 54th edition had
quite a different entry. 1 Evening on Terra— His Imperial Majesty,
High Emperor Georgios Manuel Krishna Murasaki, of the Wang dynasty the fourth,
Supreme Guardian of the Pax, Grand Director of the Stellar Council,
Commander-in-Chief, Final Arbiter, acknowledged supreme on more worlds and
honorary head of more organizations than any one man could remember, had a
birthday. On planets so remote that the unaided eye could not see their suns
among those twinkling to life above Oceania, men turned dark and leathery, or
thick and weary, by strange weathers lifted glasses in salute. The light waves
carrying their pledge would lap on his tomb. Terra herself was less
solemn. Except for the court, which still felt bound to follow daylight around
the globe for one exhausting ceremony after another, Birthday had become simply
an occasion to hold carnival. As his aircar hummed over great dusking waters,
Lord Markus Hauksberg saw the east blaze with sky luminosity, multi-colored
moving curtains where fireworks exploded meteoric. Tonight, while the planet
turned, its dark side was so radiant as to drown the very metro-centers seen
from Luna. Had he tuned his vid to almost any station, he could have watched
crowds filling pleasure houses and coming near riot among festively decorated
towers. His lady broke the
silence between them with a murmur that made him start. "I wish it were a
hundred years ago." "Eh?"
Sometimes she could still astonish him. "Birthday meant
something then." "Well … yes.
S'pose so." Hauksberg cast his mind back over history. She was right.
Fathers had taken their sons outdoors when twilight ended parades and feasts;
they had pointed to the early stars and said, Look yonder. Those are ours. We
believe that as many as four million lie within the Imperial domain. Certainly
a hundred thousand know us daily, obey us, pay tribute to us, and get peace and
the wealth of peace in return. Our ancestors did that. Keep the faith. Hauksberg shrugged. You
can't prevent later generations from outgrowing naпvetй. In time they must
realize, bone deep, that this one dustmote of a galaxy holds more than a hundred
billion suns; that we have not even explored the whole of our one spiral arm,
and it does not appear we ever will; that you need no telescope to see giants
like Betelgeuse and Polaris which do not belong to us. From there, one
proceeded easily to: Everybody knows the Empire was won and is maintained by
naked power, the central government is corrupt and the frontier is brutal and
the last organization with high morale, the Navy, lives for war and oppression
and anti-intellectualism. So get yours, have fun, ease your conscience with a
bit of discreet scoffing, and never, never make a fool of yourself by taking
the Empire seriously. Could be I'll change
that, Hauksberg thought. Alicia interrupted him.
"We might at least have gone to a decent party! But no, you have to drag
us to the Crown Prince's. Are you hoping he'll share one of his
prettyboys?" Hauksberg tried to ease
matters with a grin. "Come, come, m'love, you do me an injustice. You know
I still hunt women. Preferably beautiful women, such as you." "Or Persis
d'Io." She sagged back. "Never mind," she said tiredly. "I
just don't like orgies. Especially vulgar ones." "Nor I, much."
He patted her hand. "But you'll manage. Among the many things I admire
about you is your ability to carry off any situation with aplomb." True enough, he thought.
For a moment, regarding those perfect features under the diademed hair, he felt
regret. So his marriage had been political; why couldn't they nonetheless have
worked out a comradeship? Even love—No, he was confusing his love for ancient
literature with flesh-and-blood reality. He was not Pellйas nor she Mйlisande.
She was clever, gracious, and reasonably honest with him; she had given him an
heir; more had never been implied in the contract. For his part, he had given
her position and nearly unlimited money. As for more of his
time … how could he? Somebody had to be the repairman, when the
universe was falling to pieces. Most women understood. To entropy with it.
Alicia's looks came from an expensive biosculp job. He had seen too many slight
variations on that fashionable face. "I've explained to
you often enough," he said. " "So you say." He reached a decision.
Tonight had not seemed to him to represent any large sacrifice on her part.
During the months of his absence, she'd find ample consolation with her lovers.
(How else can a high-born lady who has no special talents pass her time on
Terra?) But if she did grow embittered she could destroy him. It is vital to
keep closed that faceplate which is pretense. Never mind what lies behind. But
in front of the faceplate waits open ridicule, as dangerous to a man in power
as emptiness and radiation to a spacefarer. Odd, reflected the
detached part of him, for all our millennia of recorded history, for all our
sociodynamic theory and data, how the basis of power remains essentially
magical. If I am laughed at, I may as well retire to my estates. And Terra
needs me. "Darlin'," he
said, "I couldn't tell you anything before. Too many ears, live and
electronic, don't y' know. If the opposition got wind of what I'm about, they'd
head me off. Not because they necessarily disagree, but because they don't want
me to bring home a jumpin' success. That'd put me in line for the Policy Board,
and everybody hopes to sit there. By arrangin' a fait accompli, though—d' you
see?" She rested a hard gaze
on him. He was a tall, slender, blond man. His features were a little too
sharp; but in green tunic and decorations, gauze cloak, gold breeches and
beefleather halfboots, he was more handsome than was right. "Your
career," she gibed. "Indeed," he
nodded. "But also peace. Would you like to see Terra under attack? Could
happen." "Mark!"
Abruptly she was changed. Her fingers, closing on his wrist beneath the lace,
felt cold. "It can't be that serious?" "Nuclear," he
said. "This thing out on Starkad isn't any common frontier squabble. Been
touted as such, and quite a few people honestly believe it is. But they've only
seen reports filtered through a hundred offices, each one bound to gloss over
facts that don't make its own job look so fiery important. I've collected raw
data and had my own computations run. Conservative extrapolation gives a forty
per cent chance of war with Merseia inside five years. And I mean war, the kind
which could get total. You don't bet those odds, do you, now?" "No," she
whispered. "I'm s'posed to go
there on a fact-findin' mission and report back to the Emperor. Then the bureaucracy
may start grindin' through the preliminaries to negotiation. Or it may not;
some powerful interests'd like to see the conflict go on. But at best,
things'll escalate meanwhile. A settlement'll get harder and harder to reach,
maybe impossible. "What I want to do
is bypass the whole wretched process. I want plenipotentiary authority to go
direct from Starkad to Merseia and try negotiatin' the protocol of an
agreement. I think it can be done. They're rational bein's too, y' know. S'pose
many of 'em're lookin' for some way out of the quicksand. I can offer
one." He straightened. "At least I can try." She sat quiet. "I
understand," she said at length. "Of course I'll cooperate." "Good girl." She leaned a little
toward him. "Mark—" "What?" His goal
stood silhouetted against a crimson sheet. "Oh, never
mind." She sat back, smoothed her gown, and stared out at the ocean. The "Lord Markus
Hauksberg, Viscount of Ny Kalmar, Second Minister of Extra-Imperial Affairs,
and Lady Hauksberg!" cried the stentor. The ballroom was open to
the sky, beneath a clear dome. Its sole interior lighting was ultraviolet.
Floor, furnishings, orchestral instruments, tableware, food shone with the deep
pure colors of fluorescence. So did the clothing of the guests, their
protective skinpaint and eyelenses. The spectacle was intense, rippling ruby,
topaz, emerald, sapphire, surmounted by glowing masks and tresses, against
night. Music lilted through the air with the scent of roses. Crown Prince Josip was
receiving. He had chosen to come in dead black. His hands and the sagging face
floated green, weirdly disembodied; his lenses smoldered red. Hauksberg bowed
and Alicia bent her knee. "Your Highness." "Ah. Pleased to see
you. Don't see you often." "Press of business,
your Highness. The loss is ours." "Yes. Understand
you're going away." "The Starkad affair,
your Highness." "What? … Oh,
yes. That. How dreadfully serious and constructive. I do hope you can relax
with us here." "We look forward to
doin' so, your Highness, though I'm 'fraid we'll have to leave early." "Hmph." Josip
half turned. He mustn't be offended.
"Goes without sayin' we both regret it the worst," Hauksberg purred.
"Might I beg for another invitation on my return?" "Well,
really!" "I'll be even more
bold. My nephew's comin' to Terra. Frontier lad, y' know, but as far as I can tell
from stereos and letters, quite a delightful boy. If he could actually meet the
heir apparent of the Empire—why, better'n a private audience with God." "Well. Well, you
don't say. Of course. Of course." Josip beamed as he greeted the next
arrival. "Isn't that
risky?" Alicia asked when they were out of earshot. "Not for my
nephew," Hauksberg chuckled. "Haven't got one. And dear Josip's
memory is rather notoriously short." He often wondered what
would become of the Empire when that creature mounted the throne. But at least
Josip was weak. If, by then, the Policy Board was headed by a man who
understood the galactic situation … He bent and kissed his lady's
hand. "Got to drift off, m'dear. Enjoy yourself. With luck, things'll
still be fairly decorous when we dare scoot off." A new dance was called
and Alicia was swept away by an admiral. He was not so old, and his decorations
showed that he had seen outplanet service. Hauksberg wondered if she would
return home tonight. He maneuvered to the
wall, where the crowd was thinner, and worked his way along. There was scant
time to admire the view above the dome's rim, though it was fantastic. The sea
marched ashimmer beneath a low moon. Long waves broke intricately, virginally
white on the outer ramparts; he thought he could hear them growl. The darkness
enclosed by the Lunar crescent was pinpointed with city lights. The sky
illumination had now formed a gigantic banner overhead, the Sunburst alive in a
field of royal blue as if stratospheric winds bugled salute. Not many stars
shone through so much radiance. But Hauksberg identified
Regulus, beyond which his mission lay, and Rigel, which burned in the heart of
the Merseian dominions. He shivered. When he reached the champagne table, a
glass was very welcome. "Good evening," said a voice. Hauksberg exchanged bows
with a portly man wearing a particolored face. Lord Advisor Petroff was not
exactly in his element at a festival like this. He jerked his head slightly.
Hauksberg nodded. They gossipped a little and drifted apart. Hauksberg was
detained by a couple of bores and so didn't manage to slip out the rear and
catch a gravshaft downward for some while. The others sat in a
small, sealed office. They were seven, the critical ones on the Policy Board:
gray men who bore the consciousness of power like added flesh. Hauksberg made
the humility salute. "My sincere apologies for keepin' my lords
waitin'," he said. "No matter,"
Petroff said. "I've been explaining the situation." "We haven't seen
any data or computations, though," da Fonseca said. "Did you bring
them, Lord Hauksberg?" "No, sir. How could
I? Every microreader in the palace is probably bugged." Hauksberg drew a
breath. "My lords, you can examine the summation at leisure, once I'm
gone. The question is, will you take my word and Lord Petroff's for the moment?
If matters are as potentially serious as I believe, then you must agree a
secret negotiator should be dispatched. If, on t'other hand, Starkad has no
special significance, what have we lost by settlin' the dispute on reasonable
terms?" "Prestige,"
Chardon said. "Morale. Credibility, the next time we have to counter a
Merseian move. I might even be so archaic as to mention honor." "I don't propose to
compromise any vital interest," Hauksberg pleaded, "and in all
events, whatever concord I may reach'll have to be ratified here. My lords, we
can't be gone long without someone noticin'. But if you'll listen—" He launched his speech.
It had been carefully prepared. It had better be. These six men, with Petroff,
controlled enough votes to swing a decision his way. Were they prevailed on to
call a privy meeting tomorrow, with a loaded quorum, Hauksberg would depart with
the authority he needed. Otherwise … No,
he mustn't take himself too seriously. Not at the present stage of his career.
But men were dying on Starkad. In the end, he won.
Shaking, sweat running down his ribs, he leaned on the table and scarcely heard
Petroff say, "Congratulations. Also, good luck. You'll need plenty of
that." 2 Night on Starkad— Tallest in the central
spine of His cigar had gone out
again. He mouthed the stub until he finished reading the report on his desk,
then leaned back and touched a lighter to it. Smoke puffed up toward a blue
cloud which already hung under the ceiling of the bleak little room. The whole
place stank. He didn't notice. "Damn!" he
said. And deliberately, for he was a religious man in his fashion, "God
damn!" Seeking calmness, he
looked at the picture of his wife and children. But they were home, on Dayan,
in the Vega region of the Empire, more parsecs distant than he liked to think.
And remote in time as well. He hadn't been with them for over a year. Little
Miriam was changing so he'd never recognize her, Marta wrote, and David become
a lanky hobbledehoy and Yael seeing such a lot of Abba Perlmutter, though of
course he was a nice boy … There was only the picture, separated from
him by a clutter of papers and a barricade of desk machines. He didn't dare
animate it. Nor feel sorry for
yourself, you clotbrain. The chair creaked beneath his shifted weight. He was a
stocky man, hair grizzled, face big and hooknosed. His uniform was rumpled,
tunic collar open, twin planets of his rank tarnished on the wide shoulders, blaster
at belt. He hauled his mind back to work. Wasn't just that a
flitter was missing, nor even that the pilot was probably dead. Vehicles got
shot down and men got killed more and more often. Too bad about this kid, who
was he, yes, Ensign Dominic Flandry. Glad I never met him. Glad I don't have to
write his parents. But the area where he vanished, that was troubling. His
assignment had been a routine reconnaissance over the Were they responsible,
though? Nobody knew, which was why the report had been bucked on to the Terran
mission's Chief of Intelligence. A burst of static had been picked up at
Highport from that general direction. A search flight had revealed nothing
except the usual Tigery merchant ships and fishing boats. Well, engines did
conk out occasionally; matйriel was in such short supply that the ground crews
couldn't detect every sign of mechanical overwork. (When in hell's flaming name
was GHQ going to get off its numb butt and realize this was no "assistance
operation to a friendly people" but a war?) And given a brilliant sun like
Saxo, currently at a peak of its energy cycle, no tricks of modulation could
invariably get a message through from high altitudes. On the other hand, a
scout flitter was supposed to be fail safe and contain several backup systems. And the Merseians were
expanding their effort. We don't do a mucking thing but expand ours in
response. How about making them respond to us for a change? The territory they
commanded grew steadily bigger. It was still distant from Kursoviki by a
quarter of the planet's circumference. But might it be reaching a tentacle this
way? Let's ask. Can't lose
much. Abrams thumbed a button
on his vidiphone. An operator looked out of the screen. "Get me the
greenskin cine," Abrams ordered. "Yes, sir. If
possible." "Better be
possible. What're you paid for? Tell his cohorts all gleaming in purple and
gold to tell him I'm about to make my next move." "What, sir?"
The operator was new here. "You heard me, son.
Snarch!" Time must pass while the
word seeped through channels. Abrams opened a drawer, got out his magnetic
chessboard, and pondered. He hadn't actually been ready to play. However, Runei
the Wanderer was too fascinated by their match to refuse an offer if he had a
spare moment lying around; and damn if any Merseian son of a mother was going
to win at a Terran game. Hm … promising
development here, with the white bishop … no, wait, then the queen
might come under attack … tempting to sic a computer onto the problem … betcha
the opposition did … maybe not … ah, so. "Commandant Runei,
sir." An image jumped to view.
Abrams could spot individual differences between nonhumans as easily as with
his own species. That was part of his business. An untrained eye saw merely the
alienness. Not that the Merseians were so odd, compared to some. Runei was a
true mammal from a terrestroid planet. He showed reptile ancestry a little more
than Homo Sapiens does, in hairless pale-green skin, faintly scaled, and short
triangular spines running from the top of his head, down his back to the end of
a long heavy tail. That tail counterbalanced a forward-leaning posture, and he
sat on the tripod which it made with his legs. But otherwise he rather
resembled a tall, broad man. Except for complex bony convolutions in place of
external ears, and brow ridges over-hanging the jet eyes, his head and face
might almost have been Terran. He wore the form-fitting black and silver
uniform of his service. Behind him could be seen on the wall a bell-mouthed
gun, a ship model, a curious statuette: souvenirs of far stars. "Greeting,
Commander." He spoke fluent Anglic, with a musical accent. "You work
late." "And you've dragged
yourself off the rack early," Abrams grunted. "Must be about sunrise
where you are." Runei's glance flickered
toward a chrono. "Yes, I believe so. But we pay scant attention
here." "You can ignore the
sun easier'n us, all right, squatted down in the ooze. But your native friends
still live by this cheap two-thirds day they got. Don't you keep office hours
for them?" Abrams' mind ranged
across the planet, to the enemy base. Starkad was a big world, whose gravity
and atmosphere gnawed land masses away between tectonic epochs. Thus, a world
of shallow ocean, made turbulent by wind and the moons; a world of many islands
large and small, but no real continents. The Merseians had established
themselves in the region they called the One of these years,
Abrams thought, somebody will break the tacit agreement and put up a few spy
satellites. Why not us?—'Course, then the other side'll bring space warships,
instead of just transports, and go potshooting. And then the first side will
bring bigger warships. "I am glad you
called," Runei said. "I have thanked Admiral Enriques for the
conversion unit, but pleasure is to express obligation to a friend." "Huh?" "You did not know?
One of our main desalinators broke down. Your commandant was good enough to
furnish us with a replacement part we lacked." "Oh, yeh.
That." Abrams rolled his cigar between his teeth. The matter was
ridiculous, he thought. Terrans and Merseians were at war on Starkad. They
killed each other's people. But nonetheless, Runei had sent a message of
congratulations when Birthday rolled around. (Twice ridiculous! Even if a
spaceship in hyperdrive has no theoretical limit to her pseudovelocity, the
concept of simultaneity remains meaningless over interstellar distances.) And
Enriques had now saved Runei from depleting his beer supplies. Because this wasn't a
war. Not officially. Not even among the two native races. Tigeries and
Seatrolls had fought since they evolved to intelligence, probably. But that was
like men and wolves in ancient days, nothing systematic, plain natural enemies.
Until the Merseians began giving the Seatrolls equipment and advice and the
landfolk were driven back. When Terra heard about that, it was sheer reflex to
do likewise for the Tigeries, preserve the balance lest Starkad be unified as a
Merseian puppet. As a result, the Merseians upped their help a bit, and Terrans
replied in kind, and— And the two empires
remained at peace. These were simple missions of assistance, weren't they?
Terra had The Covenant of Alfzar
held. You were bound to assist civilized outworlders on request. Abrams toyed
with the notion of inventing some requests from his side. In fact, that wasn't
a bad gambit right now. "Maybe you can
return the favor," he said. "We've lost a flitter in the Zletovar.
I'm not so rude as to hint that one of your lads was cruising along and
eyeballed ours and got a wee bit overexcited. But supposing the crash was
accidental, how about a joint investigation?" Abrams liked seeing
startlement on that hard green face. "You joke, Commander!" "Oh, naturally my
boss'd have to approach you officially, but I'll suggest it to him. You've got
better facilities than us for finding a sunken wreck." "But why?" Abrams shrugged. "Mutual
interest in preventing accidents. Cultivation of friendship between peoples and
individual beings. I think that's what the catchword is back home." Runei scowled.
"Quite impossible. I advise you not to make any such proposal on the
record." "Nu? Wouldn't look
so good if you turn us down?" "Tension would only
be increased. Must I repeat my government's position to you? The oceans of
Starkad belong to the seafolk. They evolved there, it is their environment, it
is not essential to the landfolk. Nevertheless the landfolk have consistently
encroached. Their fisheries, their seabeast hunts, their weed harvests, their
drag nets, everything disturbs an ecology vital to the other race. I will not
speak of those they have killed, the underwater cities they have bombed with
stones, the bays and straits they have barred. I will say that when Merseia
offered her good offices to negotiate a modus vivendi, no land culture showed
the slightest interest. My task is to help the seafolk resist aggression until
the various landfolk societies agree to establish a just and stable
peace." "Come off that
parrot act," Abrams snorted. "You haven't got the beak for it. Why
are you really here?" "I have told
you—" "No. Think. You've
got your orders and you obey 'em like a good little soldier. But don't you
sometimes wonder what the profit is for Merseia? I sure do. What the black and
red deuce is your government's reason? It's not as if Saxo sun had a decent
strategic location. Here we are, spang in the middle of a hundred light-year
strip of no man's land between our realms. Hardly been explored; hell, I'll bet
half the stars around us aren't so much as noted in a catalogue. The nearest
civilization is Betelgeuse, and the Betelgeuseans are neutrals who wish emerods
on both our houses. You're too old to believe in elves, gnomes, little men, or
the disinterested altruism of great empires. So why?" "I may not question
the decisions of the Roidhun and his Grand Council. Still less may you."
Runei's stiffness dissolved in a grin. "If Starkad is so useless, why are
you here?" " "Let us hope your
envoy manages to settle the dispute," Runei said, relaxing. "I do not
precisely enjoy myself on this hellball either." "What envoy?" "You have not
heard? Our latest courier informed us that
a … khraich … yes, a Lord Hauksberg is hitherbound." "I know."
Abrams winced. "Another big red wheel to roll around the base." "But he is to
proceed to Merseia. The Grand Council has agreed to receive him." "Huh?" Abrams
shook his head. "Damn, I wish our mails were as good as
yours … Well. How about this downed flitter? Why won't you help us
look for the pieces?" "In essence,
informally," Runei said, "because we hold it had no right, as a
foreign naval vessel, to fly over the waters. Any consequences must be on the
pilot's own head." Ho-ho! Abrams tautened.
That was something new. Implied, of course, by the Merseian position; but this
was the first time he had heard the claim in plain language. So could the
green-skins be preparing a major push? Very possible, especially if Terra had
offered to negotiate. Military operations exert pressure at bargaining tables,
too. Runei sat like a
crocodile, smiling the least amount. Had he guessed what was in Abrams' mind?
Maybe not. In spite of what the brotherhood-of-beings sentimentalists kept
bleating, Merseians did not really think in human style. Abrams made an
elaborate stretch and yawn. " 'Bout time I knocked off," he said.
"Nice talking to you, old bastard." He did not entirely lie. Runei
was a pretty decent carnivore. Abrams would have loved to hear him reminisce
about the planets where he had ranged. "Your move,"
the Merseian reminded him. "Why … yes.
Clean forgot. Knight to king's bishop four." Runei got out his own
board and shifted the piece. He sat quiet a while, studying.
"Curious," he murmured. "It'll get
curiouser. Call me back when you're ready." Abrams switched off. His cigar was dead
again. He dropped the stub down the disposal, lit a fresh one, and rose.
Weariness dragged at him. Gravity on Starkad wasn't high enough that man needed
drugs or a counterfield. But one point three gees meant twenty-five extra kilos
loaded on middle-aged bones … No, he was thinking in standard terms.
Dayan pulled ten per cent harder than Terra … Dayan, dear gaunt hills
and wind-scoured plains, homes nestled in warm orange sunlight, low trees and
salt marshes and the pride of a people who had bent desolation to their
needs … Where had young Flandry been from, and what memories did he
carry to darkness? On a sudden impulse
Abrams put down his cigar, bent his head, and inwardly recited the Kaddish. Get to bed, old man.
Maybe you've stumbled on a clue, maybe not, but it'll keep. Go to your rest. He put on cap and cloak,
thrust the cigar back between his jaws, and walked out. Cold smote him. A breeze
blew thinly under strange constellations and auroral flimmer. The nearer moon,
Egrima, was up, almost full, twice the apparent size of Luna seen from Terra.
It flooded distant snowpeaks with icy bluish light. Buruz was a Luna-sized
crescent barely above the rooftops. Walls bulked black on
either side of the unpaved street, which scrunched with frost as his boots
struck. Here and there glowed a lighted window, but they and the scattered
lamps did little to relieve the murk. On his left, unrestful radiance from
smelters picked out the two spaceships now in port, steel cenotaphs rearing
athwart the Milky Way. Thence, too, came the clangor of night-shift work. The
field was being enlarged, new sheds and barracks were going up, for Terra's
commitment was growing. On his right the sky was tinted by feverish glowsigns,
and he caught snatches of drumbeat, trumpets, perhaps laughter. Madame Cepheid
had patriotically dispatched a shipful of girls and croupiers to Starkad. And
why not? They were so young and lonely, those boys. Maria, I miss you. Abrams was almost at his
quarters when he remembered he hadn't stashed the papers on his desk. He
stopped dead. Great Emperor's elegant epiglottis! He was indeed due for an
overhaul. Briefly he was tempted
to say, "Urinate on regulations." The office was built of
ferroconcrete, with an armorplate door and an automatic recognition lock. But
no. Lieutenant Novak might report for duty before his chief, may his pink
cheeks fry in hell. Wouldn't do to set a bad security example. Not that
espionage was any problem here, but what a man didn't see, he couldn't tell if
the Merseians caught and hypnoprobed him. Abrams wheeled and
strode back, trailing bad words. At the end, he slammed to a halt. His cigar
hit the deck and he ground down a heel on it. The door was properly
closed, the windows dark. But he could see footprints in the churned, not yet
congealed mud before the entrance, and they weren't his own. And no alarm had gone
off. Somebody was inside with a truckload of roboticist's gear. Abrams' blaster snaked
into his hand. Call the guard on his wristcom? No, whoever could burgle his
office could surely detect a transmission and was surely prepared for escape
before help could arrive. By suicide if nothing else. Abrams adjusted his gun to
needle beam. Given luck, he might disable rather than kill. Unless he bought it
first. The heart slugged in his breast. Night closed thickly inward. He catfooted to the door
and touched the lock switch. Metal burned his fingers with chill. Identified,
he swung the door open and leaned around the edge. Light trickled over his
shoulder and through the windows. A thing whirled from his safe. His eyes were
adapted and he made out some details. It must have looked like any workman in
radiation armor as it passed through the base. But now one arm had sprouted
tools; and the helmet was thrown back to reveal a face with electronic eyes,
set in a head of alloy. A Merseian face. Blue lightning spat from
the tool-hand. Abrams had yanked himself back. The energy bolt sparked and
sizzled on the door. He spun his own blaster to medium beam, not stopping to
give himself reasons, and snapped a shot. The other weapon went
dead, ruined. The armored shape used its normal hand to snatch for a gun taken
forth in advance and laid on top of the safe. Abrams charged through the
doorway while he reset for needle fire. So intense a ray, at such close range,
slashed legs across. In a rattle and clash, the intruder fell. Abrams activated his
transmitter. "Guard! Intelligence office—on the double!" His blaster threatened
while he waved the lights to go on. The being stirred. No blood flowed from
those limb stumps; powerpacks, piezoelectric cascades, room-temperature
superconductors lay revealed. Abrams realized what he had caught, and whistled.
Less than half a Merseian: no tail, no breast or lower body, not much natural
skull, one arm and the fragment of another. The rest was machinery. It was the
best prosthetic job he'd ever heard of. Not that he knew of
many. Only among races which didn't know how to make tissues regenerate, or
which didn't have that kind of tissues. Surely the Merseians—But what a lovely
all-purpose plug-in they had here! The green face writhed.
Wrath and anguish spewed from the lips. The hand fumbled at the chest. To turn
off the heart? Abrams kicked that wrist aside and planted a foot on it.
"Easy, friend," he said. 3 Morning on Merseia— Brechdan Ironrede, the
Hand of the Vach Ynvory, walked forth on a terrace of Castle Dhangodhan. A
sentry slapped boots with tail and laid blaster to breastplate. A gardener,
pruning the dwarfed koir trees planted among the flagstones, folded his arms
and bent in his brown smock. To both, Brechdan touched his forehead. For they
were not slaves; their families had been clients of the Ynvorys from ages
before the nations merged into one; how could they take pride in it if the clan
chief did not accord them their own dignity? He walked unspeaking,
though, between the rows of yellow blooms, until he reached the parapet. There
he stopped and looked across his homeland. Behind him, the castle
lifted gray stone turrets. Banners snapped in a cool wind, against an
infinitely blue sky. Before him, the walls tumbled down toward gardens, and
beyond them the forested slopes of Bedh-Ivrich went on down, and down, and
down, to be lost in mists and shadows which still cloaked the valley. Thus he
could not see the farms and villages which Dhangodhan dominated: nothing but
the peaks on the other side. Those climbed until their green flanks gave way to
crags and cliffs of granite, to snowfields and the far blink of glaciers. The
sun Korych had now cleared the eastern heights and cast dazzling spears over
the world. Brechdan saluted it, as was his hereditary right. High overhead wheeled
a fangryf, hunting, and the light burned gold off its feathers. There was a buzz in the
air as the castle stirred to wakefulness, a clatter, a bugle call, a hail and a
bit of song. The wind smelled of woodsmoke. From this terrace the River Oiss
was not visible, but its cataracts rang loud. Hard to imagine how, a bare two
hundred kilometers west, that stream began to flow through lands which had
become one huge city, from foothills to the Yet they were his
too—no, not his; the Vach Ynvory's, himself no more than the Hand for a few
decades before he gave back this flesh to the soil and this mind to the God.
Dhangodhan they had preserved little changed, because here was the country from
which they sprang, long ago. But their real work today was in Ardaig and
Tridaig, the capitals, where Brechdan presided over the Grand Council. And
beyond this planet, beyond Korych itself, out to the stars. Brechdan drew a deep
breath. The sense of power coursed in his veins. But that was a familiar wine;
today he awaited a joy more gentle. It did not show upon
him. He was too long schooled in chieftainship. Big, austere in a black robe,
brow seamed with an old battle scar which he disdained to have biosculped away,
he turned to the world only the face of Brechdan Ironrede, who stood second to
none but the Roidhun. A footfall sounded.
Brechdan turned. Chwioch, his bailiff, approached, in red tunic and green
trousers and modishly highcollared cape. He wasn't called "the Dandy"
for nothing. But he was loyal and able and an Ynvory born. Brechdan exchanged
kin-salutes, right hand to left shoulder. "Word from Shwylt
Shipsbane, Protector," Chwioch reported. "His business in the
Gwelloch will not detain him after all and he will come here this afternoon as
you desired." "Good."
Brechdan was, in fact, elated. Shwylt's counsel would be most helpful,
balancing Lifrith's impatience and Priadwyr's over-reliance on computer
technology. Though they were fine males, each in his own way, those three Hands
of their respective Vachs. Brechdan depended on them for ideas as much as for
the support they gave to help him control the Council. He would need them more
and more in the next few years, as events on Starkad were maneuvered toward
their climax. A thunderclap cut the
sky. Looking up, Brechdan saw a flitter descend with reckless haste. Scalloped
fins identified it as Ynvory common-property. "Your son, Protector!"
Chwioch cried with jubilation. "No doubt."
Brechdan must not unbend, not even when Elwych returned after three years. "Ah … shall
I cancel your morning audience, Protector?" "Certainly
not," Brechdan said. "Our client folk have their right to be heard. I
am too much absent from them." But we can have an hour
for our own. "I shall meet Heir
Elwych and tell him where you are, Protector." Chwioch hurried off. Brechdan waited. The sun
began to warm him through his robe. He wished Elwych's mother were still alive.
The wives remaining to him were good females, of course, thrifty, trustworthy,
cultivated, as females should be. But Nodhia had been—well, yes, he might as
well use a Terran concept—she had been fun. Elwych was Brechdan's dearest
child, not because he was the oldest now when two others lay dead on remote
planets, but because he was Nodhia's. May the earth lie light upon her. The gardener's shears
clattered to the flagstones. "Heir! Welcome home!" It was not
ceremonial for the old fellow to kneel and embrace the newcomer's tail, but
Brechdan didn't feel that any reproof was called for. Elwych the Swift strode
toward his father in the black and silver of the Navy. A captain's dragon was
sewn to his sleeve, the banners of Dhangodhan flamed over his head. He stopped
four paces off and gave a service salute. "Greeting, Protector." "Greeting,
swordarm." Brechdan wanted to hug that body to him. Their eyes met. The
youngster winked and grinned. And that was nigh as good. "Are the kindred
well?" Elwych asked: superfluously, as he had called from the inner moon
the moment his ship arrived for furlough. "Indeed,"
Brechdan said. They might then have
gone to the gynaeceum for family reunion. But the guard watched. Hand and Heir
could set him an example by talking first of things which concerned the race.
They need not be too solemn, however. "Had you a good
trip home?" Brechdan inquired. "Not exactly,"
Elwych replied. "Our main fire-control computer developed some kind of
bellyache. I thought best we put in at Vorida for repairs. The interimperial
situation, you know; it just might have exploded, and then a Terran unit just
might have chanced near us." "Vorida? I don't
recall—" "No reason why you
should. Too hooting many planets in the universe. A rogue in the Betelguese
sector. We keep a base—What's wrong?" Elwych alone noticed the
signs of his father being taken aback. "Nothing," Brechdan said.
"I assume the Terrans don't know about this orb." Elwych laughed.
"How could they?" How, in truth? There are
so many rogues, they are so little and dark, space is so vast. Consider: To an
approximation, the size of bodies which condensed out of the primordial gas is
inversely proportional to the frequency of their occurrence. At one end of the
scale, hydrogen atoms fill the galaxy, about one per cubic centimeter. At the
other end, you can count the monstrous O-type suns by yourself. (You may extend
the scale in both directions, from quanta to quasars; but no matter.) There are
about ten times as many M-type red dwarfs as there are G-type stars like Korych
or Sol. Your spaceship is a thousand times more likely to be struck by a
one-gram pebble than by a one-kilogram rock. And so, sunless planets are more
common than suns. They usually travel in clusters; nevertheless they are for
most practical purposes unobservable before you are nearly on top of them. They
pose no special hazard—whatever their number, the odds against one of them
passing through any particular point in space are literally astronomical—and
those whose paths are known can make useful harbors. Brechdan felt he must
correct an incomplete answer. "The instantaneous vibrations of a ship
under hyperdrive are detectable within a light-year," he said. "A
Terran or Betelgeusean could happen that close to your Vorida." Elwych flushed.
"And supposing one of our ships happened to be in the vicinity, what would
detection prove except that there was another ship?" He had been given the
wristslap of being told what any cub knew; he had responded with the slap of
telling what any cub should be able to reason out for himself. Brechdan could
not but smile. Elwych responded. A blow can also be an act of love. "I
capitulate," Brechdan said. "Tell me somewhat of your tour of duty.
We got far too few letters, especially in the last months." "Where I was then,
writing was a little difficult," Elwych said. "I can tell you now,
though. Saxo V." "Starkad?" Brechdan
exclaimed. "You, a line officer?" "Was this way. My
ship was making a courtesy call on the Betelgeuseans—or showing them the flag,
whichever way they chose to take it—when a courier from Fodaich Runei arrived.
Somehow the Terrans had learned about a submarine base he was having built off
an archipelago. The whole thing was simple, primitive, so the seafolk could
operate the units themselves, but it would have served to wreck landfolk
commerce in that area. Nobody knows how the Terrans got the information, but
Runei says they have a fiendishly good Intelligence chief. At any rate, they
gave some landfolk chemical depth bombs and told them where to sail and drop
them. And by evil luck, the explosions killed several key technicians of ours
who were supervising construction. Which threw everything into chaos. Our
mission there is scandalously short-handed. Runei sent to Betelgeuse as well as
Merseia, in the hope of finding someone like us who could substitute until
proper replacements arrived. So I put my engineers in a civilian boat. And
since that immobilized our ship as a fighting unit, I must go too." Brechdan nodded. An
Ynvory did not send personnel into danger and himself stay behind without
higher duties. He knew about the
disaster already, of course. Best not tell Elwych that. Time was unripe for the
galaxy to know how serious an interest Merseia had in Starkad. His son was
discreet. But what he did not know, he could not tell if the Terrans caught and
hypnoprobed him. "You must have had
an adventurous time," Brechdan said. "Well … yes.
Occasional sport. And an interesting planet." The anger still in Elwych
flared: "I tell you, though, our people are being betrayed." "How?" "Not enough of
them. Not enough equipment. Not a single armed spaceship. Why don't we support
them properly?" "Then the Terrans
will support their mission properly," Brechdan said. Elwych gazed long at his
father. The waterfall noise seemed to louder behind Dhangodhan's ramparts.
"Are we going to make a real fight for Starkad?" he murmured.
"Or do we scuttle away?" The scar throbbed on
Brechdan's forehead. "Who serve the Roidhun do not scuttle. But they may
strike bargains, when such appears good for the race." "So." Elwych
stared past him, across the valley mists. Scorn freighted his voice. "I
see. The whole operation is a bargaining counter, to win something from Terra.
Runei told me they'll send a negotiator here." "Yes, he is
expected soon." Because the matter was great, touching as it did on honor,
Brechdan allowed himself to grasp the shoulders of his son. Their eyes met.
"Elwych," Brechdan said gently, "you are young and perhaps do
not understand. But you must. Service to the race calls for more than courage,
more even than intelligence. It calls for wisdom. "Because we
Merseians have such instincts that most of us actively enjoy combat, we tend to
look on combat as an end in itself. And such is not true. That way lies
destruction. Combat is a means to an end—the hegemony of our race. And that in
turn is but a means to the highest end of all-absolute freedom for our race, to
make of the galaxy what they will. "But we cannot
merely fight for our goal. We must work. We must have patience. You will not
see us masters of the galaxy. It is too big. We may need a million years. On
that time scale, individual pride is a small sacrifice to offer, when it
happens that compromise or retreat serves us best." Elwych swallowed.
"Retreat from Terra?" "I trust not. Terra
is the immediate obstacle. The duty of your generation is to remove it." "I don't
understand," Elwych protested. "What is the Terran Empire? A clot of
stars. An old, sated, corrupt people who want nothing except to keep what their
fathers won for them. Why pay them any heed whatsoever? Why not expand away
from them—around them—until they're engulfed?" "Precisely because
Terra's objective is the preservation of the status quo," Brechdan said.
"You are forgetting the political theory that was supposed to be part of
your training. Terra cannot permit us to become more powerful than she.
Therefore she is bound to resist our every attempt to grow. And do not
underestimate her. That race still bears the chromosomes of conquerors. There
are still brave men in the Empire, devoted men, shrewd men … with the
experience of a history longer than ours to guide them. If they see doom before
them, they'll fight like demons. So, until we have sapped their strength, we
move carefully. Do you comprehend?" "Yes, my
father," Elwych yielded. "I hope so." Brechdan eased. They had
been serious for as long as their roles demanded. "Come." His face
cracked in another smile; he took his son's arm. "Let us go greet your
kin." They walked down
corridors hung with the shields of their ancestors and the trophies of hunts on
more than one planet. A gravshaft lifted them to the gynaeceum level. The whole tribe waited,
Elwych's stepmothers, sisters and their husbands and cubs, younger brothers.
Everything dissolved in shouts, laughter, pounding of backs, twining of tails,
music from a record player and a ringdance over the floor. One cry interrupted.
Brechdan bent above the cradle of his newest grandcub. I should speak about
marriage to Elwych, he thought. High time he begot an Heir's Heir. The small
being who lay on the furs wrapped a fist around the gnarled finger that stroked
him. Brechdan Ironrede melted within himself. "You shall have stars for
toys," he crooned. "Wudda, wudda, wudda." 4 Ensign Dominic Flandry,
Imperial Naval Flight Corps, did not know whether he was alive through luck or
management. At the age of nineteen, with the encoding molecules hardly settled
down on your commission, it was natural to think the latter. But had a single
one of the factors he had used to save himself been absent—He didn't care to
dwell on that. Besides, his troubles
were far from over. As a merchant ship belonging to the Sisterhood of
Kursoviki, the Archer had been given a radio by the helpful Terrans. But it was
crap-out; some thumblewit had exercised some Iron Age notion of maintenance.
Dragoika had agreed to put back for her home. But with a foul wind, they'd be
days at sea in this damned wallowing bathtub before they were even likely to
speak a boat with a transmitter in working order. That wasn't fatal per se.
Flandry could shovel local rations through the chowlock of his helmet;
Starkadian biochemistry was sufficiently like Terran that most foods wouldn't
poison him, and he carried vitamin supplements. The taste, though, my God, the
taste! Most ominous was the
fact that he had been shot down, and at no large distance from here. Perhaps
the Seatrolls, and Merseians, would let this Tigery craft alone. If they
weren't yet ready to show their hand, they probably would. However, his
misfortune indicated their preparations were more or less complete. When he
chanced to pass above their latest kettle of mischief, they'd felt so confident
they opened fire. "And then the
Outside Folk attacked you?" Ferok prodded. His voice came as a purr
through whistle of wind, rush and smack of waves, creak of rigging, all
intensified and distorted by the thick air. "Yes," Flandry
said. He groped for words. They'd given him an electronic cram in the language
and customs of Kursovikian civilization while the transport bore him from
Terra. But some things are hard to explain in pre-industrial terms. "A
type of vessel which can both submerge and fly rose from the water. Its radio
shout drowned my call and its firebeams wrecked my craft before mine could
pierce its thicker armor. I barely escaped my hull as it sank, and kept
submerged until the enemy went away. Then I flew off in search of help. The
small engine which lifted me was nigh exhausted when I came upon your
ship." Truly his gravity
impeller wouldn't lug him much further until the capacitors were recharged. He
didn't plan to use it again. What power remained in the pack on his shoulders
must be saved to operate the pump and reduction valve in the vitryl globe which
sealed off his head. A man couldn't breathe Starkadian sea-level air and
survive. Such an oxygen concentration would burn out his lungs faster than
nitrogen narcosis and carbon dioxide acidosis could kill him. He remembered how
Lieutenant Danielson had gigged him for leaving off the helmet. "Ensign, I
don't give a ball of fertilizer how uncomfortable the thing is, when you might
be enjoying your nice Terra-conditioned cockpit. Nor do I weep at the invasion
of privacy involved in taping your every action in flight. The purpose is to
make sure that pups like you, who know so much more than a thousand years of
astronautics could possibly teach them, obey regulations. The next offense will
earn you thirty seconds of nerve-lash. Dismissed." So you saved my life,
Flandry grumbled. You're still a snot-nosed bastard. Nobody was to blame for
his absent blaster. It was torn from the holster in those wild seconds of
scrambling clear. He had kept the regulation knife and pouchful of oddments. He
had boots and gray coverall, sadly stained and in no case to be compared with
the glamorous dress uniform. And that was just about the lot. Ferok lowered the plumy
thermosensor tendrils above his eyes: a frown. "If the vaz-Siravo search
what's left of your flier, down below, and don't find your body, they may guess
what you did and come looking for you," he said. "Yes," Flandry
agreed, "they may." He braced himself
against pitch and roll and looked outward—tall, the lankiness of adolescence
still with him; brown hair, gray eyes, a rather long and regular face which
Saxo had burned dark. Before him danced and shimmered a greenish ocean,
sun-flecks and whitecaps on waves that marched faster, in Starkadian gravity,
than on Terra. The sky was pale blue. Clouds banked gigantic on the horizon,
but in a dense atmosphere they did not portend storm. A winged thing cruised, a
sea animal broached and dove again. At its distance, Saxo was only a third as
broad as Sol is to Terra and gave half the illumination. The adaptable human
vision perceived this as normal, but the sun was merciless white, so brilliant
that one dared not look anywhere near. The short day stood at late afternoon,
and the temperature, never very high in these middle northern latitudes, was
dropping. Flandry shivered. Ferok made a contrast to
him. The land Starkadian, Tigery, Toborko, or whatever you wanted to call him,
was built not unlike a short man with disproportionately long legs. His hands
were four-fingered, his feet large and clawed, he flaunted a stubby tail. The
head was less anthropoid, round, with flat face tapering to a narrow chin. The
eyes were big, slanted, scarlet in the iris, beneath his fronded tendrils. The
nose, what there was of it, had a single slit nostril. The mouth was wide and
carnivore-toothed. The ears were likewise big, outer edges elaborated till they
almost resembled bat wings. Sleek fur covered his skin, black-striped orange
that shaded into white at the throat. He wore only a beaded
pouch, kept from flapping by thigh straps, and a curved sword scabbarded across
his back. By profession he was the boatswain, a high rank for a male on a
Kursovikian ship; as such, he was no doubt among Dragoika's lovers. By nature he
was impetuous, quarrelsome, and dog-loyal to his allegiances. Flandry liked
him. Ferok lifted a telescope
and swept it around an arc. That was a native invention. Kursoviki was the
center of the planet's most advanced land culture. "No sign of anything yet,"
he said. "Do you think yon Outsider flyboat may attack us?" "I doubt
that," Flandry said. "Most likely it was simply on hand because of
having brought some Merseian advisors, and shot at me because I might be
carrying instruments which would give me a clue as to what's going on down
below. It's probably returned to Kimraig by now." He hesitated before
continuing: "The Merseians, like us, seldom take a direct role in any
action, and then nearly always just as individual officers, not representatives
of their people. Neither of us wishes to provoke a response in kind." "Afraid?" Lips
curled back from fangs. "On your
account," Flandry said, somewhat honestly. "You have no dream of what
our weapons can do to a world." "World … hunh,
the thought's hard to seize. Well, let the Sisterhood try. I'm happy to be a
plain male." Flandry turned and
looked across the deck. The Archer was a big ship by Starkadian measure,
perhaps five hundred tons, broad in the beam, high in the stern, a carven post
at the prow as emblem of her tutelary spirit. A deckhouse stood amidships,
holding galley, smithy, carpenter shop, and armory. Everything was gaudily
painted. Three masts carried yellow square sails aloft, fore-and-aft beneath;
at the moment she was tacking on the latter and a genoa. The crew were about
their duties on deck and in the rigging. They numbered thirty male hands and
half a dozen female officers. The ship had been carrying timber and spices from
Ujanka port down the Chain archipelago. "What armament have
we?" he asked. "Our Terran deck
gun," Ferok told him. "Five of your rifles. We were offered more, but
Dragoika said they'd be no use till we had more people skilled with them.
Otherwise, swords, pikes, crossbows, knives, belaying pins, teeth, and nails."
He gestured at the mesh which passed from side to side of the hull, under the
keel. "If that twitches much, could mean a Siravo trying to put a hole in
our bottom. Then we dive after him. You'd be best for that, with your
gear." Flandry winced. His helmet
was adjustable for underwater; on Starkad, thй concentration of dissolved
oxygen was almost as high as in Terra's air. But he didn't fancy a scrap with a
being evolved for such an environment. "Why are you here,
yourself?" Ferok asked conversationally. "Pleasure or plunder?" "Neither. I was
sent." Flandry didn't add that the Navy reckoned it might as well use
Starkad to give certain promising young officers some experience.
"Promising" made him sound too immature. At once he realized he'd
actually sounded unaggressive and prevaricated in haste: "Of course, with
the chance of getting into a fight, I would have asked to go anyway." "They tell me your
females obey males. True?" "Well,
sometimes." The second mate passed by and Flandry's gaze followed her. She
had curves, a tawny mane rippling down her back, breasts standing fuller and
firmer than any girl could have managed without technological assistance, and a
nearly humanoid nose. Her clothing consisted of some gold bracelets. But her
differences from the Terran went deeper than looks. She didn't lactate; those
nipples fed blood directly to her infants. And hers was the more imaginative,
more cerebral sex, not subordinated in any culture, dominant in the islands
around Kursoviki. He wondered if that might trace back to something as simple
as the female body holding more blood and more capacity to regenerate it. "But who, then,
keeps order in your home country?" Ferok wondered. "Why haven't you
killed each other off?" "Um-m-m, hard to
explain," Flandry said. "Let me first see if I understand your ways,
to compare mine. For instance, you owe nothing to the place where you live,
right? I mean, no town or island or whatever is ruled, as a ship
is … right? Instead—at any rate in this part of the world—the females
are organized into associations like the Sisterhood, whose members may live
anywhere, which even have their special languages. They own all important
property and make all important decisions through those associations. Thus
disputes among males have little effect on them. Am I right?" "I suppose so. You
might have put it more politely." "Apology-of-courage
is offered. I am a stranger. Now among my people—" A shout fell from the
crow's nest. Ferok whirled and pointed his telescope. The crew sprang to the
starboard rail, clustered in the shrouds, and yelled. Dragoika bounded from
the captain's cabin under the poop. She held a four-pronged fish spear in one
hand, a small painted drum beneath her arm. Up the ladder she went, to stand by
the quartermistress at the wheel and look for herself. Then, coolly, she tapped
her drum on one side, plucked the steel strings across the recessed head on the
other. Twang and thump carried across noise like a bugle call. All hands to
arms and battle stations! "The
vaz-Siravo!" Ferok shouted above clamor. "They're on us!" He
made for the deckhouse. Restored to discipline, the crew were lining up for
helmets, shields, byrnies, and weapons. Flandry strained his
eyes into the glare off the water. A score or so blue dorsal fins clove it,
converging on the ship. And suddenly, a hundred meters to starboard, a
submarine rose. A little, crude thing,
doubtless home-built to a Merseian design—for if you want to engineer a
planet-wide war among primitives, you should teach them what they can make and
do for themselves. The hull was greased leather stretched across a framework of
some undersea equivalent of wood. Harness trailed downward to the four fish
which pulled it; he could barely discern them as huge shadows under the
surface. The deck lay awash. But an outsize catapult projected therefrom.
Several dolphin-like bodies with transparent globes on their heads and
powerpacks on their backs crouched alongside. They rose onto flukes and
flippers; their arms reached to swing the machine around. "Dommaneek!"
Dragoika screeched. "Dommaneek Falan-daree! Can you man ours?" "Aye, aye!"
The Terran ran prow-ward. Planks rolled and thudded beneath his feet. On the forward deck, the
two females whose duty it was were trying to unlimber the gun. They worked
slowly, getting in each other's way, spitting curses. There hadn't yet been
time to drill many competent shots, even with a weapon as simple as this, a
rifle throwing 38 mm. chemical shells. Before they got the range, that catapult
might— "Gangway!"
Flandry shoved the nearest aside. She snarled and swatted at him with long red
nails. Dragoika's drum rippled an order. Both females fell back from him. He opened the breech,
grabbed a shell from the ammo box, and dogged it in. The enemy catapult
thumped. A packet arced high, down again, made a near miss and burst into flame
which spread crimson and smoky across the waves. Some version of Greek
fire—undersea oil wells—Flandry put his eye to the range finder. He was too excited
to be scared. But he must lay the gun manually. A hydraulic system would have
been too liable to breakdown. In spite of good balance and self-lubricating
bearings, the barrel swung with nightmare slowness. The Seatrolls were
rewinding their catapult … before Andromeda, they were fast! They
must use hydraulics. Dragoika spoke to the
quartermistress. She put the wheel hard over. Booms swung over the deck. The
jib flapped thunderous until crewmales reset the sheets. The Archer came about.
Flandry struggled to compensate. He barely remembered to keep one foot on the
brake, lest his gun travel too far. Bet those she-cats would've forgotten. The
enemy missile didn't make the vessel's superstructure as intended. But it
struck the hull amidships. Under this oxygen pressure, fire billowed
heavenward. Flandry pulled the
lanyard. His gun roared and kicked. A geyser fountained, mingled with
splinters. One draught fish leaped, threshed, and died. The rest already
floated bellies up. "Got him!" Flandry whooped. Dragoika plucked a
command. Most of the crew put aside their weapons and joined a firefighting
party. There was a hand pump at either rail, buckets with ropes bent to them,
sails to drag from the deckhouse and wet and lower. Ferok, or someone,
yelled through voices, wind, waves, brawling, and smoke of the flames. The
Seatrolls were coming over the opposite rail. They must have climbed
the nets. (Better invent a different warning gadget, raced through Flandry's
mind.) They wore the Merseian equipment which had enabled their kind to carry
the war ashore elsewhere on Starkad. Waterfilled helmets covered the blunt
heads, black absorbent skinsuits kept everything else moist. Pumps cycled
atmospheric oxygen, running off powerpacks. The same capacitors energized their
legs. Those were clumsy. The bodies must be harnessed into a supporting
framework, the two flippers and the fluked tail control four mechanical limbs
with prehensile feet. But they lurched across the deck, huge, powerful, their
hands holding spears and axes and a couple of waterproof machine pistols. Ten
of them were now aboard … and how many sailors could be spared from
the fire? A rifle bullet wailed. A
Seatroll sprayed lead in return. Tigeries crumpled. Their blood was human
color. Flandry rammed home
another shell and lobbed it into the sea some distance off. "Why?"
screamed a gunner. "May have been more
coming," he said. "I hope hydrostatic shock got 'em." He didn't
notice he used Anglic. Dragoika cast her fish
spear. One pistol wielder went down, the prongs in him. He scrabbled at the
shaft. Rifles barked, crossbows snapped, driving his mate to shelter between
the deckhouse and a lifeboat. Then combat ramped, leaping Tigeries, lumbering
Seatrolls, sword against ax, pike against spear, clash, clatter, grunt, shriek,
chaos run loose. Several firefighters went for their weapons. Dragoika drummed
them back to work. The Seatrolls made for them, to cut them down and let the
ship burn. The armed Tigeries tried to defend them. The enemy pistoleer kept
the Kursovikian rifle shooters pinned down behind masts and
bollards—neutralized. The battle had no more shape than that. A bullet splintered the
planks a meter from Flandry. For a moment, panic locked him where he stood.
What to do, what to do? He couldn't die. He mustn't. He was Dominic, himself,
with a lifetime yet to live. Outnumbered though they were, the Seatrolls need
but wreak havoc till the fire got beyond control and he was done. Mother! Help
me! For no sound reason, he
remembered Lieutenant Danielson. Rage blossomed in him. He bounded down the
ladder and across the main deck. A Seatroll chopped at him. He swerved and
continued. Dragoika's door stood
under the poop. He slid the panel aside and plunged into her cabin. It was
appointed in barbaric luxury. Sunlight sickled through an oval port, across the
bulkhead as the ship rolled, touching bronze candlesticks, woven tapestry, a
primitive sextant, charts and navigation tables inscribed on parchment. He
snatched what he had left here to satisfy her curiosity, his impeller, buckled
the unit on his back with frantic fingers and hooked in his capacitors. Now,
that sword, which she hadn't taken time to don. He re-emerged, flicked
controls, and rose. Over the deckhouse! The
Seatroll with the machine pistol lay next it, a hard target for a rifle,
himself commanding stem and stern. Flandry drew blade. The being heard the
slight noise and tried awkwardly to look up. Flandry struck. He missed the hand
but knocked the gun loose. It flipped over the side. He whirred aft, smiting
from above. "I've got him!" he shouted. "I've got him! Come out
and do some real shooting!" The fight was soon
finished. He used a little more energy to help spread the wet sail which
smothered the fire. After dark, Egrima and
Buruz again ruled heaven. They cast shivering glades across the waters. Few
stars shone through, but one didn't miss them with so much other beauty. The
ship plowed northward in an enormous murmurous hush. Dragoika stood with
Flandry by the totem at the prow. She had offered thanks. Kursovikian religion
was a paganism more inchoate than any recorded from ancient Terra—the Tigery
mind was less interested than the human in finding ultimate causes—but ritual
was important. Now the crew had returned to watch or to sleep and they two were
alone. Her fur was sparked with silver, her eyes pools of light. "Our thanks belong
more to you," she said softly. "I am high in the Sisterhood. They
will be told, and remember." "Oh, well."
Flandry shuffled his feet and blushed. "But have you not
endangered yourself? You explained what scant strength is left in those boxes
which keep you alive. And then you spent it to fly about." "Uh, my pump can be
operated manually if need be." "I shall appoint a
detail to do so." "No need. You see,
now I can use the Siravo powerpacks. I have tools in my pouch for adapting
them." "Good." She
looked awhile into the shadows and luminance which barred the deck. "That
one whose pistol you removed—" Her tone was wistful. "No, ma'm,"
Flandry said firmly. "You cannot have him. He's the only survivor of the
lot. We'll keep him alive and unhurt." "I simply thought
of questioning him about their plans. I know a little of their language. We've
gained it from prisoners or parleys through the ages. He wouldn't be too
damaged, I think." "My superiors can
do a better job in Highport." Dragoika sighed.
"As you will." She leaned against him. "I've met vaz-Terran
before, but you are the first I have really known well." Her tail wagged.
"I like you." Flandry gulped.
"I … I like you too." "You fight like a
male and think like a female. That's something new. Even in the far southern
islands—" She laid an arm around his waist. Her fur was warm and silken
where it touched his skin. Somebody had told him once that could you breathe
their air undiluted, the Tigeries would smell like new-mown hay. "I'll
have joy of your company." "Um-m-m … uh."
What can I say? "Pity you must wear
that helmet," Dragoika said. "I'd like to taste your lips. But
otherwise we're not made so differently, our two kinds. Will you come to my
cabin?" For an instant that
whirled, Flandry was tempted. He had everything he could do to answer. It
wasn't based on past lectures about taking care not to offend native mores, nor
on principle, nor, most certainly, on fastidiousness. If anything, her
otherness made her the more piquant. But he couldn't really predict what she
might do in a close relationship, and— "I'm deeply
sorry," he said. "I'd love to, but I'm under a—" what was the
word?—"a geas." She was neither offended
nor much surprised. She had seen a lot of different cultures. "Pity,"
she said. "Well, you know where the forecastle is. Goodnight." She
padded aft. En route, she stopped to collect Ferok. —and besides, those
fangs were awfully intimidating. 5 When Lord Hauksberg
arrived in Highport, Admiral Enriques and upper-echelon staff had given a
formal welcoming party for their distinguished visitor and his aides as
protocol required. Hauksberg was expected to reciprocate on the eve of
departure. Those affairs were predictably dull. In between, however, he invited
various officers to small gatherings. A host of shrewd graciousness, he thus
blunted resentment which he was bound to cause by his interviewing of
overworked men and his diversion of already inadequate armed forces to security
duty. "I still don't see
how you rate," Jan van Zuyl complained from the bunk where he sprawled.
"A lousy ensign like you." "You're an ensign
yourself, me boy," Flandry reminded him from the dresser. He gave his blue
tunic a final tug, pulled on his white gloves, and buffed the jetflare insignia
on his shoulders. "Yes, but not a
lousy one," said his roommate. "I'm a hero.
Remember?" "I'm a hero too.
We're all heroes." Van Zuyl's gaze prowled their dismal little chamber.
The girlie animations hardly brightened it. "Give L'Etoile a kiss for
me." "You mean she'll be
there?" Flandry's pulses jumped. "She was when
Carruthers got invited. Her and Sharine and—" "Carruthers is a
lieutenant j.g. Therefore he is ex officio a liar. Madame Cepheid's choicest
items are not available to anyone below commander." "He swears milord
had 'em on hand, and in hand, for the occasion. So he lies. Do me a favor and
elaborate the fantasy on your return. I'd like to keep that particular
illusion." "You provide the
whisky and I'll provide the tales." Flandry adjusted his cap to
micrometrically calculated rakish-ness. "Mercenary
wretch," van Zuyl groaned. "Anyone else would lie for pleasure and
prestige." "Know, O miserable
one, that I possess an inward serenity which elevates me far beyond any need
for your esteem. Yet not beyond need for your booze. Especially after the last
poker game. And a magnificent evening to you. I shall return." Flandry proceeded down
the hall and out the main door of the junior officers' dorm. Wind struck
viciously at him. Sea-level air didn't move fast, being too dense, but on this
mountaintop Saxo could energize storms of more than terrestroid ferocity. Dry
snow hissed through chill and clamor. Flandry wrapped his cloak about him with
a sigh for lost appearances, hung onto his cap, and ran. At his age he had soon
adapted to the gravity. HQ was the largest
building in Highport, which didn't say much, in order to include a level of
guest suites. Flandry had remarked on that to Commander Abrams, in one of their
conversations following the numerous times he'd been summoned for further
questioning about his experience with the Tigeries. The Intelligence chief had
a knack for putting people at their ease. "Yes, sir, quite a few of my
messmates have wondered if—uh—" "If the Imperium
has sludge on the brain, taking up shipping space with luxuries for pestiferous
junketeers that might've been used to send us more equipment. Hey?" Abrams
prompted. "Uh … nobody's
committing lиse majestй, sir." "The hell they
aren't. But I guess you can't tell me so right out. In this case, though, you
boys are mistaken." Abrams jabbed his cigar at Flandry. "Think, son.
We're here for a political purpose. So we need political support. We won't get
it by antagonizing courtiers who take champagne and lullaby beds for granted. Tell
your friends that silly-looking hotel is an investment." Here's where I find out.
A scanner checked Flandry and opened the door. The lobby beyond was warm! It
was also full of armed guards. They saluted and let him by with envious
glances. But as he went up the gravshaft, his self-confidence grew thinner.
Rather than making him bouncy, the graduated shift to Terran weight gave a
sense of unfirmness. "Offhand,"
Abrams had said when he learned about the invitation, "milord seems to
want you for a novelty. You've a good yarn and you're a talented spinner. Nu,
entertain him. But watch yourself. Hauksberg's no fool. Nor any idler. In fact,
I gather that every one of his little soirйes has served some business
purpose—off-the-record information, impressions of what we really expect will
happen and expect to do and how we really feel about the whole schtick." By that time, Flandry
knew him well enough to venture a grin. "How do we really feel, sir? I'd
like to know." "What's your
opinion? Your own, down inside? I haven't got any recorder turned on." Flandry frowned and
sought words. "Sir, I only work here, as they say.
But … indoctrination said our unselfish purpose is to save the land
civilizations from ruin; islanders depend on the sea almost as much as the
fishfolk. And our Imperial purpose is to contain Merseian expansionism
whereever it occurs. But I can't help wondering why anybody wants this
planet." "Confidentially,"
Abrams said, "my main task is to find the answer to that. I haven't
succeeded yet." —A liveried servant
announced Flandry. He stepped into a suite of iridescent walls, comfortable
loungers, an animation showing a low-gee production of Ondine. Behind a buffet
table poised another couple of servants, and three more circulated. A dozen men
stood conversing: officers of the mission in dress uniform, Hauksberg's staff
in colorful mufti. Only one girl was present. Flandry was a little too nervous
for disappointment. It was a relief to see Abrams' square figure. "Ah. Our gallant
ensign, eh?" A yellow-haired man set down his glass—a waiter with a tray
was there before he had completed the motion—and sauntered forth. His garments
were conservatively purple and gray, but they fitted like another skin and showed
him to be in better physical shape than most nobles. "Welcome.
Hauksberg." Flandry saluted.
"My lord." "At ease, at
ease." Hauksberg made a negligent gesture. "No rank or ceremony
tonight. Hate 'em, really." He took Flandry's elbow. "C'mon and be
introduced." The boy's superiors
greeted him with more interest than hitherto. They were men whom Starkad had
darkened and leaned; honors sat burnished on their tunics; they could be seen
to resent how patronizingly the Terran staffers addressed one of their own.
"—and my concubine, the right honorable Persis d'Io." "I am privileged to
meet you, Ensign," she said as if she meant it. Flandry decided she was
an adequate substitute for L'Etoile, at least in ornamental function. She was
equipped almost as sumptuously as Dragoika, and her shimmerlyn gown emphasized
the fact. Otherwise she wore a fire ruby at her throat and a tiara on
high-piled crow's-wing tresses. Her features were either her own or shaped by
an imaginative biosculptor: big green eyes, delicately arched nose, generous
mouth, uncommon vivacity. "Please get yourself a drink and a smoke,"
she said. "You'll need a soothed larynx. I intend to make you talk a
lot." "Uh … um—"
Flandry barely stopped his toes from digging in the carpet. The hand he closed
on a proffered wine glass was damp. "Little to talk about, Donna. Lots of
men have, uh, had more exciting things happen to them." "Hardly so
romantic, though," Hauksberg said. "Sailin" with a pirate crew,
et cet'ra." "They're not
pirates, my lord," Flandry blurted. "Merchants … Pardon
me." Hauksberg studied him.
"You like 'em, eh?" "Yes, sir,"
Flandry said. "Very much." He weighed his words, but they were
honest. "Before I got to know the Tigeries well, my mission here was only
a duty. Now I want to help them." "Commendable.
Still, the sea dwellers are also sentient bein's, what? And the Merseians, for
that matter. Pity everyone's at loggerheads." Flandry's ears burned.
Abrams spoke what he dared not: "My lord, those fellow beings of the
ensign's did their level best to kill him." "And in
retaliation, after he reported, an attack was made on a squadron of
theirs," Hauksberg said sharply. "Three Merseians were killed, plus a
human. I was bein' received by Commandant Runei at the time.
Embarrassin'." "I don't doubt the
Fodaich stayed courteous to the Emperor's representative," Abrams said.
"He's a charming scoundrel when he cares to be. But my lord, we have an
authorized, announced policy of paying back any attacks on our mission."
His tone grew sardonic. "It's a peaceful, advisory mission, in a territory
claimed by neither empire. So it's entitled to protection. Which means that
bushwhacking its personnel has got to be made expensive." "And if Runei
ordered a return raid?" Hauksberg challenged. "He didn't, my
lord." "Not yet. Bit of
evidence for Merseia's conciliatory attitude, what? Or could be my presence
influenced Runei. One day soon, though, if these skirmishes continue, a real
escalation will set in. Then everybody'll have the devil's personal job
controllin' the degree of escalation. Might fail. The time to stop was
yesterday." "Seems to me
Merseia's escalated quite a big hunk, starting operations this near our main
base." "The seafolk have
done so. They had Merseian help, no doubt, but it's their war and the
landfolk's. No one else's." Abrams savaged a cold
cigar. "My lord," he growled, "sea-folk and landfolk alike are
divided into thousands of communities, scores of civilizations. Many never
heard of each other before. The dwellers in the Zletovar were nothing but a
nuisance to the Kursovikians, till now. So who gave them the idea of mounting a
concerted attack? Who's gradually changing what was a stable situation into a
planet-wide war of race against race? Merseia!" "You overreach
yourself, Commander," said Captain Abd-es-Salem reluctantly. The
viscount's aides looked appalled. "No, no."
Hauksberg smiled into the angry brown face confronting him. "I appreciate
frankness. Terra's got quite enough sycophants without exportin' 'em. How can I
find facts as I'm s'posed to without listenin'? Waiter, refill—Commander
Abrams' glass." "Just what are the,
ah, opposition doing in local waters?" inquired a civilian. Abrams shrugged.
"We don't know. Kursovikian ships have naturally begun avoiding that area.
We could try sending divers, but we're holding off. You see, Ensign Flandry did
more than have an adventure. More, yet, than win a degree of respect and good
will among the Tigeries that'll prove useful to us. He's gathered information
about them we never had before, details that escaped the professional
xenologists, and given me the data as tightly organized as a limerick. Above
the lot, he delivered a live Seatroll prisoner." Hauksberg lit a cheroot.
"I gather that's unusual?" "Yes, sir, for
obvious environmental reasons as well as because the Tigeries normally barbecue
any they take." Persis d'Io grimaced.
"Did you say you like them?" she scolded Flandry. "Might be hard for
a civilized being to understand, Donna," Abrams drawled. "We prefer
nuclear weapons that can barbecue entire planets. Point is, though, our lad
here thought up gadgets to keep that Seatroll in health, things a smith and
carpenter could make aboard ship. I better not get too specific, but I've got
hopes about the interrogation." "Why not tell
us?" Hauksberg asked. "Surely you don't think anyone here is a
Merseian in disguise." "Probably
not," Abrams said. "However, you people are bound on to the enemy's
home planet. Diplomatic mission or no, I can't impose the risk on you of
carrying knowledge they'd like to have." Hauksberg laughed.
"I've never been called a blabbermouth more tactfully." Persis interrupted.
"No arguments, please, darling. I'm too anxious to hear Ensign Flandry." "You're on,
son," Abrams said. They took loungers.
Flandry received a goldleaf-tipped cigaret from Persis' own fingers. Wine and
excitement bubbled in him. He made the tale somewhat better than true:
sufficient to drive Abrams into a coughing fit. "—and so, one day
out of Ujanka, we met a ship that could put in a call for us. A flier took me
and the prisoner off." Persis sighed. "You
make it sound such fun. Have you seen your friends again since?" "Not yet, Donna.
I've been too busy working with Commander Abrams." In point of fact, he
had done the detail chores of data correlation on a considerably lower level.
"I've been temporarily assigned to his section. I do have an invitation to
visit down in Ujanka, and imagine I'll be ordered to accept." "Right,"
Captain Menotti said. "One of our problems has been that, while the
Sisterhood accepts our equipment and some of our advice, they've remained wary
of us. Understandable, when we're so foreign to them, and when their own
Seatroll neighbors were never a real menace. We've achieved better liaison with
less developed Starkadian cultures. Kursoviki is too proud, too jealous of its
privacies, I might say too sophisticated, to take us as seriously as we'd like.
Here we may have an entering wedge." "And also in your
prisoner," Hauksberg said thoughtfully. "Want to see him." "What?" Abrams
barked. "Impossible!" "Why?" "Why—that is—" "Wouldn't fulfill
my commission if I didn't," Hauksberg said. "I must insist." He
leaned forward. "You see, could be this is a wedge toward somethin' still
more important. Peace." '"How
so … my lord?" "If you pump him as
dry's I imagine you plan, you'll find out a lot about his culture. They won't
be the faceless enemy, they'll be real bein's with real needs and desires. He
can accompany an envoy of ours to his people. We can—not unthinkable, y'
know—we can p'rhaps head off this latest local war. Negotiate a peace between
the Kursovikians and their neighbors." "Or between lions
and lambs?" Abrams snapped. "How do you start? They'd never come near
any submarine of ours." "Go out in native
ships, then." "We haven't the men
for it. Damn few humans know how to operate a windjammer these days, and
sailing on Starkad is a different art anyhow. We should get Kursovikians to
take us on a peace mission? Ha!" "What if their chum
here asked 'em? Don't you think that might be worth a try?" "Oh!" Persis,
who sat beside him, laid a hand over Flandry's. "If you could—" Under those eyes, he
glowed happily and said he would be delighted. Abrams gave him a bleak look.
"If ordered, of course," he added in a hurry. "I'll discuss the
question with your superiors," Hauksberg said. "But gentlemen, this
is s'posed to be a social evenin'. Forget business and have another drink or
ten, eh?" His gossip from Terra
was scandalous and comical. "Darling," Persis said, "you mustn't
cynicize our guest of honor. Let's go talk more politely, Ensign." "W-w-with joy,
Donna." The suite was interior,
but a viewscreen gave on the scene outside. Snowfall had stopped; mountaintops
lay gaunt and white beneath the moons. Persis shivered. "What a dreadful
place. I pray we can bring you home soon." He was emboldened to
say, "I never expected a, uh, highborn and, uh, lovely lady to come this
long, dull, dangerous way." She laughed. "I
highborn? But thanks. You're sweet." Her lashes fluttered. "If I can
help my lord by traveling with him … how could I refuse? He's working
for Terra. So are you. So should I. All of us together, wouldn't that be
best?" She laughed again. "I'm sorry to be the only girl here. Would
your officers mind if we danced a little?" He went back to quarters
with his head afloat. Nonetheless, next day he gave Jan van Zuyl a good
bottle's worth. At the center of a
soundproofed room, whose fluoros glared with Saxo light, the Siravo floated in
a vitryl tank surrounded by machines. He was big, 210
centimeters in length and thick of body. His skin was glabrous, deep blue on
the back, paler greenish blue on the stomach, opalescent on the gillcovers. In
shape he suggested a cross between dolphin, seal, and man. But the flukes, and
the two flippers near his middle, were marvels of musculature with some
prehensile capability. A fleshy dorsal fin grew above. Not far behind the head
were two short, strong arms; except for vestigial webs, the hands were
startlingly humanlike. The head was big and golden of eyes, blunt of snout,
with quivering cilia flanking a mouth that had lips. Abrams, Hauksberg, and
Flandry entered. ("You come too," the commander had said to the
ensign. "You're in this thing ass deep.") The four marines on guard
presented arms. The technicians straightened from their instruments. "At ease,"
Abrams said. "Freely translated: get the hell back to work. How's she
coming, Leong?" "Encouraging,
sir," the scientific chief answered. "Computation from neurological
and encйphalographie data shows he can definitely stand at least a
half-intensity hypnoprobing without high probability of permanent lesion. We
expect to have apparatus modified for underwater use in another couple of
days." Hauksberg went to the
tank. The swimmer moved toward him. Look met look; those were beautiful eyes in
there. Hauksberg was flushing as he turned about. "Do you mean to torture
that bein'?" he demanded. "A light
hypnoprobing isn't painful, my lord," Abrams said. "You know what I
mean. Psychological torture. 'Specially when he's in the hands of utter aliens.
Ever occur to you to talk with him?" "That's easy? My
lord, the Kursovikians have tried for centuries. Our only advantages over them
are that we have a developed theory of linguistics, and vocalizers to reproduce
his kind of sounds more accurately. From the Tigeries and xenological records
we have a trifle of his language. But only a trifle. The early expeditions
investigated this race more thoroughly in the Kimraig area, where the Merseians
are now, no doubt for just that reason. The cultural patterns of Charlie here are
completely unknown to us. And he hasn't been exactly cooperative." "Would you be, in
his place?" "Hope not. But my
lord, we're in a hurry too. His people may be planning a massive operation,
like against settlements in the Chain. Or he may up and die on us. We think he
has an adequate diet and such, but how can we be certain?" Hauksberg
scowled. "You'll destroy any chance of gettin' his cooperation, let alone
his trust." "For negotiation
purposes? So what have we lost? But we won't necessarily alienate him forever.
We don't know his psyche. He may well figure ruthlessness is in the day's work.
God knows Tigeries in small boats get short shrift from any Seatrolls they
meet. And—" The great blue shape glided off to the end of the
tank—"he looks pretty, but he is no kin of you or me or the
landfolk." "He thinks. He
feels." "Thinks and feels
what? I don't know. I do know he isn't even a fish. He's homeothermic; his
females give live birth and nurse their young. Under high atmospheric pressure,
there's enough oxygen dissolved in water to support an active metabolism and a
good brain. That must be why intelligence evolved in the seas: biological
competition like you hardly ever find in the seas of Terra-type planets. But
the environment is almost as strange to us as Jupiter." "The Merseians get
along with his kind." "Uh-huh. They took
time to learn everything we haven't. We've tried to xenologize ourselves, in
regions the conflict hasn't reached so far, but the Merseians have always found
out and arranged trouble." "Found out
how?" Hauksberg pounced. "By spies?" "No, surveillance.
'Bout all that either side has available. If we could somehow get access to
their undersea information—" Abrams snapped his mouth shut and pulled out
a cigar. Hauksberg eased. He
smiled. "Please don't take me wrong, Commander. Assure you I'm not some
weepin' idealist. You can't make an omelet, et cet'ra. I merely object to
breakin' every egg in sight. Rather messy, that." He paused. "Won't
bother you more today. But I want a full report on this project to date, and
regular bulletins. I don't forbid hypnoprobin' categorically, but I will not
allow any form of torture. And I'll be back." He couldn't quite suppress a
moue of distaste. "No, no, thanks awf'lly but you needn't escort me out.
Good day, gentlemen." The door closed on his
elegance. Abrams went into a conference with Leong. They talked low. The hum,
click, buzz of machines filled the room, which was cold. Flandry stood staring
at the captive he had taken. "A millo for 'em," Abrams said. Flandry started. The
older man had joined him on cat feet. "Sir?" "Your thoughts.
What're you turning over in your mind, besides the fair d'Io?" Flandry blushed. "I
was wondering, sir. Hau—milord was right. You are pushing ahead terribly fast,
aren't you?" "Got to." "No," said
Flandry earnestly. "Pardon, sir, but we could use divers and subs and
probes to scout the Zletovar. Charlie here has more value in the long run, for
study. I've read what I could find about the Seatrolls. They are an unknown
quantity. You need a lot more information before you can be sure that any given
kind of questioning will show results." Beneath lowered bushy
brows, behind a tobacco cloud, Abrams regarded him. "Telling me my
business?" His tone was mild. "No, sir. Certainly
not. I—I've gotten plenty of respect for you." The idea flamed. "Sir!
You do have more information than you admit! A pipeline to—" "Shut up." The
voice stayed quiet, but Flandry gulped and snapped to an automatic brace.
"Keep shut up. Understand?" "Y-yes, sir." Abrams glanced at his
team. None of them had noticed. "Son," he
murmured, "you surprise me. You really do. You're wasted among those
flyboys. Ever considered transferring to the spyboys?" Flandry bit his lip. "All right,"
Abrams said. "Tell uncle. Why don't you like the idea?" "It—I mean—No, sir,
I'm not suited." "You look bundled
to the ears to me. Give me a break. Talk honest. I don't mind being called a
son of a bitch. I've got my birth certificate." "Well—"
Flandry rallied his courage. "This is a dirty business, sir." "Hm. You mean for
instance right here? Charlie?" "Yes, sir.
I … well, I sort of got sent to the Academy. Everybody took for
granted I'd go. So did I. I was pretty young." Abrams' mouth twitched
upward. "I've … started
to wonder, though," Flandry stumbled. "Things I heard at the
party … uh, Donna d'Io said—You know, sir, I wasn't scared in that
sea action, and afterward it seemed like a grand, glorious victory. But now
I—I've begun remembering the dead. One Tigery took a whole day to die. And
Charlie, he doesn't so much as know what's going to happen to him!" Abrams smoked a while.
"All beings are brothers, eh?" he said. "No, sir, not
exactly, but—" "Not exactly? You
know better'n that. They aren't! Not even all men are. Never have been. Sure,
war is degrading. But there are worse degradations. Sure, peace is wonderful.
But you can't always have peace, except in death, and you most definitely can't
have a peace that isn't founded on hard common interest, that doesn't pay off
for everybody concerned. Sure, the Empire is sick. But she's ours. She's all
we've got. Son, the height of irresponsibility is to spread your love and
loyalty so thin that you haven't got enough left for the few beings and the few
institutions which rate it from you." Flandry stood
motionless. "I know,"
Abrams said. "They rammed you through your education. You were supposed to
learn what civilization is about, but there wasn't really time, they get so
damned few cadets with promise these days. So here you are, nineteen years old,
loaded to the hatches with technical information and condemned to make for
yourself every philosophical mistake recorded in history. I'd like you to read
some books I pack around in micro. Ancient stuff mostly, a smidgin of
Aristotle, Machiavelli, Jefferson, Clausewitz, Jouvenel, Michaelis. But that'll
take a while. You just go back to quarters today. Sit. Think over what I
said." "Has the Fodaich
not seen the report I filed?" asked Dwyr the Hook. "Yes, of
course," Runei answered. "But I want to inquire about certain
details. Having gotten into the Terran base, even though your objective was too
well guarded to burgle, why did you not wait for an opportunity?" "The likelihood did
not appear great, Fodaich. And dawn was coming. Someone might have addressed
me, and my reply might have provoked suspicion. My orders were to avoid
unnecessary risks. The decision to leave at once is justified in retrospect,
since I did not find my vehicle in the canyon when I returned. A Terran patrol
must have come upon it. Thus I had to travel overland to our hidden depot, and
hence my delay in returning here." "What about that
other patrol you encountered on the way? How much did they see?" "Very little, I
believe, Fodaich. We were in thick forest, and they shot blindly when I failed
to answer their challenge. They did, as you know, inflict considerable damage
on me, and it is fortunate that I was then so close to my goal that I could
crawl the rest of the way after escaping them." "Khr-r-r,"
Runei sighed. "Well, the attempt was worth making. But this seems to make
you supernumerary on Starkad, doesn't it?" "I trust I may
continue to serve in honor." Dwyr gathered nerve. "Fodaich, I did
observe one thing from afar while in Highport, which may or may not be
significant. Abrams himself walked downstreet in close conversation with a
civilian who had several attendants—I suspect the delegate from Terra." "Who is most
wonderfully officious," Runei mused, "and who is proceeding on from
here. Did you catch anything of what was said?" "The noise level
was high, Fodaich. With the help of aural amplification and focusing, I could
identify a few words like 'Merseia.' My impression is that Abrams may be going
with him. In such case, Abrams had better be kept under special watch." "Yes." Runei
stroked his chin. "A possibility. I shall consider it. Hold yourself in
readiness for a quick departure." Dwyr saluted and left.
Runei sat alone. The whirr of ventilators filled his lair. Presently he nodded
to himself, got out his chessboard, and pondered his next move. A smile touched
his lips. 6 Starkad rotated thrice
more. Then the onslaught came. Flandry was in Ujanka.
The principal seaport of Kurijsoviki stood on "Here my mothers
dwelt since the town was founded," she told her guest. "Here Chupa
once feasted. Here the staircase ran with blood on the Day of the Gulch. There
are too many ghosts for me to abandon." She chuckled, deep in her throat,
and gestured around the stone-built room, at furs, carpets, furnishings, books,
weapons, bronze vases and candelabra, goblets of glass and seashell, souvenirs
and plunder from across a quarter of the planet. "Also, too much stuff to
move." Flandry glanced out the
third-floor window. A cobbled way twisted between tenements that could double
as fortresses. A pair of cowled males slunk by, swords drawn; a drum thuttered;
the yells and stampings and metal on metal of a brawl flared brief but loud. "What about
robbers?" he asked. Ferok grinned.
"They've learned better." He sprawled on a couch whose curves
suggested a ship. Likewise did his skipper and Iguraz, a portly grizzled male
who had charge of Seatraders' Castle. In the gloom of the chamber, their eyes
and jewelry seemed to glow. The weather outside was bright but chill. Flandry
was glad he had chosen to wear a thick coverall on his visit. They wouldn't
appreciate Terran dress uniform anyhow. "I don't understand
you people," Dragoika said. She leaned forward and sniffed the mild
narcotic smoke from a brazier. "Good to see you again, Dommaneek, but I
don't understand you. What's wrong with a fight now and then? And—after
personally defeating the vaz-Siravo—you come here to babble about making peace
with them!" Flandry turned. The
murmur of his airpump seemed to grow in his head. "I was told to broach
the idea," he replied. "But you don't like
it yourself?" Iguraz wondered. "Then why beneath heaven do you speak
it?" "Would you tolerate
insubordination?" Flandry said. "Not at sea,"
Dragoika admitted. "But land is different." "Well, if nothing
else, we vaz-Terran here find ourselves in a situation like sailors."
Flandry tried to ease his nerves by pacing. His boots felt heavy. "Why don't you
simply wipe out the vaz-Siravo for us?" Ferok asked. "Shouldn't be
hard if your powers are as claimed." Dragoika surprised
Flandry by lowering her tendrils and saying, "No such talk. Would you
upset the world?" To the human: "The Sisterhood bears them no vast
ill will. They must be kept at their distance like any other dangerous beasts.
But if they would leave us alone there would be no occasion for battle." "Perhaps they think
the same," Flandry said. "Since first your people went to sea, you
have troubled them." "The oceans are
wide. Let them stay clear of our islands." "They cannot.
Sunlight breeds life, so they need the shoals for food. Also, you go far out to
chase the big animals and harvest weed. They have to have those things
too." Flandry stopped, tried to run a hand through his hair, and struck
his helmet. "I'm not against peace in the Zletovar myself. If nothing
else, because the vaz-Merseian would be annoyed. They started this arming of
one folk against another, you know. And they must be preparing some action
here. What harm can it do to talk with the vaz-Siravo?" "How do so?"
Iguraz countered. "Any Toborko who went below'd be slaughtered out of
hand, unless you equipped her to do the slaughtering herself." "Be still,"
Dragoika ordered. "I asked you here because you have the records of what
ships are in, and Ferok because he's Dommaneek's friend. But this is female
talk." The Tigeries took her
reproof in good humor. Flandry explained: "The delegates would be my
people. We don't want to alarm the seafolk unduly by arriving in one of our own
craft. But we'll need a handy base. So we ask for ships of yours, a big enough
fleet that attack on it is unlikely. Of course, the Sisterhood would have to ratify
any terms we arrived at." "That's not so
easy," Dragoika said. "The Janjevar va-Radovik reaches far beyond
Kursovikian waters. Which means, I suppose, that many different Siravo
interests would also be involved in any general settlement." She rubbed
her triangular chin. "Nonetheless … a local truce, if nothing
else … hunh, needs thinking about—" And then, from the
castle, a horn blew. Huge, brazen,
bellows-driven, it howled across the city. The hills echoed. Birds stormed from
trees. Hoo-hoo! Fire, flood, or foe! To arms, to arms! Hoo, hoo-hoo, hoo-oo! "What the
wreck?" Ferok was on his feet, snatching sword and shield from the wall,
before Flandry had seen him move. Iguraz took his ponderous battleax. Dragoika
crouched where she was and snarled. Bronze and crystal shivered. "Attack?"
Flandry cried among the hornblasts. "But they can't!" The picture unreeled for
him. The mouth of Terran HQ had worried
about assaults on the archipelago colonies. Ujanka, though, had not seen war
for hundreds of years, and that was with other Tigeries … Hoo, hoo! "We'll go
look." Dragoika's gorgeous fur stood on end, her tail was rigid, her ears
aquiver; but now she spoke as if suggesting dinner and flowed from her couch
with no obvious haste. On the way, she slung a sword over her back. Blaster in hand, Flandry
followed her into a hall dominated by a contorted stone figure, three meters
high, from the They were halfway to the
top when the world said Crump! and stones trembled. Dragoika was thrown back
against Flandry. He caught her. It was like holding steel and rubber, sheathed
in velvet. A rumble of collapsing masonry beat through his helmet. Screams came
thin and remote. "What's
happened?" Iguraz bawled. Ferok cursed. Even then, Flandry noted some of
his expressions for later use. If there was a later. Dragoika regained balance.
"Thanks," she murmured, and stroked the human's arm. "Come."
She bounded on. They emerged on the
house tower as a second explosion went off. That one was further away. But
thunder rolled loud in Starkad's air. Flandry ran to the parapet. He stared
across steeply pitched red tile roofs whose beam ends were carved with flowers
and monster heads. Northward, beyond these old gray walls, the High Housing
lifted emerald green, agleam with villas. He could see the Concourse pylon,
where Pride's Way, the "There!" Ferok
yelled. He pointed to sea. Dragoika went to a telescope mounted under a canopy. Flandry squinted. Light
dazzled him off the water. He found the hulks, out past the Long Moles. They
lay ablaze. Past them—Dragoika nodded grimly and pulled him to her telescope. Where the bay broadened,
between Whitestrands to west and Sorrow Cliff to east, a whale shape basked.
Its hide was wet metal. A turret projected amidships; Flandry could just see
that it stood open and held a few shapes not unlike men. Fore and aft were
turrets more low, flat, with jutting tubes. As he looked, fire spat
from one of those dragon snouts. A moment later, smoke puffed off the high
square wall of Sea-Traders' Castle. Stones avalanched onto the wharf below. One
of the ships which crowded the harbor was caught under them. Her mast reeled
and broke, her hull settled. Noise rolled from waterfront to hills and back
again. "Lucifer! That's a submarine!" And nothing like what he
had fought. Yonder was a Merseian job, probably nuclear-propelled, surely
Merseian crewed. She wasn't very big, some twenty meters in length, must have
been assembled here on Starkad. Her guns, though of large caliber, were
throwing chemical H.E. So the enemy wasn't introducing atomics into this war.
(Yet. When somebody did, all hell would let out for "We'll burn!"
Ferok wailed. On this planet, no one
was ashamed to stand in terror of fire. Flandry raced through an assessment.
Detested hours and years of psych drill at the Academy paid off. He knew rage
and fear, his mouth was dry and his heart slammed, but emotion didn't get in
the way of logic. Ujanka wouldn't go up fast. Over the centuries, stone and
tile had replaced wood nearly everywhere. But if fire started among the ships,
there went something like half the strength of Kursoviki. And not many shells
were needed for that. Dragoika had had the
same thought. She wheeled to glare across the Pechaniki, where the Sisterhood
centrum lifted a green copper dome from the West Housing. Her mane fluttered
wild. "Why haven't they rung Quarters?" "Surely none need
reminding," Iguraz puffed. To Flandry: "Law is that when aught may
threaten the ships, their crews are to report aboard and take them out on the
bay." A shell trundled overhead. Its impact gouted near "But today they may
indeed forget," Dragoika said between her fangs. "They may panic.
Those tallywhackers yonder must've done so, not to be hanging on the bell ropes
now." She started forward.
"Best I go there myself. Ferok, tell them not to await me on the
Archer." Flandry stopped her. She
mewed anger. "Apology-of-courage," he said. "Let's try calling
first." "Call—argh, yes,
you've given 'em a radio, haven't you? My brain's beaten flat." Crash! Crash! The
bombardment was increasing. As yet it seemed almost random. The idea must be to
cause terror and conflagration as fast as possible. Flandry lifted wristcom
to helmet speaker and tuned the Sisters' waveband. His hope that someone would
be at the other end was not great. He let out a breath when a female voice
replied, insect small beneath whistle and boom: "Ey-ya, do you belong to
the vaz-Terran? I could not raise anyone of you." No doubt all
switchboards're flooded with yammer from Our Men In Ujanka, Flandry thought. He
couldn't see their dome in the hills, but he could imagine the scene. Those
were Navy too, of course—but engineers, technicians, hitherto concerned merely
with providing a few gadgets and training Tigeries in the use of same. Nor was
their staff large. Other regions, where the war was intense, claimed most of
what Terra could offer. (Five thousand or so men get spread horribly thin
across an entire world; and then a third of them are not technical but combat
and Intelligence units, lest Runei feel free to gobble the whole mission.) Like
him, the Ujanka team had sidearms and weaponless flitters: nothing else. "Why haven't
Quarters been rung?" Flandry demanded as if he'd known the law his whole
life. "But no one
thought—" "So start
thinking!" Dragoika put her lips close to Flan-dry's wrist. Her bosom
crowded against him. "I see no sign of craft readying to stand out." "When that thing
waits for them?" "They'll be safer
scattered than docked," Dragoika said. "Ring the call." "Aye. But when do
the vaz-Terran come?" "Soon,"
Flandry said. He switched to the team band. "I go now," Dragoika
said. "No, wait, I beg
you. I may need you to … to help." It would be so lonely on
this tower. Flandry worked the signal button with an unsteady forefinger. This
microunit couldn't reach Highport unless the local 'caster relayed, but he
could talk to someone in the dome, if anybody noticed a signal light, if every
circuit wasn't tied up—Brrum! A female loped down Shiv Alley. Two males
followed, their young in their arms, screaming. "Ujanka Station,
Lieutenant Kaiser." Shellburst nearly drowned the Anglic words. Concussion
struck like a fist. The tower seemed to sway. "Flandry
here." He remembered to overlook naming his rank, and crisped his tone.
"I'm down on the east side. Have you seen what's on the bay?" "Sure have. A
sub—" "I know. Is help on
the way?" "No." "What? But that
thing's Merseian! It'll take this town apart unless we strike." "Citizen,"
said the voice raggedly, "I've just signed off from HQ. Recon reports the
greenskin air fleet at hover in the stratosphere. Right over your head. Our
fliers are scrambled to cover Highport. They're not going anywhere else." Reckon they can't at
that, Flandry thought. Let a general dogfight develop, and the result is up for
grabs. A Merseian could even break through and lay an egg on our main base. "I understand
Admiral Enriques is trying to get hold of his opposite number and enter a
strenuous protest," Kaiser fleered. "Never mind. What
can you yourselves do?" "Not a mucking
thing, citizen. HQ did promise us a couple of transports equipped to spray
firefighting chemicals. They'll fly low, broadcasting their identity. If the
gatortails don't shoot them regardless, they should get here in half an hour or
so. Now, where are you? I'll dispatch a flitter." "I have my
own," Flandry said. "Stand by for further messages." He snapped off his unit.
From across the river began a high and striding peal. "Well?"
Dragoika's ruby eyes blazed at him. He told her. For a moment, her
shoulders sagged. She straightened again. "We'll not go down politely. If
a few ships with deck guns work close—" "Not a
chance," Flandry said. "That vessel's too well armored. Besides, she
could sink you at twice your own range." "I'll try
anyhow." Dragoika clasped his hands. She smiled. "Farewell. Perhaps we'll
meet in the "No!" It
leaped from him. He didn't know why. His duty was to save himself for future
use. His natural inclination was identical. But he wasn't about to let a bunch
of smug Merseians send to the bottom these people he'd sailed with. Not if he
could help it! "Come on," he
said. "To my flier." Ferok stiffened.
"I, flee?" "Who talked about
that? You've guns in this house, haven't you? Let's collect them and some
assistants." Flandry clattered down the stairs. He entered the alley
with a slugthrower as well as his blaster. The three Tigeries followed, bearing
several modern small arms between them. They ran into the Street Where They
Fought and on toward Seatraders' Castle. Crowds milled back and
forth. No one had the civilized reflex of getting under cover when artillery
spoke. But neither did many scuttle about blinded by terror. Panic would
likeliest take the form of a mob rush to the waterfront, with weapons-swords
and bows against pentanitro. Sailors shoved through the broil, purpose restored
to them by the bells. A shell smote close by.
Flandry was hurled into a cloth-dealer's booth. He climbed to his feet with
ears ringing, draped in multicolored tatters. Bodies were strewn between the
walls. Blood oozed among the cobbles. The wounded ululated, most horribly, from
beneath a heap of fallen stones. Dragoika lurched toward
him. Her black and orange fur was smeared with red. "Are you all
right?" he shouted. "Aye." She loped
on. Ferok accompanied them. Iguraz lay with a smashed skull, but Ferok had
gathered his guns. By the time he reached
the castle, Flandry was reeling. He entered the forecourt, sat down beside his
flitter, and gasped. Dragoika called males down from the parapets and armed
them. After a while, Flandry adjusted his pump. An upward shift in helmet
pressure made his abused eardrums protest, but the extra oxygen restored some
vitality. They crowded into the
flitter. It was a simple passenger vehicle which could hold a score or so if
they filled seats and aisle and rear end. Flandry settled himself at the board
and started the grav generators. Overloaded, the machine rose sluggishly. He
kept low, nigh shaving the heads of the Tigeries outside, until he was across
the river and past the docks and had a screen of forest between him and the
bay. "You're headed for
Whitestrands," Dragoika protested. "Of course,"
Flandry said. "We want the sun behind us." She got the idea.
Doubtless no one else did. They huddled together, fingered what guns they had,
and muttered. He hoped their first airborne trip wouldn't demoralize them. "When we set
down," he said loudly, "everyone jump out. You will find open hatches
on the deck. Try to seize them first. Otherwise the boat can submerge and drown
you." "Then their gunners
will drown too," said a vindictive voice at his back. "They'll have
reserves." Flandry understood, suddenly and shatteringly, how insane his
behavior was. If he didn't get shot down on approach, if he succeeded in
landing, he still had one blaster and a few bullet projectors against how many
Merseian firespitters? He almost turned around. But no, he couldn't, not in the
presence of these beings. Moral cowardice, that's what was the matter with him. At the beach he veered
and kicked in emergency overpower. The vehicle raced barely above the water,
still with grisly slowness. A gust threw spray across the windshield. The
submarine lay gray, indistinct, and terrible. "Yonder!"
Dragoika screeched. She pointed south. The
sea churned with dorsal fins. Fish-drawn catapult boats had begun to rise,
dotting it as far as one could eye. Of course, trickled through the cellars of
Flandry's awareness. This has to be largely a Seatroll operation, partly to conserve
Merseian facilities, partly to conserve the fiction. That sub's only an
auxiliary … isn't it? Those are only advisors—well, volunteers this
time—at the guns … aren't they? But once they've reduced Ujanka's
defenses, the Seatrolls will clean the place out. I don't give a hiss what
happens to Charlie. An energy bolt tore
through the thin fuselage. No one was hit. But he'd been seen. But he was under the
cannon. He was over the deck. He stopped dead and
lowered his wheels. A seat-of-the-pants shiver told him they had touched.
Dragoika flung wide the door. Yelling, she led the rush. Flandry held his flitter
poised. These were the worst seconds, the unreal ones when death, which must
not be real, nibbled around him. Perhaps ten Merseians were topside, in air
helmets and black uniforms: three at either gun, three or four in the opened
conning tower. For the moment, that tower was a shield between him and the
after crew. The rest wielded blasters and machine pistols. Lightnings raged. Dragoika had hit the
deck, rolled, and shot from her belly. Her chatterbox spewed lead. Flame raked
at her. Then Ferok was out, snapping with his own pistol. And more, and more. The officers in the
tower, sheltered below its bulwark, fired. And now the after crew dashed
beneath them. Bolts and slugs seethed through the flitter. Flandry drew up his
knees, hunched under the pilot board, and nearly prayed. The last Tigery was out.
Flandry stood the flitter upward. His luck had held; she was damaged but not
crippled. (He noticed, vaguely, a burn on his arm.) In a wobbling arc, he went
above the tower, turned sideways, hung onto his seat with one hand and fired
out the open door with the other. Return bursts missed him. However inadequate
it was, he had some protection. He cleared the Merseians away. An explosion rattled his
teeth. Motor dead, the flitter crashed three meters down, onto the conning
tower. After a minute, Flandry
was back to consciousness. He went on hands and knees across the buckled,
tilted fuselage, took a quick peek, and dropped to the bridge deck. A body,
still smoking, was in his path. He shoved it aside and looked over the bulwark.
The dozen Tigeries who remained active had taken the forward gun and were using
it for cover. They had stalled the second gang beneath Flandry. But
reinforcements were boiling from the after hatch. Flandry set his blaster
to wide beam and shot. Again. Again. The crew
must be small. He'd dropped—how many?—whoops, don't forget the hatch in the
tower itself, up to this place he commanded! No, his flitter blocked the
way … Silence thundered upon
him. Only the wind and the slap-slap of water broke it, that and a steady
sobbing from one Merseian who lay with his leg blasted off, bleeding to death.
Satan on Saturn, they'd done it. They'd actually done it. Flandry stared at his
free hand, thinking in a remote fashion how wonderful a machine it was, look,
he could flex the fingers. Not much time to spare.
He rose. A bullet whanged from the bows. "Hold off there, you tubehead!
Me! Dragoika, are you alive?" "Yes." She
trod triumphant from behind the gun. "What next?" "Some of you get
astern. Shoot anybody who shows himself." Dragoika drew her sword.
"We'll go after them." "You'll do no such
idiot thing," Flandry stormed. "You'll have trouble enough keeping
them bottled." "And
you … now," she breathed ecstatically, "you can turn these
guns on the vaz-Siravo." "Not that
either," Flandry said. God, he was tired! "First, I can't man
something so heavy alone and you don't know how to help. Second, we don't want
any heroic bastards who may be left below to get the idea they can best serve
the cause by dunking the lot of us." He tuned his
communicator. Call the Navy team to come get him and his people off. If they
were too scared of violating policy to flush out this boat with anesthetic gas
and take her for a prize, he'd arrange her sinking personally. But no doubt the
situation would be accepted. Successes don't bring courts-martial and policy is
the excuse you make up as you go along, if you have any sense. Call the
Sisterhood, too. Have them peal the battle command. Once organized, the
Kursovikian ships could drive off the Seatroll armada, if it didn't simply quit
after its ace had been trumped. And then—and
then—Flandry didn't know what. By choice, a week abed, followed by a medal and
assignment to making propaganda tapes about himself back on Terra. Wasn't going
to work that way, however. Merseia had ratcheted the war another step upward.
Terra had to respond or get out. He glanced down at Dragoika as she disposed
her followers on guard. She saw him and flashed back a grin. He decided he
didn't really want out after all. 7 Runei the Wanderer
leaned forward until black-clad shoulders and gaunt green visage seemed to
enter the office room of the suite. "My lord," he said, "you
know the juridical position of my government. The sea people are sovereign over
the Starkadian high seas. At most, landfolk ships may be conceded a limited
right of transit—provided the sea people agree. Likewise, outworld craft fly
above entirely on their sufferance. You accuse us of escalation? Frankly, I
think I showed remarkable forbearance in not ordering my air fleet into action
after your attack on a Merseian submarine." Hauksberg managed a
smile. "If I may speak rather frankly in return, Commandant," he
said, "the fact that Terra's airborne forces would then have joined the
fight may have stayed your hand. Eh?" Runei shrugged. "In
such case, who would have been escalating?" "By usin' a purely
Merseian unit against a, ah, Toborkan city, you've directly involved your
planet in the war." "Retaliation, my
lord, and not by Merseia; by the Six-point of Zletovar, using foreign
volunteers temporarily detached from duty with their regular units. It is Terra
which has long promulgated the doctrine that limited retaliation is not a casus
belli." Hauksberg scowled.
Speaking for the Empire, he could not utter his full disapproval of that
principle. "Goes far back into our hist'ry, to the era of international
wars. We use it these days so our people in remote parts of space'll have some
freedom of action when trouble develops, 'stead of havin' to send couriers home
askin' for orders. Unfortunate. P'rhaps its abolition can be arranged, at least
as between your government and mine. But we'll want guarantees in exchange, y'
know." "You are the
diplomat, not I," Runei said. "As of now, I chiefly want back any
prisoners you hold." "Don't know if
there were any survivors," Hauksberg said. He knew quite well there were
some, and that Abrams wouldn't release them till they'd been interrogated at
length, probably hypnoprobed; and he suspected Runei knew he knew. Most
embarrassing. "I'll inquire, if you wish, and urge—" "Thank you,"
Runei said dryly. After a minute: "Not to ask for military secrets, but
what will the next move be of your, khraich, allies?" "Not allies. The
Terran Empire is not a belligerent." "Spare me,"
Runei snorted. "I warn you, as I have warned Admiral Enriques, that
Merseia won't stand idle if the aggressors try to destroy what Merseia has
helped create to ameliorate the lot of the sea people." An opening! "Point
o' fact," Hauksberg said, as casually as he was able, "with the
assault on Ujanka repelled, we're tryin' to restrain the Kursovikians. They're
hollerin' for vengeance and all that sort o' thing, but we've persuaded 'em to
attempt negotiations." A muscle jumped in
Runei's jaw, the ebony eyes widened a millimeter, and he sat motionless for
half a minute. "Indeed?" he said, flat-toned. "Indeed."
Hauksberg pursued the initiative he had gained. "A fleet'll depart very
soon. We couldn't keep that secret from you, nor conceal the fact of our makin'
contact with the Siravoans. So you'll be told officially, and I may's well tell
you today, the fleet won't fight except in self-defense. I trust none o' those
Merseian volunteers participate in any violence. If so, Terran forces would
natur'lly have to intervene. But we hope to send envoys underwater, to discuss
a truce with the idea of makin' permanent peace." "So." Runei
drummed his desktop. "Our xenological
information is limited," Hauksberg said. "And o' course we won't
exactly get childlike trust at first. Be most helpful if you'd urge the, ah,
Sixpoint to receive our delegation and listen to 'em." "A joint
commission, Terran and Merseian—" "Not yet,
Commandant. Please, not yet. These'll be nothin' but informal preliminary
talks." "What you
mean," Runei said, "is that Admiral Enriques won't lend men to any
dealings that involve Merseians." Correct. "No, no. Nothin' so
ungracious. Nothin' but a desire to avoid complications. No reason why the sea
people shouldn't keep you posted as to what goes on, eh? But we have to know
where we stand with 'em; in fact, we have to know 'em much better before we can
make sensible suggestions; and you, regrettably, decline to share your
data." "I am under
orders," Runei said. "Quite. Policy'll
need to be modified on both sides before we can cooperate worth mentionin', let
alone think about joint commissions. That sort o' problem is why I'm goin' on
to Merseia." "Those hoofs will
stamp slowly." "Hey? Oh. Oh, yes.
We'd speak of wheels. Agreed, with the best will in the universe, neither
government can end this conflict overnight. But we can make a start, you and us.
We restrain the Kursovikians, you restrain the Sixpoint. All military
operations suspended in the Zletovar till further notice. You've that much
discretionary power, I'm sure." "I do," Runei
said. "You do. The natives may not agree. If they decide to move, either
faction, I am bound to support the sea people." Or if you tell them to
move, Hauksberg thought. You may. In which case Enriques will have no choice
but to fight. However, I'll assume you're honest, that you'd also like to see
this affair wound up before matters get out of hand. I have to assume that.
Otherwise I can only go home and help Terra prepare for interstellar war. "You'll be gettin'
official memoranda and such," he said. "This is preliminary
chit-chat. But I'll stay on, myself, till we see how our try at a parley is
shapin' up. Feel free to call on me at any time." "Thank you. Good
day, my lord." "Good day,
Com—Fodaich." Though they had been using Anglic, Hauksberg was rather
proud of his Eriau. The screen blanked. He
lit a cigaret. Now what? Now you sit and wait, m' boy. You continue gathering
reports, conducting interviews, making tours of inspection, but this is past
the point of diminishing returns, among these iron-spined militarists who
consider you a meddlesome ass. You'll see many an empty hour. Not much
amusement here. Good thing you had the foresight to take Persis along. He rose and drifted from
the office to the living room. She sat there watching the animation. Ondine
again—poor kid, the local tape library didn't give a wide selection. He lowered
himself to the arm of her lounger and laid a hand on her shoulder. It was bare,
in a low-cut blouse; the skin felt warm and smooth, and he caught a violet hint
of perfume. "Aren't you tired
o' that thing?" he asked. "No." She
didn't quite take her eyes from it. Her voice was dark and her mouth not quite
steady. "Wish I were, though." "Why?" "It frightens me.
It reminds me how far we are from home, the strangeness, the—And we're going
on." Half human, the mermaid
floated beneath seas which never were. "Merseia's p'rhaps
a touch more familiar," Hauksberg said. "They were already
industrialized when humans discovered 'em. They caught onto the idea of space
travel fast." "Does that make
them anything like us? Does it make us like … like ourselves?"
She twisted her fingers together. "People say 'hyperdrive' and
'light-year' so casually. They don't understand. They can't or won't. Too
shallow." "Don't tell me
you've mastered the theory," he jollied her. "Oh, no. I haven't
the brain. But I tried. A series of quantum jumps which do not cross the small
intervening spaces, therefore do not amount to a true velocity and are not
bound by the light-speed limitation … sounds nice and scientific to
you, doesn't it? You know what it sounds like to me? Ghosts flitting forever in
darkness. And have you ever thought about a light-year, one measly light-year,
how huge it is?" "Well, well."
He stroked her hair. "You'll have company." "Your staff. Your
servants. Little men with little minds. Routineers, yes-men, careerists who've
laid out their own futures on rails. They're nothing, between me and the night.
I'm sick of them, anyway." "You've me,"
he said. She smiled a trifle.
"Present company excepted. You're so often busy, though." "We'll have two or
three Navy chaps with us. Might interest you. Diff'rent from courtiers and
bureaucrats." She brightened further.
"Who?" "Well, Commander
Abrams and I got talkin', and next thing I knew I'd suggested he come along as
our expert on the waterfolk. We could use one. Rather have that Ridenour
fellow, 'course; he's the real authority, insofar as Terra's got any. But on
that account, he can't be spared here." Hauksberg drew in a long tail of
smoke. "Obvious dangers involved. Abrams wouldn't leave his post either,
if he didn't think this was a chance to gather more information than he can on
Starkad. Which could compromise our mission. I still don't know but what I was
cleverly maneuvered into co-optin' him." "That old bear,
manipulating you?" Persis actually giggled. "A shrewd bear. And
ruthless. Fanatical, almost. However, he can be useful, and I'll be sure to
keep a spot on him. Daresay he'll bring an aide or two. Handsome young
officers, hm?" "You're handsome
and young enough for me, Mark." Persis rubbed her head against him. Hauksberg chucked his
cigaret at the nearest disposal. "I'm not so frightfully busy,
either." The day was raw and
overcast, with whitecaps on a leaden sea. Wind piped in rigging; timbers
creaked; the Archer rocked. Astern lay the accompanying fleet, hove to. Banners
snapped from mastheads. One deck was covered by a Terra-conditioned sealtent.
But Dragoika's vessel bore merely a tank and a handful of humans. She and her
crew watched impassive as Ridenour, the civilian head of xenological studies,
went to release the Siravo. He was a tall,
sandy-haired man; within the helmet, his face was intense. His fingers moved
across the console of the vocalizer attached to one wall. Sounds boomed forth
which otherwise only a sea dweller's voice bladder could have made. The long body in the
tank stirred. Those curiously human lips opened. An answer could be heard. John
Ridenour nodded. "Very well," he said. "Let him go." Flandry helped remove
the cover. The prisoner arched his tail. In one dizzying leap he was out and
over the side. Water spouted across the deck. Ridenour went to the
rail and stood staring down. "So long, Evenfall," he said. "That his real
name?" Flandry asked. "What the phrase
means, roughly," the xenologist answered. He straightened. "I don't
expect anyone'll show for some hours. But be ready from 1500. I want to study
my notes." He walked to his cabin.
Flandry's gaze followed him. How much does he know? the ensign wondered. More'n
he possibly could learn from our Charlie, or from old records, that's for sure.
Somehow Abrams has arranged—Oh, God, the shells bursting in Ujanka! He fled that thought and
pulled his gaze back, around the team who were to go undersea. A couple of
assistant xenologists; an engineer ensign and four burly ratings with some
previous diving experience. They were almost more alien to him than the
Tigeries. The glory of having
turned the battle of Golden Bay was blown away on this mordant wind. So, too,
was the intoxicating sequel: that he, Dominic Flandry, was no longer a
wet-eared youngster but appreciated as he deserved, promised a citation, as the
hero of all Kursoviki, the one man who could talk the landfolk into attempting peace.
What that amounted to, in unromantic fact, was that he must go along with the
Terran envoys, so their mission would have his full approval in Tigery eyes.
And Ridenour had told him curtly to keep out of the way. Jan van Zuyl was
luckier! Well—Flandry put on his
best nonchalance and strolled to Dragoika. She regarded him gravely. "I
hate your going down," she said. "Nonsense," he
said. "Wonderful adventure. I can't wait." "Down where the
bones of our mothers lie, whom they drowned," she said. "Down where
there is no sun, no moons, no stars, only blackness and cold sliding currents.
Among enemies and horrors. Combat was better." "I'll be back soon.
This first dive is just to ask if they'll let us erect a dome on the bottom.
Once that's done, your fleet can go home." "How long will you
be there yourself, in the dome?" "I don't know. I
hope for not more than a few days. If things look promising, I—" Flandry
preened—"won't be needed so much. They'll need me more on land
again." "I will be gone by
then," Dragoika said. "The Archer still has an undelivered cargo, and
the Sisterhood wants to take advantage of the truce while it lasts." "You'll return,
won't you? Call me when you do, and I'll flit straight to Ujanka." He
patted her hand. She gripped his,
"Someday you will depart forever." "M-m … this
isn't my world." "I would like to
see yours," she said wistfully. "The stories we hear, the pictures we
see, like a dream. Like the lost island. Perhaps it is in truth?" "I fear not."
Flandry wondered why the Eden motif was universal in the land cultures of
Starkad. Be interesting to know. Except for this damned war, men could come
here and really study the planet. He thought he might like to join them. But no. There was little
pure research, for love, in the Empire any more. Outwardness had died from the
human spirit. Could that be because the Time of Troubles had brutalized
civilization? Or was it simply that when he saw he couldn't own the galaxy and
consolidated what little he had, man lost interest in anything beyond himself?
No doubt the ancient eagernesss could be regained. But first the Empire might
have to go under. And he was sworn to defend it. I better read more in those
books of Abrams'. So far they've mainly confused me. "You think high
thoughts," Dragoika said. He tried to laugh.
"Contrariwise. I'm thinking about food, fun, and females." "Yes.
Females." She stood quiet a while, before she too laughed. "I can try
to provide the fun, anyhow. What say you to a game of Yavolak?" "I haven't yet
straightened out those cursed rules," Flandry said. "But if we can
get a few players together, I have some cards with me and there's a Terran game
called poker." A head rose sleek and
blue from the waves. Flandry couldn't tell if it belonged to Evenfall or
someone else. The flukes slapped thrice. "That's our signal,"
Ridenour said. "Let's go." He spoke by radio. The
team were encased in armor which was supposed to withstand pressures to a
kilometer's depth. Wish I hadn't thought of "supposed" Flandry
regretted. He clumped across the deck and in his turn was lowered over the
side. He had a last glimpse of Dragoika, waving. Then the hull was before his
faceplate, and then green water. He cast loose, switched his communicator to sonic,
and started the motor on his back. Trailing bubbles, he moved to join the
others. For one who'd been trained in spacesuit maneuvers, underwater was
simple … Damn! He'd forgotten that friction would brake him. "Follow me in close
order," Ridenour's voice sounded in his earplugs. "And for God's
sake, don't get trigger happy." The being who was not a
fish glided in advance. The water darkened. Lightbeams weren't needed, though,
when they reached bottom; this was a shallow sea. Flandry whirred through a
crйpuscule that faded into sightlessness. Above him was a circle of dim
radiance, like a frosted port. Below him was a forest. Long fronds rippled
upward, green and brown and yellow. Massive boles trailed a mesh of filaments
from their branches. Shellfish, often immense, covered with lesser shells,
gripped lacy, delicately hued coraloid. A flock of crustaceans clanked—no other
word would do—across a weed meadow. A thing like an eel wriggled over their
heads. Tiny finned animals in rainbow stripes flitted among the sea trees. Why,
the place is beautiful! Charlie—no, Evenfall had
directed the fleet to a spot in midsea where ships rarely passed. How he
navigated was a mystery. But Shellgleam lay near. Flandry had gathered
that the vaz-Siravo of Zletovar lived in, and between, six cities more or less
regularly spaced around a circle. Tidehome and Reefcastle were at the end of
the Chain. The Kursovikians had long known about them; sometimes they raided
them, dropping stones, and sometimes the cities were bases for attacks on
Tigery craft. But Shellgleam, Vault, Crystal, and Outlier on the verge of that
stupendous downfall of sea bottom called the Deeps—those had been unsuspected.
Considering how intercity traffic patterns must go, Flandry decided that the
Sixpoint might as well be called the Davidstar. You couldn't make good
translations anyway from a language so foreign. A drumming noise
resounded through the waters. A hundred or more swimmers came into view, in
formation. They wore skull helmets and scaly leather corselets, they were armed
with obsidian-headed spears, axes, and daggers. The guide exchanged words with
their chief. They englobed the party and proceeded. Now Flandry passed above
agricultural (?) lands. He saw tended fields, fish penned in wicker domes,
cylindrical woven houses anchored by rocks, A wagon passed not far away, a
skin-covered torpedo shape with stabilizer fins, drawn by an elephant-sized
fish which a Siravo led. Belike he traveled from some cave or depth, because he
carried a lantern, a bladder filled with what were no doubt phosphorescent
microorganisms. As he approached town, Flandry saw a mill. It stood on an
upthrust—go ahead and say "hill"—and a shaft ran vertically from an
eccentric drive wheel. Aiming his laser light and adjusting his faceplate lens
for telescopic vision, he made out a sphere at the other end, afloat on the
surface. So, a tide motor. Shellgleam hove in
sight. The city looked frail, unstable, unreal: what a place to stage that
ballet! In this weatherless world, walls and roofs need but give privacy; they
were made of many-colored fabrics, loosely draped so they could move with
currents, on poles which gave shapes soaring in fantastic curves. The higher
levels were more broad than the lower. Lanterns glowed perpetually at the
corners, against night's advent. With little need for ground transport, streets
did not exist; but whether to control silt or to enjoy the sight, the builders
had covered the spaces between houses with gravel and gardens. A crowd assembled. Flandry
saw many females, holding infants to their breasts and slightly older offspring
on leash. Few people wore clothes except for jewelry. They murmured, a low surf
sound. But they were more quiet, better behaved, than Tigeries or humans. In the middle of town,
on another hill, stood a building of dressed stone. It was rectangular, the
main part roofless and colonnaded; but at the rear a tower equally wide thrust
up and up, with a thick glass top just below the surface. If, as presumably was
the case, it was similarly sealed further down, it should flood the interior
with light. Though the architecture was altogether different, that whiteness
reminded Flandry of Terra's Parthenon. He had seen the reconstruction
once … He was being taken thither. A shape darkened the
overhead luminance. Looking, he saw a fish team drawing a submarine. The escort
was a troop of swimmers armed with Merseian-made guns. Suddenly he remembered
he was among his enemies. 8 Once a dome was
established outside town and equipped for the long-term living of men, Flandry
expected to make rapid progress in Professor Abrams' Instant Philosophy of
History Course. What else would there be to do, except practice the different
varieties of thumbtwiddling, until HQ decided that sufficient of his prestige
had rubbed off on Ridenour and ordered him back to Highport? Instead, he found
himself having the time of his life. The sea people were
every bit as interested in the Terrans as the Terrans in them. Perhaps more so;
and after the horror stories the Merseians must have fed them, it was
astonishing that they could make such an effort to get at the truth for
themselves. But then, while bonny fighters at need and in some ways quite
devoid of pity, they seemed less ferocious by nature than humans, Tigeries, or
Merseians. Ridenour and his
colleagues were held to the Temple of Sky, where talk went on endlessly with
the powers that were in the Davidstar. The xenologist groaned when his
unoccupied followers were invited on a set of tours. "If you were trained,
my God, what you could learn!—Well, we simply haven't got any more
professionals to use here, so you amateurs go ahead, and if you don't observe
in detail I'll personally operate on you with a butter knife." Thus Flandry and one or
another companion were often out for hours on end. Since none of them
understood the native language or Eriau, their usual guide was Isinglass, who
had some command of Kursovikian and had also been taught by the Merseians to
operate a portable vocalizer. (The land tongue had been gotten gradually from
prisoners. Flandry admired the ingenuity of the methods by which their
technologically backward captors had kept them alive for weeks, but otherwise
he shuddered and hoped with all his heart that the age-old strife could indeed
be ended.) Others whom he got to know included Finbright, Byway, Zoomboy, and
the weise Frau Allhealer. They had total individuality, you could no more
characterize one of them in a sentence than you could a human. "We are glad you
make this overture," Isinglass said on first acquaintance. "So glad
that, despite their helpfulness to us, we told the Merseians to keep away while
you are here." "I have suspected
we and the landfolk were made pieces in a larger game," added Allhealer
through him. "Fortunate that you wish to resign from it." Flandry's cheeks burned
inside his helmet. He knew too well how little altruism was involved.
Scuttlebutt claimed Enriques had openly protested Hauksberg's proposal, and
yielded only when the viscount threatened to get him reassigned to Pluto.
Abrams approved because any chance at new facts was good, but he was not
sanguine. Nor was Byway.
"Peace with the Hunters is a contradiction in terms. Shall the gilltooth
swim beside the tail-on-head? And as long as the green strangers offer us
assistance, we must take it. Such is our duty to the cities and our
dependents." "Yet evidently,
while they support us, their adversaries are bound to support the
Hunters," Finbright said. "Best might be that both sets of foreigners
withdrew and let the ancient balance return." "I know not,"
Byway argued. "Could we win a final victory—" "Be not so tempted
by that as to overlook the risk of a final defeat," Allhealer warned. "To the Deeps with
your bone-picking!" Zoomboy exclaimed. "We'll be late for the
theater." He shot off in an exuberant curve. Flandry did not follow
the drama which was enacted in a faerie coraloid grotto. He gathered it was a
recently composed tragedy in the classic mode. But the eldritch grace of
movement, the solemn music of voices, strings, percussion, the utter balance of
every element, touched his roots. And the audience reacted with cries, surges
back and forth, at last a dance in honor of author and cast. To him, the sculptures
and oil paintings he was shown were abstract; but as such they were more
pleasing than anything Terra had produced for centuries. He looked at fishskin
scrolls covered with writing in grease-based ink and did not comprehend. Yet
they were so many that they must hold a deal of accumulated wisdom. Then he got off into
mathematics and science, and went nearly delirious. He was still so close to
the days when such things had been unfolded for him like a flower that he could
appreciate what had been done here. For the People (he
didn't like using the Kursovikian name "Siravo" in their own home,
and could certainly never again call them Seatrolls) lived in a different
conceptual universe from his. And though they were handicapped—fireless save
for volcanic outlets where glass was made as a precious material, metalless,
unable to develop more than a rudimentary astronomy, the laws of motion and
gravity and light propagation obscured for them by the surrounding water—they
had thought their way through to ideas which not only made sense but which
drove directly toward insights man had not had before Planck and Einstein. To them, vision was not
the dominant sense that it was for him. No eyes could look far undersea. Hence
they were nearsighted by his standards, and the optical centers of their brains
appeared to have slightly lower information-processing capability. On the other
hand, their perception of tactile, thermal, kinesthetic, olfactory, and less
familiar nuances was unbelievably delicate. The upper air was hostile to them;
like humans vis-а-vis water, they could control but not kill an instinctive
dread. So they experienced
space as relation rather than extension. For them, as a fact of daily life, it
was unbounded but finite. Expeditions which circumnavigated the globe had
simply given more weight and subtlety to that apprehension. Reflecting this
primitive awareness, undersea mathematics rejected infinity. A philosopher with
whom Flandry talked via Isinglass asserted that it was empirically meaningless
to speak of a number above factorial N, where N was 75 the total of
distinguishable particles in the universe. What could a larger number count?
Likewise, he recognized zero as useful notion, corresponding to the null class,
but not as a number. The least possible amount must be the inverse of the
greatest. You could count from there, on to NI, but if you proceeded beyond,
you would get decreasing quantities. The number axis was not linear but
circular. Flandry wasn't
mathematician enough to decide if the system was entirely self-consistent. As
far as he could tell, it was. It even went on to curious versions of negatives,
irrationals, imaginaries, approximational calculus, differential geometry,
theory of equations, and much else of whose Terran equivalents he was ignorant. Physical theory fitted
in. Space was regarded as quantized. Discontinuities between kinds of space
were accepted. That might only be an elaboration of the everyday—the sharp
distinction between water, solid ground, and air—but the idea of layered space
accounted well for experimental data and closely paralleled the relativistic
concept of a metric varying from point to point, as well as the wave-mechanical
basis of atomistics and the hyperdrive. Nor could time, in the
thought of the People, be infinite. Tides, seasons, the rhythm of life all
suggested a universe which would eventually return to its initial state and
resume a cycle which it would be semantically empty to call endless. But having
no means of measuring time with any precision, the philosophers had concluded
that it was essentially immeasurable. They denied simultaneity; how could you
say a distant event happened simultaneously with a near one, when news of the
former must be brought by a swimmer whose average speed was unpredictable?
Again the likeness to relativity was startling. Biology was well
developed in every macroscopic facet, including genetic laws. Physics proper,
as opposed to its conceptual framework, was still early Newtonian, and
chemistry little more than an embryo. But Judas on Jupiter, Flandry thought,
give these fellows some equipment tailored for underwater use and watch them
lift! "Come along,"
Zoomboy said impatiently. "Wiggle a flipper. We're off to
Reefcastle." En route, Flandry did
his unskilled best to get an outline of social structure. The fundamental
Weltanschauung eluded him. You could say the People of the Davidstar were
partly Apollonian and partly Dionysian, but those were mere metaphors which
anthropology had long discarded and were worse than useless in dealing with
nonhumans. Politics (if that word was applicable) looked simpler. Being more
gregarious and ceremony-minded than most humans, and less impulsive, and
finding travel easier than land animals do, the sea dwellers on Starkad tended
to form large nations without strong rivalries. The Zletovar culture was
organized hieratically. Governors inherited their positions, as did People in
most other walks (swims?) of life. On the individual level there existed a kind
of serfdom, binding not to a piece of territory but to the person of the
master. And females had that status with respect to their polygamous husbands. Yet such expressions
were misleading. The decision makers did not lord it over the rest. No
formalities were used between classes. Merit brought promotion; so had
Allhealer won her independence and considerable authority. Failure, especially
the failure to meet one's obligation to dependents, brought demotion. For the
system did nothing except apportion rights and duties. Terra had known similar
things, in theory. Practice had never worked out. Men were too greedy, too
lazy. But it seemed to operate among the People. At least, Isinglass claimed it
had been stable for many generations, and Flandry saw no evidence of discontent. Reefcastle was nothing
like Shellgleam. Here the houses were stone and coraloid, built into the
skerries off a small island. The inhabitants were more brisk, less
contemplative than their bottom-dwelling cousins; Isinglass scoffed at them as a
bunch of wealth-grubbing traders. "But I must admit they have bravely
borne an undue share of trouble from the Hunters," he added, "and
they went in the van of our late attack, which took courage, when none knew
about the Merseian boat." "None?" asked
Flandry in surprise. "I daresay the
governors were told beforehand. Otherwise we knew only that when the signal was
given our leg-equipped troops were to go ashore and lay waste what they could
while our swimmers sank the ships." "Oh." Flandry
did not describe his role in frustrating that. He felt an enormous relief. If
Abrams had learned from Evenfall about the planned bombardment, Abrams ought to
have arranged countermeasures. But since the information hadn't been there to
obtain—Flandry was glad to stop finding excuses for a man who was rapidly
becoming an idol. The party went among the
reefs beyond town to see their tide pools. Surf roared, long wrinkled
azure-and-emerald billows which spouted white under a brilliant sky. The People
frolicked, leaping out of the waves, plunging recklessly through channels where
cross-currents ramped. Flandry discarded the staleness of his armor for a plain
helmet and knew himself fully alive. "We shall take you
next to Outlier," Isinglass said on the way home to Shellgleam. "It
is something unique. Below its foundations the abyss goes down into a night
where fish and forests glow. The rocks are gnawed by time and lividly hued. The
water tastes of volcano. But the silence—the silence!" "I look
forward," Flandry said. "—?—. So. You scent
a future perfume." When he cycled through
the airlock and entered the Terran dome, Flandry was almost repelled. This
narrow, stinking, cheerless bubble, jammed with hairy bodies whose every motion
was a jerk against weight! He started peeling off his undergarment to take a
shower. "How was your
trip?" Ridenour asked. "Wonderful," Flandry glowed. "All right, I
guess," said Ensign Quarles, who had been along. "Good to get back,
though. How 'bout putting on a girlie tape for us?" Ridenour nipped the
switch of the recorder on his desk. "First things first," he said.
"Let's have your report." Flandry suppressed an
obscenity. Adventures got spoiled by being reduced to data. Maybe he didn't
really want to be a xenologist. At the end, Ridenour
grimaced. "Wish to blazes my part of the job were doing as well." "Trouble?"
Flandry asked, alarmed. "Impasse. Problem
is, the Kursovikians are too damned efficient. Their hunting, fishing,
gathering do make serious inroads on resources, which are never as plentiful in
the sea. The governors refuse any terms which don't involve the land-folk
stopping exploitation. And of course the landfolk won't. They can't, without
undermining their own economy and suffering famine. So I'm trying to persuade
the Sixpoint to reject further Merseian aid. That way we might get the Zletovar
out of the total-war mess. But they point out, very rightly, that what we've
given the Kursovikians has upset the balance of power. And how can we take our
presents back? We'd antagonize them—which I don't imagine Runei's agents would
be slow to take advantage of." Ridenour sighed. "I still have some
hopes of arranging for a two-sided phaseout, but they've grown pretty
dim." "We can't start
killing the People again!" Flandry protested. "Can't we
just?" Quarles said. "After what we've
seen, what they've done for us—" "Grow up. We belong
to the Empire, not some barnacle-bitten gang of xenos." "You may be out of
the matter anyhow, Flandry," Ridenour said. "Your orders came through
several hours ago." "Orders?" "You report to
Commander Abrams at Highport. An amphibian will pick you up at 0730 tomorrow,
Terran clock. Special duty, I don't know what." Abrams leaned back, put
one foot on his battered desk, and drew hard on his cigar. "You'd really
rather've stayed underwater?" "For a while,
sir," Flandry said from the edge of his chair. "I mean, well, besides
being interesting, I felt I was accomplishing something.
Information—friendship—" His voice trailed off. "Modest young chap,
aren't you? Describing yourself as 'interesting.' " Abrams blew a smoke
ring. "Oh, sure, I see your point. Not a bad one. Were matters different,
I wouldn't've hauled you topside. You might, though, ask what I have in mind
for you." "Sir?" "Lord Hauksberg is
continuing to Merseia in another couple days. I'm going along in an advisory
capacity, my orders claim. I rate an aide. Want the job?" Flandry goggled. His
heart somersaulted. After a minute he noticed that his mouth hung open. "Plain to
see," Abrams continued, "my hope is to collect some intelligence.
Nothing melodramatic; I hope I'm more competent than that. I'll keep my eyes
and ears open. Nose, too. But none of our diplomats, attachйs, trade-talk representatives,
none of our sources has ever been very helpful. Merseia's too distant from
Terra. Almost the only contact has been on the level of brute,
chip-on-your-shoulder power. This may be a chance to circulate under fewer
restrictions. "So I ought to
bring an experienced, proven man. But we can't spare one. You've shown yourself
pretty tough and resourceful for a younker. A bit of practical experience in
Intelligence will give you a mighty long leg up, if I do succeed in making you
transfer. From your standpoint, you get off this miserable planet, travel in a
luxury ship, see exotic Merseia, maybe other spots as well, probably get taken
back to Terra and then probably not reassigned to Starkad even if you remain a
flyboy—and make some highly useable contacts. How about it?" "Y-y-yes,
sir!" Flandry stammered. Abrams' eyes crinkled.
"Don't get above yourself, son. This won't be any pleasure cruise. I'll
expect you to forget about sleep and live on stimpills from now till departure,
learning what an aide of mine has to know. You'll be saddled with everything
from secretarial chores to keeping my uniforms neat. En route, you'll take an
electrocram in the Eriau language and as much Merseiology as your brain'll hold
without exploding. I need hardly warn you that's no carnival Once we're there,
if you're lucky you'll grind through a drab list of duties. If you're
unlucky—if things should go nova—you won't be a plumed knight of the skies any
longer, you'll be a hunted animal, and if they take you alive their style of
quizzing won't leave you any personality worth having. Think about that." Flandry didn't. His one
regret was that he'd likely never see Dragoika again, and it was a passing
twinge. "Sir," he declaimed, "you've got yourself an aide." 9 The Dronning Margrete was
not of a size to land safely on a planet. Her auxiliaries were small spaceships
in their own right. Officially belonging to Ny Kalmar, in practice a yacht for
whoever was the current viscount, she did sometimes travel in the Imperial
service: a vast improvement with respect to comfort over any Navy vessel. Now
she departed her orbit around Starkad and accelerated outward on gravities.
Before long she was into clear enough space that she could switch over to
hyperdrive and outpace light. Despite her mass, with her engine power and phase
frequency, top pseudo-speed equalled that of a Planet class warcraft. The sun
she left behind was soon dwindled to another star, and then to nothing. Had the
viewscreens not compensated for aberration and Doppler effect, the universe
would have looked distorted beyond recognition. Yet the constellations
changed but slowly. Days and nights passed while she fled through the marches.
Only once was routine broken, when alarms sounded. They were followed
immediately by the All Clear. Her force screens, warding off radiation and
interstellar atoms, had for a microsecond brushed a larger piece of matter, a
pebble estimated at five grams. Though contact with the hull would have been
damaging, given the difference in kinetic velocities, and though such
meteoroids occur in the galaxy to the total of perhaps 1050, the likelihood of
collision was too small to worry about. Once, also, another vessel passed
within a light-year and thus its "wake" was detected. The pattern indicated
it was Ymirite, crewed by hydrogen breathers whose civilization was nearly
irrelevant to man or Merseian. They trafficked quite heavily in these parts.
Nonetheless this sign of life was the subject of excited conversation. So big
is the cosmos. There came at last the
time when Hauksberg and Abrams sat talking far into the middle watch. Hitherto
their relationship had been distant and correct. But with journey's end
approaching they saw a mutual need to understand each other better. The
viscount invited the commander to dinner а deux in his private suite. His chef
transcended himself for the occasion and his butler spent considerable time
choosing wines. Afterward, at the cognac stage of things, the butler saw he
could get away with simply leaving the bottle on the table plus another in
reserve, and went off to bed. The ship whispered,
powerplant, ventilators, a rare hail when two crewmen on duty passed in the
corridor outside. Light glowed soft off pictures and drapes. A heathery scent
in the air underlay curling smoke. After Starkad, the Terran weight maintained
by the gravitors was good; Abrams still relished a sense of lightness and often
in his sleep had flying dreams. "Pioneer types,
eh?" Hauksberg kindled a fresh cheroot. "Sounds int'restin'. Really
must visit Dayan someday." "You wouldn't find
much there in your line," Abrams grunted. "Ordinary people." "And what they've
carved for themselves out of howlin' wilderness. I know." The blond head
nodded. "Natural you should be a little chauvinistic, with such a
background. But's a dangerous attitude." "More dangerous to
sit and wait for an enemy," Abrams said around his own cigar. "I got
a wife and kids and a million cousins. My duty to them is to keep the Merseians
at a long arm's length." "No. Your duty is
to help make that unnecess'ry." "Great, if the
Merseians'll cooperate." "Why shouldn't
they? No, wait." Hauksberg lifted a hand. "Let me finish. I'm not
int'rested in who started the trouble. That's childish. Fact is, there we were,
the great power among oxygen breathers in the known galaxy. S'pose they'd been?
Wouldn't you've plumped for man acquirin' a comparable empire? Otherwise
we'd've been at their mercy. As was, they didn't want to be at our mercy. So,
by the time we took real notice, Merseia'd picked up sufficient real estate to
alarm us. We reacted, propaganda,
alliances, diplomacy, economic maneuvers, subversion, outright armed clashes
now and then. Which was bound to confirm their poor opinion of our intentions.
They re-reacted, heightenin' our fears. Positive feedback. Got to be
stopped." "I've heard this
before," Abrams said. "I don't believe a word of it. Maybe memories
of Assyria, Rome, and Germany are built into my chromosomes, I dunno. Fact is,
if Merseia wanted a real dйtente she could have one today. We're no longer
interested in expansion. Terra is old and fat. Merseia is young and full of
beans. She hankers for the universe. We stand in the way. Therefore we have to
be eaten. Everything else is dessert." "Come, come,"
Hauksberg said. "They're not stupid. A galactic government is impossible.
It'd collapse under its own weight. We've everything we can do to control what
we have, and we don't control tightly. Local self-government is so strong, most
places, that I see actual feudalism evolvin' within the Imperial structure.
Can't the Merseians look ahead?" "Oh, Lord, yes. Can
they ever. But I don't imagine they want to copy us. The Roidhunate is not like
the Empire." "Well, the electors
of the landed clans do pick their supreme chief from the one landless one, but
that's a detail." "Yes, from the Vach
Urdiolch. It's not a detail. It reflects their whole concept of society. What
they have in mind for their far future is a set of autonomous Merseian-ruled
regions. The race, not the nation, counts with them. Which makes them a hell of
a lot more dangerous than simple imperialists like us, who only want to be top
dogs and admit other species have an equal right to exist. Anyway, so I think
on the basis of what information is available. While on Merseia I hope to read
a lot of their philosophers." Hauksberg smiled.
"Be my guest. Be theirs. Long's you don't get zealous and upset things
with any cloak-and-dagger stuff, you're welcome aboard." The smile faded.
"Make trouble and I'll break you." Abrams looked into the
blue eyes. They were suddenly very cold and steady. It grew on him that
Hauksberg was not at all the fop he pretended to be. "Thanks for warning
me," the officer of Intelligence said. "But damnation!" His fist
smote the table. "The Merseians didn't come to Starkad because their
hearts bled for the poor oppressed seafolk. Nor do I think they stumbled in by
mistake and are looking for any face-saving excuse to pull out again. They
figure on a real payoff there." "F'r
instance?" "How the devil
should I know? I swear none of their own personnel on Starkad do. Doubtless
just a hatful of higher-ups on Merseia itself have any idea what the grand
strategy is. But those boys see it in clockwork detail." "Valuable minerals
undersea, p'rhaps?" "Now you must
realize that's ridiculous. Likewise any notion that the seafolk may possess a
great secret like being universal telepaths. If Starkad per se has something
useful, the Merseians could have gotten it more quietly. If it's a base they're
after, say for the purpose of pressuring Betel-geuse, then there are plenty of
better planets in that general volume. No, they for sure want a showdown." "I've speculated
along those lines," Hauksberg said thoughtfully. "S'pose some
fanatical militarists among 'em plan on a decisive clash with Terra. That'd
have to be built up to. If nothin' else, lines of communication are so long
that neither power could hope to mount a direct attack on the other. So if they
escalate things on an intrinsically worthless Starkad—well, eventually there
could be a confrontation. And out where no useful planet got damaged." "Could be,"
Abrams said. "In fact, it's sort of a working hypothesis for me. But it
don't smell right somehow." "I aim to warn
them," Hauksberg said. "Informally and privately, to keep pride and
such from complicatin' matters. If we can discover who the reasonable elements
are in their government, we can cooperate with those—most discreetly—to freeze
the warhawks out." "Trouble is,"
Abrams said, "the whole bunch of them are reasonable. But they don't
reason on the same basis as us." "No, you're the
unreasonable one, old chap. You've gotten paranoid on the subject."
Hauksberg refilled their glasses, a clear gurgle through the stillness.
"Have another drink while I explain to you the error of your ways." The officers' lounge was
deserted. Persis had commandeered from the bar a demi of port but had not
turned on the fluoros. Here in the veranda, enough light came through the
viewport which stretched from deck to overhead. It was soft and shadowy,
caressed a cheek or a lock of hair and vanished into susurrant dark. Stars were the source,
uncountable throngs of them, white, blue, yellow, green, red, cold and
unwinking against an absolute night. And the Milky Way was a shining smoke and
the nebulae and the sister galaxies glimmered at vision's edge. That was a
terrible beauty. Flandry was far too
conscious of her eyes and of the shape enclosed by thin, slightly
phosphorescent pajamas, where she faced him in her lounger. He sat stiff on
his. "Yes," he said, "yonder bright one, you're right, Donna, a
nova. What … uh … what Saxo's slated to become before
long." "Really?" Her
attentiveness flattered him. "Yes. F-type, you
know. Evolves faster than the less massive suns like Sol, and goes off the main
sequence more spectacularly. The red giant stage like Betelgeuse is short—then
bang." "But those poor
natives!" Flandry made a
forced-sounding chuckle. "Don't worry, Donna. It won't happen for almost a
billion years, according to every spectroscopic indication. Plenty of time to
evacuate the planet." "A billion
years." She shivered a little. "Too big a number. A billion years
ago, we were still fish in the Terran seas, weren't we? All the numbers are too
big out here." "I, uh, guess I'm
more used to them." His nonchalance didn't quite come off. He could barely see how
her lips curved upward. "I'm sure you are," she said. "Maybe you
can help me learn to feel the same way." His tunic collar was
open but felt tight anyhow. "Betelgeuse is an interesting case," he
said. "The star expanded slowly by mortal standards. The autochthons could
develop an industrial culture and move out to Alfzar and the planets beyond.
They didn't hit on the hyperdrive by themselves, but they had a high-powered
interplanetary society when Terrans arrived. If we hadn't provided a better
means, they'd have left the system altogether in sublight ships. No real rush.
Betelgeuse won't be so swollen that Alfzar becomes uninhabitable for another
million years or better. But they had their plans in train. A fascinating
species, the Betelgeuseans." "True." Persis
took a sip of wine, then leaned forward. One leg, glimmering silky in the
starlight, brushed his. "However," she said, "I didn't lock onto
you after dinner in hopes of a lecture." "Why, uh, what can
I do for you, Donna? Glad to, if—" Flandry drained his own goblet with a
gulp. His pulse racketed. "Talk to me. About
yourself. You're too shy." "About me?" he
squeaked. "Whatever for? I mean, I'm nobody." "You're the first
young hero I've met. The others, at home, they're old and gray and crusted with
decorations. You might as well try to make conversation with Mount Narpa.
Frankly, I'm lonesome on this trip. You're the single one I could relax and
feel human with. And you've hardly shown your nose outside your office." "Uh, Donna,
Commander Abrams has kept me busy. I didn't want to be unsociable, but, well,
this is the first time he's told me I could go off duty except to sleep. Uh,
Lord Hauksberg—" Persis shrugged.
"He doesn't understand. All right, he's been good to me and without him
I'd probably be an underpaid dancer on Luna yet. But he does not
understand." Flandry opened his
mouth, decided to close it again, and recharged his goblet. "Let's get
acquainted," Persis said gently. "We exist for such a short time at
best. Why were you on Starkad?" "Orders,
Donna." "That's no answer.
You could simply have done the minimum and guarded jour neck. Most ot them seem
to. You must have some belief in what you're doing." "Well—I don't know,
Donna. Never could keep out of a good scrap, I suppose." She sighed. "I
thought better of you, Dominic." "Beg pardon?" "Cynicism is
boringly fashionable. I didn't think you would be afraid to say mankind is
worth fighting for." Flandry winced. She had
touched a nerve. "Sort of thing's been said too often, Donna. The words
have gone all hollow. I … I do like some ancient words.
' … the best fortress is to be found in the love of the people.' From
Machiavelli." "Who? Never mind. I
don't care what some dead Irishman said. I want to know what you care about.
You are the future. What did Terra give you, for you to offer your life in
return?" "Well, uh, places
to live. Protection. Education." "Stingy
gifts," she said. "You were poor?" "Not really, Donna.
Illegitimate son of a petty nobleman. He sent me to good schools and finally
the Naval Academy." "But you were
scarcely ever at home?" "No. Couldn't be. I
mean, my mother was in opera then. She had her career to think of. My father's
a scholar, an encyclopedist, and, uh, everything else is sort of incidental to
him. That's the way he's made. They did their duty by me. I can't complain,
Donna." "At least you
won't." She touched his hand. "My name is Persis." Flandry swallowed. "What a hard, harsh
life you've had," she mused. "And still you'll fight for the
Empire." "Really, it wasn't
bad … Persis." "Good. You
progress." This time her hand lingered. "I mean, well, we
had fun between classes and drills. I'm afraid I set some kind of record for
demerits. And later, a couple of training cruises, the damnedest things happened." She leaned closer.
"Tell me." He spun out the yarns as
amusingly as he was able. She cocked her head at
him. "You were right fluent there," she said. "Why are you
backward with me?" He retreated into his
lounger. "I—I, you see, never had a chance to, uh, learn how to, well,
behave in circumstances like—" She was so near that
beneath perfume he caught the odor of herself. Her eyes were half closed, lips
parted. "Now's your chance," she whispered. "You weren't afraid
of anything else, were you?" Later, in his cabin, she
raised herself to one hand and regarded him for a long moment. Her hair spilled
across his shoulder. "And I thought I was your first," she said. "Why, Persis!"
he grinned. "I felt so—And
every minute this evening you knew exactly what you were doing." "I had to take
action," he said. "I'm in love with you. How could I help
being?" "Do you expect me
to believe that? Oh, hell, just for this voyage I will. Come here again." 10 Ardaig, the original
capital, had grown to surround that bay where the River Oiss poured into the
Wilwidh Ocean; and its hinterland was now megalopolis eastward to the Hun
foothills. Nonetheless it retained a flavor of antiquity. Its citizens were
more tradition-minded, ceremonious, leisurely than most. It was the cultural
and artistic center of Merseia. Though the Grand Council still met here
annually, and Castle Afon was still the Roidhun's official primary residence,
the bulk of government business was transacted in antipodal Tridaig. The co-capital
was young, technology-oriented, brawling with traffic and life, seething with
schemes and occasional violence. Hence there had been surprise when Brechdan
Ironrede wanted the new Navy offices built in Ardaig. He did not encounter
much opposition. Not only did he preside over the Grand Council; in the space
service he had attained fleet admiral's rank before succeeding to Handship of
the Vach Ynvory, and the Navy remained his special love and expertise.
Characteristically, he had offered little justification for his choice. This
was his will, therefore let it be done. In fact he could not
even to himself have given fully logical reasons. Economics, regional balance,
any such argument was rebuttable. He appreciated being within a short flit of
Dhangodhan's serenity but hoped and believed that had not influenced him. In
some obscure fashion he simply knew it was right that the instrument of
Merseia's destiny should have roots in Merseia's eternal city. And thus the tower
arose, tier upon gleaming tier until at dawn its shadow engulfed Afon. Aircraft
swarmed around the upper flanges like seabirds. After dark its windows were a
constellation of goblin eyes and the beacon on top a torch that frightened
stars away. But Admiralty House did not clash with the battlements, dome roofs,
and craggy spires of the old quarter. Brechdan had seen to that. Rather, it was
a culmination of them, their answer to the modern skyline. Its uppermost floor,
decked by nothing except a level of traffic control automata, was his own
eyrie. A while after a certain
sunset he was there in his secretorium. Besides himself, three living creatures
were allowed entry. Passing through an unoccupied antechamber before which was
posted a guard, they would put eyes and hands to scanner plates in the armored
door. Under positive identification, it would open until they had stepped
through. Were more than one present, all must be identified first. The rule was
enforced by alarms and robotic blasters. The vault behind was
fitted with spaceship-type air recyclers and thermostats. Walls, floor, ceiling
were a sable against which Brechdan's black uniform nigh vanished, the medals
he wore tonight glittering doubly fierce. The furnishing was usual for an
office—desk, communicators, computer, dicto-scribe. But in the center a
beautifully grained wooden pedestal supported an opalescent box. He walked thither and
activated a second recognition circuit. A hum and swirl of dim colors told him
that power had gone on. His fingers moved above the console. Photoelectric
cells fired commands to the memory unit. Electromagnetic fields interacted with
distorted molecules. Information was compared, evaluated, and assembled. In a
nanosecond or two, the data he wanted—ultrasecret, available to none but him and
his three closest, most trusted colleagues—flashed onto a screen. Brechdan had seen the
report before, but on an interstellar scale (every planet a complete world, old
and infinitely complex) an overlord was doing extraordinarily well if he could
remember that a specific detail was known, let alone the fact itself. A
sizeable party in the Council wanted to install more decision-making machines
on that account. He had resisted them. Why ape the Terrans? Look what a state
their dominions had gotten into. Personal government, to the greatest extent
possible, was less stable but more flexible. Unwise to bind oneself to a single
approach, in this unknowable universe. "Khraich." He
switched his tail. Shwylt was entirely correct, the matter must be attended to
without delay. An unimaginative provincial governor was missing a radium
opportunity to bring one more planetary system into the power of the race. And yet—He sought his
desk. Sensing his absence, the data file went blank. He stabbed a communicator
button. On sealed and scrambled circuit, his call flew across a third of the
globe. Shwylt Shipsbane
growled. "You woke me. Couldn't you pick a decent hour?" "Which would be an
indecent one for me," Brechdan laughed. "This Therayn business won't
wait on our joint convenience. I have checked, and we'd best get a fleet out
there as fast as may be, together with a suitable replacement for Gadrol." "Easy to say. But
Gadrol will resent that, not without justice, and he has powerful friends. Then
there are the Terrans. They'll hear about our seizure, and even though it's
taken place on the opposite frontier to them, they'll react. We have to get a
prognostication of what they'll do and a computation of how that'll affect
events on Starkad. I've alerted Lifrith and Priadwyr. The sooner the four of us
can meet on this problem, the better." "I can't, though.
The Terran delegation arrived today. I must attend a welcoming festival
tonight." "What?"
Shwylt's jaws snapped together. "One of their stupid rites? Are you
serious?" "Quite. Afterward I
must remain available to them. In Terran symbology, it would be grave indeed if
the, gr-r-rum, the prime minister of Merseia snubbed the special representative
of his Majesty." "But the whole
thing is such a farce!" "They don't know
that. If we disillusion them promptly, we'll accelerate matters off schedule.
Besides, by encouraging their hopes for a Starkadian settlement we can soften
the emotional impact of our occupying Therayn. Which means I shall have to
prolong these talks more than I originally intended. Finally, I want some
personal acquaintance with the significant members of this group." Shwylt rubbed the spines
on his head. "You have the strangest taste in friends." "Like you?"
Brechdan gibed. "See here. The plan for Starkad is anything but a road we
need merely walk at a pre-calculated pace. It has to be watched, nurtured,
modified according to new developments, almost day by clay. Something
unforeseeable—a brilliant Terran move, a loss of morale among them, a change in
attitude by the natives themselves—anything could throw off the timing and
negate our whole strategy. The more subliminal data we possess, the better our
judgments. For we do have to operate on their emotions as well as their
military logic, and they are an alien race. We need empathy with them. In their
phrase, we must play by ear." Shwylt looked harshly
out of the screen. "I suspect you actually like them." "Why, that's no
secret," Brechdan said. "They were magnificent once. They could be
again. I would love to see them our willing subjects." His scarred
features drooped a little. "Unlikely, of course. They're not that kind of
species. We may be forced to exterminate." "What about
Therayn?" Shwylt demanded. "You three take
charge," Brechdan said. "I'll advise from time to time, but you will
have full authority. After the post-seizure configuration has stabilized enough
for evaluation, we can all meet and discuss how this will affect Starkad." He did not add he would
back them against an outraged Council, risking his own position, if they should
make some ruinous error. That went without saying. "As you wish,"
nodded Shwylt. "Hunt well." "Hunt well."
Brechdan broke the circuit. For a space he sat quiet. The day had been long for
him. His bones felt stiff and his tail ached from the weight on it. Yes, he
thought, one grows old; at first the thing merely creeps forward, a dulling of
sense and a waning of strength, nothing that enzyme therapy can't handle—then
suddenly, overnight, you are borne on a current so fast that the landscape
blurs, and you hear the cataract roar ahead of you. Dearly desired he to
flit home, breathe the purity which blew around Dhangodhan's towers, chat over
a hot cup with Elwych and tumble to bed. But they awaited him at the Terran
Embassy; and afterward he must return hither and meet with … who was
that agent waiting down in Intelligence? … Dwyr the Hook, aye; and
then he might as well bunk here for what remained of the night. He squared his
shoulders, swallowed a stimpill, and left the vault. His Admiralty worked
around the clock. He heard its buzz, click, foot-shuffle, mutter through the
shut anteroom door. Because he really had not time for exchanging salutes
according to rank and clan with every officer, technician, and guard, he seldom
passed that way. Another door opened directly on his main suite of offices.
Opposite, a third door gave on a private corridor which ran blank and straight
to the landing flange. When he stepped out onto
that, the air was cool and damp. The roof screened the beacon from him and he
saw clearly over Ardaig. It was not a Terran city
and knew nothing of hectic many-colored blaze after dark. Ground vehicles were
confined to a few avenues, otherwise tubeways; the streets were for pedestrians
and gwydh riders. Recreation was largely at home or in ancient theaters and
sports fields. Shops—as contrasted to mercantile centers with communicator and
delivery systems—were small enterprises, closed at this hour, which had been in
the same house and the same family for generations. Tridaig shouted. Ardaig
murmured, beneath a low salt wind. Luminous pavements wove their web over the
hills, trapping lit windows; aircraft made moving lanterns above; spotlights on
Afon simply heightened its austerity. Two of the four moons were aloft,
Neihevin and Seith. The bay glowed and sparkled under them. Brechdan's driver folded
arms and bowed. Illogical, retaining that old gaffer when this aircar had a
robopilot. But his family had always served the Ynvorys. Guards made their
clashing salute and entered the vehicle too. It purred off. The stimulant took hold.
Brechdan felt renewed eagerness. What might he not uncover tonight? Relax, he
told himself, keep patience, wait for the one gem to appear from a dung-heap of
formalisms … If we must exterminate the Terrans, we will at lease
have rid the universe of much empty chatter. His destination was
another offense, a compound of residences and offices in the garish bubble
style of the Imperium four hundred years ago. Then Merseia was an up-and-coming
planet, worth a legation but in no position to dictate architecture or site.
Qgoth Heights lay well outside Ardaig. Later the city grew around them and the
legation became an embassy and Merseia could deny requests for expanded
facilities. : Brechdan walked the entranceway alone, between rosebushes. He did
admire that forlorn defiance. A slave took his cloak, a butler tall as himself
announced him to the company. The usual pack of civilians in fancy dress,
service attachйs in uniform—no, yonder stood the newcomers. Lord Oliveira of
Ganymede, Imperial Ambassador to his Supremacy the Roidhun, scurried forth. He
was a thin and fussy man whose abilities had on a memorable occasion given
Brechdan a disconcerting surprise. "Welcome,
Councillor," he said in Eriau, executing a Terran style bow. "We are
delighted you could come." He escorted his guest across the parquet floor.
"May I present his Majesty's envoy, Lord Markus Hauksberg, Viscount of Ny
Kalmar?" "I am honored,
sir." (Languid manner belied by physical condition, eyes that watched
closely from beneath the lids, good grasp of language.) " … Commander
Max Abrams." "The Hand of the
Vach Ynvory is my shield." (Dense accent, but fluent; words and gestures
precisely right, dignified greeting of one near in rank to his master who is
your equal. Stout frame, gray-shot hair, big nose, military carriage. So this
was the fellow reported by courier to be coming along from Starkad. Handle with
care.) Introductions proceeded.
Brechdan soon judged that none but Hauksberg and Abrams were worth more than
routine attention. The latter's aide, Flandry, looked alert; but he was young
and very junior. A trumpet blew the At
Ease. Oliveira was being especially courteous in following local custom. But as
this also meant females were excluded, most of his staff couldn't think what to
do next. They stood about in dismal little groups, trying to make talk with
their Merseian counterparts. Brechdan accepted a
glass of arthberry wine and declined further refreshment. He circulated for
what he believed was a decent minimum time—let the Terrans know that he could
observe their rituals when he chose—before he zeroed in on Lord Hauksberg. "I trust your
journey here was enjoyable," he began. "A bit dull,
sir," the viscount replied, "until your naval escort joined us. Must
say they put on a grand show; and the honor guard after we landed was better
yet. Hope no one minded my taping the spectacle." "Certainly not,
provided you stopped before entering Afon." "Haw! Your, ah,
foreign minister is a bit stiff, isn't he? But he was quite pleasant when I
offered my credentials, and promised me an early presentation to his
Supremacy." Brechdan took Hauksberg's
arm and strolled him toward a corner. Everyone got the hint; the party plodded
on at a distance from where they two sat down below an abominable portrait of
the Emperor. "And how was
Starkad?" Brechdan asked. "Speaking for
myself, sir, grim and fascinating," Hauksberg said. "Were you ever
there?" "No."
Sometimes Brechdan was tempted to pay a visit. By the God, it was long since he
had been on a planet unraped by civilization! Impossible, however, at any rate
for the next few years when Starkad's importance must be underplayed.
Conceivably near the end—He decided that he hoped a visit would not be called
for. Easier to make use of a world which was a set of reports than one whose
people had been seen in their own lives. "Well, scarcely in
your sphere of interest, eh, sir?" Hauksberg said. "We are bemused
by, ah, Merseia's endeavors." "The Roidhunate has
explained over and over." "Of course. Of
course. But mean to say, sir, if you wish to practice charity, as you obviously
do, well, aren't there equal needs closer to home? The Grand Council's first
duty is to Merseia. I would be the last to accuse you of neglecting your
duty." Brechdan shrugged.
"Another mercantile base would be useful in the Betelgeuse region. Starkad
is not ideal, either in location or characteristics, but it is acceptable. If
at the same time we can gain the gratitude of a talented and deserving species,
that tips the balance." He sharpened his gaze. "Your government's
reaction was distressing." "Predictable,
though." Hauksberg sprawled deeper into his antique chromeplated chair.
"To build confidence on both sides, until a true general agreement can be
reached—" mercifully, he did not say "between our great
races"—"the inter-imperial buffer space must remain inviolate. I
might add, sir, that the landfolk are no less deserving than the seafolk.
Meaningless quibble, who was the initial aggressor. His Majesty's government
feels morally bound to help the landfolk before their cultures go under." "Now who is
ignoring needs close to home?" Brechdan asked dryly. Hauksberg grew earnest.
"Sir, the conflict can be ended. You must have received reports of our
efforts to negotiate peace in the Zletovar area. If Merseia would join her good
offices to ours, a planet-wide arrangement could be made. And as for bases
there, why should we not establish one together? A long stride toward real
friendship, wouldn't you say?" "Forgive possible
rudeness," Brechdan parried, "but I am curious why your pacific
mission includes the chief of Intelligence operations on Starkad." "As an advisor,
sir," Hauksberg said with less enthusiasm. "Simply an advisor who
knows more about the natives than anyone else who was available. Would you like
to speak with him?" He raised an arm and called in Anglic, which Brechdan
understood better than was publicly admitted: "Max! I say, Max, come over
here for a bit, will you?" Commander Abrams
disengaged himself from an assistant secretary (Brechdan sympathized; that
fellow was the dreariest of Oliveira's entire retinue) and saluted the
Councillor. "May I serve the Hand?" "Never mind
ceremony, Max," Hauksberg said in Eriau. "We're not talking business
tonight. Merely sounding each other out away from protocol and recorders.
Please explain your intentions here." "Give what facts I
have and my opinions for whatever they are worth, if anyone asks," Abrams
drawled. "I don't expect I'll be called on very often." "Then why did you
come, Commander?" Brechdan gave him his title, which he had not bothered
to do for Hauksberg. "Well, Hand, I did
hope to ask a good many questions." "Sit down,"
Hauksberg invited. Abrams said, "With
the Hand's leave?" Brechdan touched a
finger to his brow, feeling sure the other would understand. He felt a higher
and higher regard for this man, which meant Abrams must be watched closer than
anyone else. The officer plumped his
broad bottom into a chair. "I thank the Hand." He lifted a glass of
whisky-and-soda to them, sipped, and said: "We really know so little on
Terra about you. I couldn't tell you how many Merseiological volumes are in the
archives, but no matter; they can't possibly contain more than a fraction of
the truth. Could well be we misinterpret you on any number of important
points." "You have your
Embassy," Brechdan reminded him. "The staff includes
xenologists." "Not enough, Hand.
Not by a cometary orbit. And in any event, most of what they do learn is
irrelevant at my level. With your permission, I'd like to talk freely with a
lot of different Merseians. Please keep those talks surveyed, to avoid any
appearance of evil." Brechdan and Abrams exchanged a grin. "Also, I'd
like access to your libraries, journals, whatever is public information as far
as you're concerned but may not have reached Terra." "Have you any
specific problems in mind? I will help if I can." "The Hand is most
gracious. I'll mention just one typical point. It puzzles me, I've ransacked
our files and turned researchers loose on it myself, and still haven't found an
answer. How did Merseia come upon Starkad in the first place?" Brechdan stiffened.
"Exploring the region," he said curtly. "Unclaimed space is free
to all ships." "But suddenly,
Hand, there you were, active on the confounded planet. Precisely how did you
happen to get interested?" Brechdan took a moment
to organize his reply. "Your people went through that region rather
superficially in the old days," he said. "We are less eager for
commercial profit than the Polesotechnic League was, and more eager for
knowledge, so we mounted a systematic survey. The entry for Saxo, in your
pilot's manual, made Starkad seem worth thorough study. After all, we too are
attracted by planets with free oxygen and liquid water, be they ever so
inhospitable otherwise. We found a situation which needed correction, and
proceeded to send a mission. Inevitably, ships in the Betelgeuse trade noted
frequent wakes near Saxo. Terran units investigated, and the present unhappy
state of affairs developed." "Hm." Abrams
looked into his glass. "I thank the Hand. But it'd be nice to have more
details. Maybe, buried somewhere among them, is a clue to something our side
has misunderstood—semantic and cultural barrier, not so?" "I doubt
that," Brechdan said. "You are welcome to conduct inquiries, but on
this subject you will waste your energy. There may not even be a record of the
first several Merseian expeditions to the Saxo vicinity. We are not as concerned
to put everything on tape as you." Sensing his coldness,
Hauksberg hastened to change the subject. Conversation petered out in
banalities. Brechdan made his excuses and departed before midnight. A good opponent, Abrams,
he thought. Too good for my peace of mind. He is definitely the one on whom to
concentrate attention. Or is he? Would a
genuinely competent spy look formidable? He could be a—yes, they call it a
stalking horse—for someone or something else. Then again, that may be what he
wants me to think. Brechdan chuckled. This
regression could go on forever. And it was not his business to play watchbeast.
The supply of security officers was ample. Every move that every Terran made,
outside the Embassy which they kept bugproof with annoying ingenuity, was
observed as a matter of course. Still, he was about to
see in person an individual Intelligence agent, one who was important enough to
have been sent especially to Starkad and especially returned when wily old
Runei decided he could be more valuable at home. Dwyr the Hook might carry
information worthy of the Council president's direct hearing. After which
Brechdan could give him fresh orders … In the icy fluorescence
of an otherwise empty office, the thing waited. Once it had been Merseian and
young. The lower face remained, as a mask rebuilt by surgery; part of the
torso; left arm and right stump. The rest was machine. Its biped frame executed
a surprisingly smooth salute. At such close quarters Brechdan, who had keen
ears, could barely discern the hum from within. Power coursed out of capacitors
which need not be recharged for several days, even under strenuous use: out
through microminiaturized assemblies that together formed a body. "Service
to my overlord." A faint metal tone rang in the voice. Brechdan responded in
honor. He did not know if he would have had the courage to stay alive so
amputated. "Well met, Arlech Dwyr. At ease." "The Hand of the
Vach Ynvory desired my presence?" "Yes, yes."
Brechdan waved impatiently. "Let us have no more etiquette. I'm fed to the
occiput with it. Apology that I kept you waiting, but before I could talk
meaningfully about those Terrans I must needs encounter them for myself. Now
then, you worked on the staff of Fodaich Runei's Intelligence corps as well as
in the field, did you not? So you are conversant both with collated data and
with the problems of gathering information in the first place. Good. Tell me in
your own words why you were ordered back." "Hand," said
the voice, "as an operative, I was useful but not indispensable. The one
mission which I and no other might have carried out, failed: to burgle the
office of the Terran chief of Intelligence." "You expected
success?" Brechdan hadn't known Dwyr was that good. "Yes, Hand. I can
be equipped with electromagnetic sensors and transducers, to feel out a hidden
circuit. In addition, I have developed an empathy with machines. I can be
aware, on a level below consciousness, of what they are about to do, and adjust
my behavior accordingly. It is analogous to my former perception, the normal
one, of nuances in expression, tone, stance on the part of fellow Merseians
whom I knew intimately. Thus I could have opened the door without triggering an
alarm. Unfortunately, and unexpectedly, living guards were posted. In physical
strength, speed, and agility, this body is inferior to what I formerly had. I
could not have killed them unbeknownst to their mates." "Do you think
Abrams knows about you?" Brechdan asked sharply. "No, Hand. Evidence
indicates he is ultra-cautious by habit. Those Terrans who damaged me later in
the jungle got no good look at me. I did glimpse Abrams in companionship with
the other, Hauksberg. This led us to suspect early that he would accompany the
delegation to Merseia, no doubt in the hope of conducting espionage. Because of
my special capabilities, and my acquaintance with Abrams' working methods,
Fodaich Runei felt I should go ahead of the Terrans and await their
arrival." "Khraich. Yes.
Correct." Brechdan forced himelf to look at Dwyr as he would at a fully
alive being. "You can be put into other bodies, can you not?" "Yes, Hand,"
came from the blank visage. "Vehicles, weapons, detectors, machine tools,
anything designed to receive my organic component and my essential prostheses.
I do not take long to familiarize myself with their use. Under his Supremacy, I
stand at your orders." . "You will have
work." Brechdan said "In truth you will. I know not what as yet. You
may even be asked to burgle the envoy's ship in orbit. For a beginning,
however, I think we must plan a program again our friend Abrams. He will expect
the usual devices; you may give him a surprise. If you do, you shall not go
unhonored." Dwyr the Hook waited to
hear further. Brechdan could not
forebear taking a minute for plain fleshly comradeship. "How were you
hurt?" he asked. "In the conquest of
Janair, Hand. A nuclear blast. The field hospital kept me alive and sent me to
base for regeneration. But the surgeons there found that the radiation had too
much deranged my cellular chemistry. At that point I requested death. They
explained that techniques newly learned from Gorrazan gave hope of an
alternative, which might make my service quite precious. They were
correct." Brechdan was momentarily
startled. This didn't sound right—Well, he was no biomedic. His spirits darkened.
Why pretend pity? You can't be friends with the dead. And Dwyr was dead, in
bone, sinew, glands, gonads, guts, everything but a brain which had nothing
left except the single-mindedness of a machine. So, use him. That was what
machines were for. Brechdan took a turn
around the room, hands behind back, tail unrestful, scar throbbing.
"Good," he said. "Let us discuss procedure." 11 "Oh, no,"
Abrams had said. "I thank most humbly the government of his Supremacy for
this generous offer, but would not dream of causing such needless trouble and
expense. True, the Embassy cannot spare me an airboat. However, the ship we
came in, Dronning Margrete, has a number of auxiliaries now idle. I can use one
of them." "The Commander's
courtesy is appreciated," bowed the officiai at the other end of the
vidiphone line. "Regrettably, though, law permits no one not of Merseian
race to operate within the Korychan System a vessel possessing hyperdrive
capabilities. The Commander will remember that a Merseian pilot and engineer
boarded his Lordship's vessel for the last sublight leg of the journey here. Is
my information correct that the auxiliaries of his Lordship's so impressive vessel
possess hyperdrives in addition to gravities?" "They do,
distinguished colleague. But the two largest carry an airboat apiece as their
own auxiliaries. I am sure Lord Hauksberg won't mind lending me one of those
for my personal transportation. There is no reason to bother your
department." "But there
is!" The Merseian threw up his hands in quite a manlike gesture of horror.
"The Commander, no less than his Lordship, is a guest of his Supremacy. We
cannot disgrace his Supremacy by failing to show what hospitality lies within
our power. A vessel will arrive tomorrow for the Commander's personal use. The
delay is merely so that it may be furnished comfortably for Terrans and the
controls modified to a Terran pattern. The boat can sleep six, and we will
stock its galley with whatever is desired and available here. It has full
aerial capability, has been checked out for orbital use, and could no doubt
reach the outermost moon at need. I beg for the Commander's acceptance." "Distinguished
colleague, I in turn beg that you, under his Supremacy, accept my sincerest
thanks," Abrams beamed. The beam turned into a guffaw as soon as he had
cut the circuit. Of course the Merseians weren't going to let him travel around
unescorted—not unless they could bug his transportation. And of course they
would expect him to look for eavesdropping gimmicks and find any of the usual
sorts. Therefore he really needn't conduct that tedious search. Nonetheless, he did.
Negligence would have been out of character. To those who delivered his
beautiful new flier he explained that he set technicians swarming through her
to make certain that everything was understood about her operation; different
cultures, different engineering, don't y' know. The routine disclaimer was met
by the routine pretense of believing it. The airboat carried no spy gadgets
apart from the one he had been hoping for. He found this by the simple
expedient of waiting till he was alone aboard and then asking. The method of
its concealment filled him with admiration. But thereafter he ran
into a stone wall—or, rather, a pot of glue. Days came and went, the long
thirty-seven-hour days of Merseia. He lost one after another by being summoned
to the chamber in Castle Afon where Hauksberg and staff conferred with Brechdan's
puppets. Usually the summons was at the request of a Merseian, who wanted
elucidation of some utterly trivial question about Starkad. Having explained,
Abrams couldn't leave. Protocol forbade. He must sit there while talk droned
on, inquiries, harangues, haggles over points which a child could see were
unessential—oh, yes, these greenskins had a fine art of making negotiations
interminable. Abrams said as much to
Hauksberg, once when they were back at the Embassy. "I know," the
viscount snapped. He was turning gaunt and hollow-eyed. "They're so
suspicious of us. Well, we're partly to blame for that, eh? Got to show good
faith. While we talk, we don't fight." "They fight on
Starkad," Abrams grumbled around his cigar. "Terra won't wait on
Brechdan's comma-counting forever." "I'll dispatch a
courier presently, to report and explain. We are gettin' somewhere, don't
forget. They're definitely int'rested in establishin' a system for continuous
medium-level conference between the governments." "Yah. A great big
gorgeous idea which'll give political leverage to our accommodationists at home
for as many years as Brechdan feels like carrying on discussions about it. I
thought we came here to settle the Starkad issue." "I thought I was
the head of this mission," Hauksberg retorted. "That'll do,
Commander." He yawned and stretched, stiffly. "One more drink and ho
for bed. Lord Emp'ror, but I'm tired!" On days when he was not
immobilized, Abrams ground through his library research and his interviews. The
Merseians were most courteous and helpful. They flooded him with books and
periodicals. Officers and officials would talk to him for hours on end. That
was the trouble. Aside from whatever feel he might be getting for the basic
setup, he learned precisely nothing of value. Which was a kind of
indicator too, he admitted. The lack of hard information about early Merseian
journeys to the Saxo region might be due to sloppiness about record keeping as
Brechdan had said. But a check of other planets showed that they were, as a
rule, better documented. Starkad appeared to have some secret importance. So
what else is new? At first Abrams had
Flandry to help out. Then an invitation arrived. In the cause of better
understanding between races, as well as hospitality, would Ensign Flandry like
to tour the planet in company with some young Merseians whose rank corresponded
more or less to his? "Would you?"
Abrams asked. "Why—" Flandry
straightened at his desk. "Hell, yes. Right now I feel as if every library
in the universe should be bombed. But you need me here … I
suppose." "I do. This is a
baldpated ruse to cripple me still worse. However, you can go." "You mean
that?" Flandry gasped. "Sure. We're
stalled here. You just might discover something." "Thank you,
sir!" Flandry rocketed out of his chair. "Whoa there, son.
Won't be any vacation for you. You've got to play the decadent Terran
nogoodnik. Mustn't disappoint their expectations. Besides, it improves your
chances. Keep your eyes and ears open, sure, but forget the rule about keeping
your mouth shut. Babble. Ask questions. Foolish ones, mainly; and be damned
sure not to get so inquisitive they suspect you of playing spy." Flandry frowned.
"Uh … sir, I'd look odd if I didn't grab after information.
Thing to do, I should guess, is be clumsy and obvious about it." "Good. You catch on
fast. I wish you were experienced, but—Nu, everybody has to start sometime, and
I'm afraid you will not run into anything too big for a pup to handle. So go
get yourself some experience." Abrams watched the boy
bustle off, and a sigh gusted from him. By and large, after winking at a few
things, he felt he'd have been proud to have Dominic Flandry for a son. Though
not likely to hit any pay dirt, this trip would further test the ensign's
competence. If he proved out well, then probably he must be thrown to the
wolves by Abrams' own hand. Because events could not
be left on dead zero as long as Brechdan wished. The situation right now
carried potentials which only a traitor would fail to exploit. Nonetheless, the
way matters had developed, with the mission detained on Merseia for an
indefinite period, Abrams could not exploit them as he had originally schemed.
The classically neat operation he had had in mind must be turned into an
explosion. And Flandry was the
fuse. Like almost every
intelligent species, the Merseians had in their past evolved thousands of
languages and cultures. Finally, as in the case of Terra, one came to dominate
the others and slowly absorb them into itself. But the process had not gone as
far on Merseia. The laws and customs of the lands bordering the Wilwidh Ocean
were still a mere overlay on some parts of the planet. Eriau was the common
tongue, but there were still those who were less at home in it than in the
languages they had learned from their mothers. Perhaps this was why
Lannawar Belgis had never risen above yqan—CPO, Flandry translated—and was at
the moment a sort of batman to the group. He couldn't even pronounce his rating
correctly. The sound rendered by q, approximately kdh where dh = th as in
"the," gave him almost as much trouble as it did an Anglic speaker.
Or perhaps he just wasn't ambitious. For certainly he was able, as his huge
fund of stories from his years in space attested. He was also a likeable old
chap. He sat relaxed with the
Terran and Tachwyr the Dark, whose rank of mei answered somewhat to lieutenant
j.g. Flandry was getting used to the interplay of formality and ease between
officers and enlisted personnel in the Merseian service. Instead of the mutual
aloofness on Terran ships, there was an intimacy which the seniors led but did
not rigidly control, a sort of perpetual dance. "Aye,
foreseers," Lannawar rumbled, "yon was a strange orb and glad I was
to see the last of it. Yet somehow, I know not, ours was never a lucky ship
afterward. Nothing went ever wholly right, you track me? Speaking naught
against captain nor crew, I was glad for transfer to the Bedh-Ivrich. Her
skipper was Runei the Wanderer, and far did he take us on explores." Tachwyr's tailtip jerked
and he opened his mouth. Someone was always around to keep a brake on
Lannawar's gar-rulousness. Flandry, who had sat half drowsing, surged to
alertness. He beat Tachwyr by a millisecond in exclaiming: "Runei? The
same who is now Fodaich on Starkad?" "Why … aye,
believe so, foreseer." Eyes squinched in the tattooed face across the
table. A green hand scratched the paunch where the undress tunic bulged open.
"Not as I know much. Heard naught of Starkad ere they told me why you
Terrans is come." Flandry's mind went into
such furious action that he felt each of the several levels on which it was
operating. He had to grab whatever lead chance had offered him after so many
fruitless days; he must fend off Tachwyr's efforts to wrench the lead away from
him, for a minute or two anyhow; at the same time, he must maintain his role.
(Decadent, as Abrams had suggested, and this he had enjoyed living up to
whenever his escorts took him to some place of amusement. But not fatuous; he
had quickly seen that he'd get further if they respected him a little and were
not bored by his company. He was naпve, wide-eyed, pathetically hoping to
accomplish something for Mother Terra, simultaneously impressed by what he saw
here. In wry moments he admitted to himself that this was hardly a faked
character.) On lower levels of consciousness, excitement opened the sensory
floodgates. Once more he noticed the
background. They sat, with a bench for him, in a marble pergola intricately
arabesqued and onion-domed. Tankards of bitter ale stood before them. Merseian
food and drink were nourishing to a Terran, and often tasty. They had entered
this hilltop restaurant (which was also a shrine, run by the devotees of a very
ancient faith) for the view and for a rest after walking around in Dalgorad.
That community nestled below them, half hidden by lambent flowers and
deep-green fronds, a few small modern buildings and many hollowed-out trees
which had housed untold generations of a civilized society. Past the airport
lay a beach of red sand. An ocean so blue it was nearly black cast breakers
ashore; their booming drifted faint to Flandry on a wind that smelled cinnamon.
Korych shone overhead with subtropical fierceness, but the moons Wythna and
Lythyr were discernible, like ghosts. Interior sensations:
muscles drawn tight in thighs and belly, bloodbeat in the eardrums, chill in
the palms. No feeling of excess weight; Merseian gravity was only a few percent
above Terra's. Merseian air, water, biochemistry, animal and plant life, were
close parallels to what man had evolved among. By the standards of either
world, the other was beautiful. Which made the two races
enemies. They wanted the same kind of real estate. "So Runei himself
was not concerned with the original missions to Starkad?" Flandry asked. "No, foreseer. We
surveyed beyond Rigel." Lannawar reached for his tankard. "I imagine,
though," Flandry prompted, "from time to time when space explorers
got together, as it might be in a tavern, you'd swap yarns?" "Aye, aye. What
else? 'Cept when we was told to keep our hatches dogged about where we'd been.
Not easy, foreseer, believe you me 'tis not, when you could outbrag the crew of
'em save 'tis a Naval secret." "You must have
heard a lot about the Betelgeuse region, regardless." Lannawar raised his
tankard. Thereby he missed noticing Tachwyr's frown. But he did break the
thread, and the officer caught the raveled end deftly. "Are you really
interested in anecdotes, Ensign? I fear that our good yqan has nothing else to
give you." "Well, yes, Mei, I
am interested in anything about the Betelgeuse sector," Flandry said.
"After all, it borders on our Empire. I've already served there, on
Starkad, and I daresay I will again. So I'd be grateful for whatever you care
to tell me." Lannawar came up for
air. "If you yourself, Yqan, were never there, perhaps you know someone
who was. I ask for no secrets, of course, only stories." "Khr-r-r."
Lannawar wiped foam off his chin. "Not many about. Not many what have
fared yonderways. They're either back in space, or they've died. Was old Ralgo
Tamuar, my barracks friend in training days. He was there aplenty. How he could
lie! But he retired to one of the colonies, let me see now, which one?" "Yqan Belgis."
Tachwyr spoke quietly, with no special inflection, but Lannawar stiffened.
"I think best we leave this subject. The Starkadian situation is an
unfortunate one. We are trying to be friends with our guest, and I hope we are
succeeding, but to dwell on the dispute makes a needless obstacle." To
Flandry, with sardonicism: "I trust the ensign agrees?" "As you wish,"
the Terran mumbled. Damn, damn, and damn to
the power of hell! He'd been on a scent. He could swear he'd been. He felt
nauseated with frustration. Some draughts of ale
soothed him. He'd never been idiot enough to imagine himself making any
spectacular discoveries or pulling off any dazzling coups on this junket.
(Well, certain daydreams, but you couldn't really count that.) What he had
obtained now was—a hint which tended to confirm that the early Merseian
expeditions to Starkad had found a big and strange thing. As a result, secrecy
had come down like a candlesnuffer. Officers and crews who knew, or might
suspect, the truth were snatched from sight. Murdered? No, surely not. The
Merseians were not the antlike monsters which Terran propaganda depicted.
They'd never have come as far as this, or be as dangerous as they were, had
that been the case. To shut a spacefarer's mouth, you reassigned him or retired
him to an exile which might well be comfortable and which he himself might
never realize was an exile. Even for the post of
Starkadian commandant, Brechdan had been careful to pick an officer who knew
nothing beforehand about his post, and could not since have been told the hidden
truth. Why … aside from those exploratory personnel who no longer
counted, perhaps only half a dozen beings in the universe knew! Obviously Tachwyr
didn't. He and his fellows had simply been ordered to keep Flandry off certain
topics. The Terran believed they
were honest, most of them, in their friendliness toward him and their expressed
wish that today's discord could be resolved. They were good chaps. He felt more
akin to them than to many humans. In spite of which, they
served the enemy, the real enemy, Brechdan Ironrede and his Grand Council, who
had put something monstrous in motion. Wind and surfbeat sounded all at once
like the noise of an oncoming machine. I haven't found anything
Abrams doesn't already suspect, Flandry thought. But I have got for him a bit
more proof. God! Four days to go before I can get back and give it to him. His mouth still felt
dry. "How about another round?" he said. "We're going for a
ride," Abrams said. "Sir?" Flandry
blinked. "Little pleasure
trip. Don't you think I deserve one too? A run to Gethwyd Forest, say, that's
an unrestricted area." Flandry looked past his
boss's burly form, out the window to the compound. A garden robot whickered
among the roses, struggling to maintain the microecology they required. A
secretary on the diplomatic staff stood outside one of the residence bubbles,
flirting boredly with the assistant naval attache's wife. Beyond them, Ardaig's
modern towers shouldered brutally skyward. The afternoon was hot and quiet. "Uh … sir—"
Flandry hesitated. "When you 'sir' me
in private these days, you want something," Abrams said. "Carry
on." "Well, uh, could we
invite Donna d'Io?" Beneath those crow's-footed eyes, Flandry felt himself
blush. He tried to control it, which made matters worse. "She, uh, must be
rather lonesome when his Lordship and aides are out of town." Abrams grinned.
"What, I'm not decorative enough for you? Sorry. It wouldn't look right.
Let's go." Flandry stared at him.
He knew the man by now. At least, he could spot when something unadmitted
lurked under the skin. His spine tingled. Having reported on his trip, he'd
expected a return to desk work, dullness occasionally relieved after dark. But
action must be starting at last. However much he had grumbled, however
sarcastic he had waxed about the glamorous life in romantic alien capitals, he
wasn't sure he liked the change. "Very good,
sir," he said. They left the office and
crossed aboveground to the garages. The Merseian technics reported periodically
to inspect the luxury boat lent Abrams, but today a lone human was on duty.
Envious, he floated the long blue teardrop out into the sunlight. Abrams and
Flandry boarded, sealed the door, and found chairs in the saloon. "Gethwyd
Forest, main parking area," Abrams said. "Five hundred KPH. Any
altitude will do." The machine communicated
with other machines. Clearance was granted and lane assigned. The boat rose
noiselessly. On Terra, its path could have been monitored, but the haughty
chieftains of Merseia had not allowed that sort of capability to be built in
for possible use against them. Traffic control outside of restricted sections
was automatic and anonymous. Unless they shadowed a boat, or bugged it somehow,
security officers were unable to keep it under surveillance. Abrams had
remarked that he liked that, on principle as well as because his own
convenience was served. He groped in his tunic
for a cigar. "We could have a drink," he suggested. "Whisky and
water for me." Flandry got it, with a
stiff cognac for himself. By the time he returned from the bar, they were
leveled off at about six kilometers and headed north. They would take a couple
of hours, at this ambling pace, to reach the preserve which the Vach Dathyr had
opened to the public. Flandry had been there before, on a holiday excursion
Oliveira arranged for Hauksberg and company. He remembered great solemn trees,
gold-feathered birds, the smell of humus and the wild taste of a spring. Most
vividly he remembered sunflecks patterned across Persis' thin gown. Now he saw
the planet's curve through a broad viewport, the ocean gleaming westward, the
megalopolitan maze giving way to fields and isolated castles. "Sit down,"
Abrams said. His hand chopped at a lounger. Smoke hazed him where he sprawled. Flandry lowered himself.
He wet his lips. "You've business with me, haven't you?" he said. "Right on the first
guess! To win your Junior Spy badge and pocket decoder, tell me what an
elephant is." "Huh, sir?" "An elephant is a
mouse built to government specifications. Or else a mouse is a transistorized
elephant." Abrams didn't look jovial. He was delaying. Flandry took a nervous
sip. "If it's confidential," he asked, "should we be here?" "Safer than the
Embassy. That's only probably debugged, not certainly, and old-fashioned
listening at doors hasn't ever quite gone out of style." "But a Merseian
runabout—" "We're safe. Take
my word." Abrams glared at the cigar he rolled between his fingers.
"Son, I need you for a job of work and I need you bad. Could be dangerous
and sure to be nasty. Are you game?" Flandry's heart bumped.
"I'd better be, hadn't I?" Abrams cocked his head
at the other. "Not bad repartee for a nineteen-year-old. But do you mean
it, down in your bones?" "Yes, sir." I
think so. "I believe you. I
have to." Abrams took a drink and a long drag. Abruptly: "Look here, let's
review the circumstances as she stands. I reckon you have the innate common
sense to see what's written on your eyeballs, that Brechdan hasn't got the
slightest intention of settling the squabble on Starkad. I thought for a while,
maybe he figured to offer us peace there in exchange for some other thing he
really wants. But if that were the case, he wouldn't have thrown a triple gee
field onto the parley the way he has. He'd have come to the point with the
unavoidable minimum of waste motion. Merseians don't take a human's glee in
forensics. If Brechdan wanted to strike a a bargain, Hauksberg would be home on
Terra right now with a preliminary report. "Instead,
Brechdan's talkboys have stalled, with one quibble and irrelevancy after another.
Even Hauksberg's getting a gutful. Which I think is the reason Brechdan
personally invited him and aides to Dhangodhan for a week or two of shootin'
and fishin'. Partly because that makes one more delay by itself; partly to
smooth our viscount's feelings with a 'gesture of goodwill.' " The quotes
were virtually audible. "I was invited too, but begged off on grounds of
wanting to continue my researches. If he'd thought of it, Brechdan'd likely
have broken custom and asked Donna Persis, as an added inducement for staying
in the mountains a while. Unless, hm, he's provided a little variety for his
guests. There are humans in Merseian service, you know." Flandry nodded. For a
second he felt disappointment. Hauksberg's absence when he returned had seemed
to provide a still better opportunity than Hauksberg's frequent exhaustion in
Ardaig. But excitement caught him. Never mind Persis. She was splendid
recreation, but that was all. "I might be tempted
to think like his Lordship, Brechdan is fundamentally sincere," he said.
"The average Merseian is, I'm sure." "Sure you're sure.
And you're right. Fat lot of difference that makes." "But anyhow,
Starkad is too important. Haven't you told that idi—Lord Hauksberg so?" "I finally got
tired of telling him," Abrams said. "What have I got to argue from
except a prejudice based on experiences he's never shared?" "I wonder why
Brechdan agreed to receive a delegation in the first place." "Oh, easier to
accept than refuse, I suppose. Or it might have suited his plans very well. He
doesn't want total war yet. I do believe he originally intended to send us
packing in fairly short order. What hints I've gathered suggest that another
issue has arisen—that he's planning quite a different move, not really germane
to Starkad—and figures to put a better face on it by acting mild toward us. God
alone knows how long we'll be kept here. Could be weeks more." Abrams leaned forward.
"And meanwhile," he continued, "anything could happen. I came
with some hopes of pulling off a hell of a good stunt just before we left. And
it did look hopeful at first, too. Could give us the truth about Starkad. Well,
things have dragged on, configurations have changed, my opportunity may vanish.
We've got to act soon, or our chance of acting at all will be mighty
poor." This is it, Flandry
thought, and a part of him jeered at the banality, while he waited with
hardheld breath. "I don't want to
tell you more than I've got to," Abrams said. "Just this: I've
learned where Brechdan's ultrasecret file is. That wasn't hard; everybody knows
about it. But I think I can get an agent in there. The next and worst problem
will be to get the information out, and not have the fact we're doing so be
known. "I dare not wait
till we all go home. That gives too much time for too many things to go wrong.
Nor can I leave beforehand by myself. I'm too damn conspicuous. It'd look too
much as if I'd finished whatever I set out to do. Hauksberg himself might
forbid me to go, precisely because he suspected I was going to queer his
pea-ea-eace mission. Or else … I'd be piloted out of the system by
Merseians. Brechdan's bully boys could arrange an unfortunate accident merely
as a precaution. They could even spirit me off to a hypnoprobe room, and what
happened to me there wouldn't matter a hoot-let compared to what'd happen to
our forces later. I'm not being melodramatic, son. Those are the unbuttered
facts of life." Flandry sat still.
"You want me to convey the data out, if you get them," he said. "Ah, you do know what
an elephant is." "You must have a
pretty efficient pipeline to Merseian HQ." "I've seen
worse," Abrams said rather smugly. "Couldn't have been
developed in advance." Flandry spoke word by word. Realization was
freezing him. "Had it been, why should you yourself come here? Must be
something you got hold of on Starkad, and hadn't a chance to instruct anyone
about that you trusted and who could be spared." "Let's get down to
business," Abrams said fast. "No. I want to
finish this." "You?" Flandry stared past
Abrams like a blind man. "If the contact was that good," he said,
"I think you got a warning about the submarine attack on Ujanka. And you
didn't tell. There was no preparation. Except for a fluke, the city would have
been destroyed." He rose. "I saw Tigeries killed in the
streets." "Sit down!" "One mortar planted
on a wharf would have gotten that boat." Flandry started to walk away. His
voice lifted. "Males and females and little cubs, blown apart, buried
alive under rubble, and you did nothing!" Abrams surged to his
feet and came after him. "Hold on, there," he barked. Flandry whirled on him.
"Why the obscenity should I?" Abrams grabbed the boy's
wrists. Flandry tried to break free. Abrams held him where he was. Rage rode
across the dark Chaldean face. "You listen to me," Abrams said.
"I did know. I knew the consequences of keeping silent. When you saved
that town, I went down on my knees before God. I'd've done it before you if you
could've understood. But suppose I had acted. Runei is no man's fool. He'd have
guessed I had a source, and there was exactly one possibility, and after he
looked into that my pipeline would've been broken like a dry stick. And I was
already developing it as a line into Brechdan's own files. Into the truth about
Starkad. How many lives might that save? Not only human. Tigery, Siravo, hell,
Merseian! Use your brains, Dom. You must have a couple of cells clicking
together between those ears. Sure, this is a filthy game. But it has one point
of practicality which is also a point of honor. You don't compromise your
sources. You don't!" Flandry struggled for
air. Abrams let him go. Flandry went back to his lounger, collapsed in it, and
drank deep. Abrams stood waiting. Flandry looked up.
"I'm sorry, sir," he got out. "Overwrought, I guess." "No excuses
needed." Abrams clapped his shoulder. "You had to learn sometime.
Might as well be now. And you know, you give me a tinge of hope. I'd begun to
wonder if anybody was left on our side who played the game for anything but its
own foul sake. When you get some rank—Well, we'll see." He sat down too. Silence
lay between them for a while. "I'm all right now,
sir," Flandry ventured. "Good," Abrams
grunted. "You'll need whatever all rightness you can muster. The best way
I can see to get that information out soon involves a pretty dirty trick too.
Also a humiliating one. I'd like to think you can hit on a better idea, but
I've tried and failed." Flandry gulped.
"What is it?" Abrams approached the
core gingerly. "The problem is this," he said. "I do believe we
can raid that file unbeknownst. Especially now while Brechdan is away, and the
three others who I've found have access to that certain room. But even so, it'd
look too funny if anyone left right after who didn't have a plausible reason.
You can have one." Flandry braced himself.
"What?" "Well … if
Lord Hauksberg caught you in flagrante delicto with his toothsome traveling
companion—" That would have unbraced
a far more sophisticated person. Flandry leaped from his seat. "Sir!" "Down, boy. Don't
tell me the mice haven't been playing while the cat's elsewhere. You've been so
crafty that I don't think anybody else guesses, even in our gossipy little
enclave. Which augurs well for your career in Intelligence. But son, I work
close to you. When you report draggle-tailed on mornings after I noticed Lord
Hauksberg was dead tired and took a hypnotic; when I can't sleep and want to
get some work done in the middle of the night and you aren't in your room; when
you and she keep swapping glances—Must I spell every word? No matter. I don't
condemn you. If I weren't an old man with some eccentric ideas about my
marriage, I'd be jealous. "But this does give
us our chance. All we need do is keep Persis from knowing when her lord and
master is coming back. She don't mix much with the rest of the compound—can't
say I blame her—and you can provide the distraction to make sure. Then the
message sent ahead—which won't be to her personally anyhow, only to alert the
servants in the expectation they'll tell everyone—I'll see to it that the word
doesn't reach her. For the rest, let nature take its course." "No!" Flandry
raged. "Have no fears for
her," Abrams said. "She may suffer no more than a scolding. Lord
Hauksberg is pretty tolerant. Anyway, he ought to be. If she does lose her
position … our corps has a slush fund. She can be supported in
reasonable style on Terra till she hooks someone else. I really don't have the
impression she'd be heartbroken at having to trade Lord Hauksberg in on a newer
model." "But—"
Confound that blush! Flandry stared at the deck. His fists beat on his knees.
"She trusts me. I can't." "I said this was a
dirty business. Do you flatter yourself she's in love with you?" "Well—uh—" "You do. I
wouldn't. But supposing she is, a psych treatment for something that simple is
cheap, and she's cool enough to get one. I've spent more time worrying about
you." "What about
me?" asked Flandry miserably. "Lord Hauksberg has
to retaliate on you. Whatever his private feelings, he can't let something like
this go by; because the whole compound, hell, eventually all Terra is going to
know, if you handle the scene right. He figures on dispatching a courier home a
day or two after he gets back from Dhangodhan, with a progress report. You'll
go on the same boat, in disgrace, charged with some crime like disrespect for
hereditary authority. "Somewhere along
the line—I'll have to work out the details as we go—my agent will nobble the
information and slip it to me. I'll pass it to you. Once on Terra, you'll use a
word I'll give you to get the ear of a certain man. Afterward—son, you're in.
You shouldn't be fumblydiddling this way. You should be licking my boots for
such an opportunity to get noticed by men who count. My boots need
polishing." Flandry shifted, looked
away, out to the clouds which drifted across the green and brown face of
Merseia. The motor hum pervaded his skull. "What about
you?" he asked finally. "And the rest?" "We'll stay here
till the farce is over." "But … no,
wait, sir … so many things could go wrong. Deadly wrong." "I know. That's the
risk you take." "You more."
Flandry swung back to Abrams. "I might get free without a hitch. But if
later there's any suspicion—" "They won't bother
Persis," Abrams said. "She's not worth the trouble. Nor Hauksberg.
He's an accredited diplomat, and arresting him would damn near be an act of
war." "But you, sir! You
may be accredited to him, but—" "Don't fret,"
Abrams said. "I aim to die of advanced senile decay. If that starts
looking unlikely, I've got my blaster. I won't get taken alive and I won't go
out of the cosmos alone. Now: are you game?" It took Flandry's entire
strength to nod. 12 Two days later, Abrams
departed the Embassy again in his boat. Ahead, on the ocean's rim, smoldered a
remnant of sunset. The streets of Ardaig glowed ever more visible as dusk
deepened into night. Windows blinked to life, the Admiralty beacon flared like
a sudden red sun. Traffic was heavy, and the flier's robopilot must keep
signals constantly flickering between itself, others, and the nearest routing
stations. The computers in all stations were still more tightly linked, by a
web of data exchange. Its nexus was Central Control, where the total pattern
was evaluated and the three-dimensional grid of airlanes adjusted from minute
to minute for optimum flow. Into this endless
pulsation, it was easy to inject a suitably heterodyned and scrambled message.
None but sender and recipient would know. Nothing less than a major job of
stochastic analysis could reveal to an outsider that occasional talk had passed
(and even then, would not show what the talk had been about). Neither the boat
nor the Terran Embassy possessed the equipment for that. From the darkness where
he lay, Dwyr the Hook willed a message forth. Not sent: willed, as one wills a
normal voice to speak; for his nerve endings meshed directly with the circuits
of the vessel and he felt the tides in the electronic sea which filled Ardaig
like a living creature feeling the tides in its own blood. "Prime Observer
Three to Intelligence Division Thirteen." A string of code symbols
followed. "Prepare to receive report." Kilometers away, a
Merseian tautened at his desk. He was among the few who knew about Dwyr; they
alternated shifts around the clock. Thus far nothing of great interest had been
revealed to them. But that was good. It proved the Terran agent, whom they had
been warned was dangerous, had accomplished nothing. "Division Thirteen to
Prime Three. Dhech on duty. Report." 120 "Abrams has boarded
alone and instructed the 'pilot to take him to the following location."
Dwyr specified. He identified the place as being in a hill suburb, but no more;
Ardaig was not his town. "Ah, yes,"
Dhech nodded. "Fodaich Qwynn's home. We knew already Abrams was going
there tonight." "Shall I expect
anything to happen?" Dwyr asked. "No, you'll be
parked for several hours, I'm sure, and return him to the Embassy. He's been
after Qwynn for some time for an invitation, so they could talk privately and
at length about certain questions of mutual interest. Today he pressed so hard
that Qwynn found it impossible not to invite him for tonight without open
discourtesy." "Is that
significant?" "Hardly. We judge
Abrams makes haste simply because he got word that his chief will return
tomorrow with the Hand of the Vach Ynvory, great protector of us all.
Thereafter he can expect once more to be enmeshed in diplomatic maneuverings.
This may be his last chance to see Qwynn." "I could leave the
boat and spy upon them," Dwyr offered. "No need. Qwynn is
discreet, and will make his own report to us. If Abrams hopes to pick up a
useful crumb, he will be disappointed. Quite likely, though, his interest is
academic. He appears to have abandoned any plans he may have entertained for
conducting espionage." "He has certainly
done nothing suspicious under my surveillance," Dwyr said, "in a boat
designed to make him think it ideal for hatching plots. I will be glad when he
leaves. This has been a drab assignment." "Honor to you for
taking it," Dhech said. "No one else could have endured so
long." A burst of distortion made him start. "What's that?" "Some trouble with
the communicator," said Dwyr, who had willed the malfunction. "It had
better be checked soon. I might lose touch with you." "We'll think of
some excuse to send a technician over in a day or so. Hunt well." "Hunt well."
Dwyr broke the connection. Through the circuits,
which included scanners, he observed both outside and inside the hull. The boat
was slanting down toward its destination. Abrams had risen and donned a formal
cloak. Dwyr activated a speaker. "I have contacted Division
Thirteen," he said. "They are quite unsuspicious. I planted the idea
that my sender may go blank, in case for some reason they try to call me while
I am absent." "Good lad."
Abrams' tones were likewise calm, but he took a last nervous pull on his cigar
and stubbed it out viciously. "Now remember, I'll stay put for several
hours. Should give you ample time to do your job and slip back into this shell.
But if anything goes wrong, I repeat, what matters is the information. Since we
can't arrange a safe drop, and since mine host tonight will have plenty of
retainers to arrest me, in emergency you get hold of Ensign Flandry and tell
him. You recall he should be in Lord Hauksberg's suite, or else his own room;
and I've mapped the Embassy for you. Now also, make damn sure the phone here is
hooked to the 'pilot, so you or he can call this boat to him. I haven't told
him about you, but I have told him to trust absolutely whoever has the key
word. You remember?" "Yes, of course.
Meshuggah. What does it mean?" "Never mind."
Abrams grinned. "What about
rescuing you?" "Don't. You'd come
to grief for certain. Besides, my personal chances are better if I invoke
diplomatic immunity. I hope, though, our stunt will go off without a
hitch." Abrams looked about. "I can't see you, Dwyr, and I can't
shake your hand, but I'd sure like to. And one day I plan to." The boat
grounded. "Good luck." Dwyr's electronic gaze
followed the stocky figure out, down the ramp and across the small parking
strip in the garden. A pair of clan members saluted the Terran and followed him
toward the mansion. A screen of trees soon hid them. No one else was in view.
Shadows lay heavy around the boat. Let us commence, Dwyr
thought. His decision was altogether unperturbed. Once he would have tasted
fear, felt his heart thud, clutched to him the beloved images of wife and young
and their home upon far Tanis. Courage would have followed, sense of high
purpose, joy of proving his maleness by a leap between the horns of death—thus
did you know yourself wholly alive! But those things had departed with his
body. He could no longer recollect how they felt. The one emotion which never
left him, like an unhealing wound, was the wish to know all emotions again. He had a few.
Workmanship gave a cerebral pleasure. Hate and fury could still
burn … though cold, cold. He wondered if they were not mere habits,
engraved in the synapses of his brain. He stirred in the
womblike cubicle where he lay. Circuit by circuit, his living arm disconnected
his machine parts from the boat. For a moment he was totally cut off. How many
hours till sensory deprivation broke down his sanity? He had been kept supplied
with impressions of the world, and asleep he never dreamed. But suppose he
stayed where he was, in this lightless, soundless, currentless nothing. When he
began to hallucinate, would he imagine himself back on Tanis? Or would Sivilla
his wife come to him? Nonsense. The objective
was that he come to her, whole. He opened a panel and glided forth. The systems
that kept him functional were mounted in a tiny gravsled. His first task would
be to exchange it for a more versatile body. Emerging, he floated low,
keeping to the bushes and shadows. Stars were plainer to see here, away from
the city web and the beacon flare which lay at the foot of these hills. He
noted the sun of Tanis, where Merseians had made their homes among mountains
and forests, where Sivilla lived yet with their children. She thought him dead,
but they told him she had not remarried and the children were growing up well. Was that another lie? The problem of weaving
his way unseen into the city occupied a bare fragment of Dwyr's attention. His
artificial senses were designed for this kind of task, and he had a decade of
experience with them. Mostly he was remembering. "I was reluctant to
leave," he had confessed to Abrams on Starkad. "I was happy. What was
the conquest of Janair to me? They spoke of the glory of the race. I saw
nothing except that other race, crushed, burned, enslaved as we advanced. I
would have fought for my liberty as they did for theirs. Instead, being
required to do my military service, I was fighting to rob them of their
birthright. Do not misunderstand. I stayed loyal to my Roidhun and my people.
It was they who betrayed me." "They sure as the
seventh hell did," Abrams said. That was after the
revelation which knocked Dwyr's universe apart. "What?" Abrams had roared.
"You could not be regenerated? Impossible!" "But radiation
damage to the cells—" "With that kind of
radiation damage, you'd've been dead. The basic gene pattern governs the
organism throughout life. If everything mutated at once, life would have to
stop. And the regeneration process uses the chromosomes for a chemical
template. No, they saw their chance to make a unique tool out of you, and lied.
I suppose they must've planted an unconscious mental block too, so you'd never
think to study basic biomedicine for yourself, and avoid situations where
somebody might tell you. God! I've seen some vile tricks in my time, but this
one takes the purple shaft, with pineapple clusters." "You can heal
me?" Dwyr screamed. "Our chemosurgeons
can. But slow down. Let's think a bit. I could order the job done on you, and
would as a matter of ethics. Still, you'd be cut off from your family. What we
ought to do is smuggle them out also. We could resettle you on an Imperial
planet. And I haven't the authority to arrange that. Not unless you rate it.
Which you could, by serving as a double agent." "To you too, then,
I am nothing but a tool." "Easy. I didn't say
that. I just said that getting back your family won't come cheap. It'll involve
some risk to the crew who fetch them. You've got to earn a claim on us.
Willing?" Oh, very willing! As he darted between
towers, Dwyr was no more conspicuous than a nigh third. He could easily reach
the place assigned him, on an upper level of a control station where only computers
dwelt, without being noticed. That had been arranged on Brechdan Ironrede's own
command. The secret of Dwyr's existence was worth taking trouble to preserve. A
recognition lock opened for him and he glided into a room crowded with his
bodies and attachments. There was nothing else; an amputated personality did
not carry around the little treasures of a mortal. He had already chosen
what to take. After detaching from the sled, he hitched himself to the biped
body which lay stretched out like a metal corpse. For those moments he was
without any senses but sight, hearing, a dim touch and kinesthesia, a jab of
pain through what remained of his tissues. He was glad when he had finished
making the new connections. Rising, he lumbered
about and gathered what else he would need and fastened it on: special tools
and sensors, a gravity impeller, a blaster. How weak and awkward he was. He
much preferred being a vehicle or a gun. Metal and plastic did not substitute
well for cells, nerves, muscles, the marvelous structure which was bone. But
tonight an unspecialized shape was required. Last came some disguise.
He could not pass for Merseian (after what had been done to him) but he could
look like a spacesuited human or Iskeled. The latter race had long ago become
resigned to the domination of his, and furnished many loyal personnel. No few
had been granted Merseian citizenship. It had less significance than the
corresponding honor did for Terra, but it carried certain valuable privileges. Ready. Dwyr left his
room and took to the air again, openly this time. Admiralty House grew before
him, a gaunt mountain where caves glared and the beacon made a volcano spout. A
sound of machines mumbled through the sky he clove. He sensed their radiation
as a glow, a tone, a rising wave. Soaring, he approached the forbidden zone and
spoke, on a tight beam, those passwords Brechdan had given him. "Absolute
security," he added. "My presence is to be kept secret." When he landed on the
flange, an officer had joined the sentries. "What is your business on this
level?" the Merseian demanded. "Our protector the Hand is not in
Ardaig." "I know," Dwyr
said. "I am at his direct orders, to conduct some business inside. That is
as much as I am allowed to tell you. You and these males will admit me, and let
me out in a while, and forget I was ever here. It is not to be mentioned to
anyone in any circumstances. The matter is sealed." "Under what
code?" "Triple Star." The officer saluted.
"Pass." Dwyr went down the
corridor. It echoed a little to his footfalls. When he reached the anteroom, he
heard the buzz of work in the offices beyond; but he stood alone at the door of
the vault. He had never seen this place. However, the layout was no secret and
had been easy to obtain. The door itself,
though—He approached with immense care, every sensor at full amplification. The
scanners saw he was not authorized to go by, and might trigger an alarm. No.
Nothing. After all, people did use this route on certain errands. He removed
the false glove on his robot arm and extended tendrils to the plates. They reacted. By
induction, his artificial neurones felt how signals moved into a comparison
unit and were rejected. So now he must feed in pulses which would be
interpreted as the right eye and hand patterns. Slowly … slowly,
micro-metric exactitude, growing into the assembly, feeling with it, calling
forth the response he wanted, a seduction which stirred instincts until his
machine heart and lungs moved rapidly and he was lost to the exterior
world … there! The door opened,
ponderous and silent. He trod through. It closed behind him. In a black
chamber, he confronted a thing which shone like opal. Except for possessing a
recognition trigger of its own, the molecular file was no different from
numerous others he had seen. Still full of oneness with the flow of electrons
and inter-meshed fields, still half in a dream, he activated it. The operation code
was unknown to him, but he detected that not much information was stored here.
Stood to reason, the thought trickled at the back of his awareness. No
individual could single-handedly steer an empire. The secrets which Brechdan
reserved for himself and his three comrades must be few, however tremendous.
He, Dwyr the Hook, need not carry on a lengthy random search before he got the
notes on Starkad. Eidhafor: Report on
another Hand who often opposed Brechdan in Council; data which could be used,
at need, to break him. Maxwell Crawford: Ha,
the Terran Emperor's governor of the Arachnean System was in Merseian pay. A
sleeper, kept in reserve. Therayn: So that was
what preoccupied Brechdan's friends. Abrams was evidently right; Hauksberg was
being delayed so as to be present, influenceable, when the news broke. Starkad! Onto the screen flashed
a set of numbers. 0.17847, 3° 14' 22".591, 1818 h.3264 … Dwyr
memorized them automatically, while he stood rigid with shock. Something had
happened in the file. An impulse had passed. Its transient radiation had given
his nerves a split second's wispy shiver. Might be nothing. But better finish
up and get out fast! The screen blanked.
Dwyr's fingers moved with blurring speed. The numbers returned. Why—they were
the whole secret. They were what Starkad was about. And he didn't know what
they meant. Let Abrams solve this
riddle. Dwyr's task was done. Almost. He went toward the door.
It opened and he stepped into the antechamber. The door behind, to the main offices,
was agape. A guard waited, blaster poised. Two more were hurrying toward him.
Desk workers scuttled from their path. "What is the
matter?" Dwyr rapped. Because he could not feel terror or dismay, a blue
flame of wrath sheeted through him. Sweat glistened on the
guard's forehead and ran down over the brow ridges. "You were in his
secretorium," he whispered. So terrible is the magic
in those numbers that the machine has had one extra geas laid upon it. When
they are brought forth, it calls for help. "I am
authorized," Dwyr said. "How else do you think I could enter?" He did not really
believe his burglary could long remain unknown. Too many had seen. But he might
gain a few hours. His voice belled. "No one is to speak of this to anyone
else whatsoever, not even among yourselves. The business is sealed under a code
which the officer of the night knows. He can explain its significance to you.
Let me pass." "No." The
blaster trembled. "Do you wish to be
charged with insubordination?" "I … I must
take that risk, foreseer. We all must. You are under arrest until the Hand
clears you in person." Dwyr's motors snarled.
He drew his own gun as he flung himself aside. Fire and thunder broke free. The
Merseian collapsed in a seared heap. But he had shot first. Dwyr's living arm
was blasted off. He did not go into
shock. He was not that alive. Pain flooded him, he staggered for a moment in
blindness. Then the homeostats in his prostheses reacted. Chemical stimulation
poured from tubes into veins. Electronic impulses at the control of a
microcomputer joined the nerve currents, damped out agony, forced the flesh to
stop bleeding. Dwyr whirled and ran. The others came behind
him. Guns crashed anew. He staggered from their impact. Looking down, he saw a
hole drilled in him from back to breast. The energy beam must have wrecked some
part of the mechanism which kept his brain alive. What part, he didn't know.
Not the circulation, for he continued moving. The filtration system, the
purifier, the osmotic balancer? He'd find out soon enough. Crash! His left leg
went immobile. He fell. The clatter was loud in the corridor. Why hadn't he
remembered his impeller? He willed the negagravity field to go on. Still he lay
like a stone. The Merseians pounded near, shouting. He flipped the manual
switch and rose. The door to the flange
stood shut. At top speed, he tore the panels asunder. A firebolt from a guard
rainbowed off his armor. Out … over the verge … down toward
shadow! And shadows were closing
in on him. His machinery must indeed have been struck in a vital spot. It would
be good to die. No, not yet. He must hang on a while longer. Get by secret ways
to the Terran Embassy; Abrams was too far, and effectively a prisoner in any
event. Get to the Embassy—don't faint!—find this Flandry—how it roared in his
head—summon the airboat—the fact that his identity was unknown to his pursuers
until they called Brechdan would help—try for an escape—if you must faint, hide
yourself first, and do not die, do not die—perhaps Flandry can save you. If
nothing else, you will have revenged yourself a little if you find him.
Darkness and great rushing waters … Dwyr the Hook fled alone
over the night city. 13 That afternoon, Abrams
had entered the office where Flandry was at work. He closed the door and said,
"All right, son, you can knock off." "Glad to,"
Flandry said. Preparing a series of transcribed interviews for the computer was
not his idea of sport, especially when the chance of anything worthwhile being
buried in them hovered near zero. He shoved the papers across his desk, leaned
back, and tensed cramped muscles against each other. "How come?" "Lord Hauksberg's
valet just called the majordomo here. They're returning tomorrow morning.
Figure to arrive about Period Four, which'd be fourteen or fifteen hundred
Thursday, Terran Prime Meridian." Flandry sucked in a
breath, wheeled his chair about, and stared up at his chief.
"Tonight—?" "Uh-huh,"
Abrams nodded. "I won't be around. For reasons you don't need to know, except
that I want attention focused my way, I'm going to wangle me an invite to a
local Pooh-Bah." "And a partial
alibi, if events go sour." Flandry spoke with only the top half of his
mind engaged. The rest strove to check pulse, lungs, perspiration, tension. It
had been one thing to dash impulsively against a Merseian watercraft. It would
be quite another to play against incalculable risks, under rules that would
change minute by minute, in cold blood, for x many hours. He glanced at his
chrono. Persis was doubtless asleep. Unlike Navy men, who were trained to adapt
to nonterrestrial diurnal periods by juggling watches, the Embassy civilians
split Merseia's rotation time into two short, complete "days." She
followed the practice. "I suppose I'm to stand by in reserve,"
Flandry said. "Another reason for our separating." "Smart boy,"
Abrams said. "You deserve a pat and a dog biscuit. I hope your lady fair
will provide the same." "I still hate
to … to use her this way." "In your position,
I'd enjoy every second. Besides, don't forget your friends on Starkad. They're
being shot at." "Y-yes."
Flandry rose. "What about, uh, emergency procedure?" "Be on tap, either
in her place or yours. Our agent will identify himself by a word I'll think of.
He may look funny, but trust him. I can't give you specific orders. Among other
reasons, I don't like saying even this much here, however unbuggable we're
alleged to be. Do whatever seems best. Don't act too damned fast. Even if the
gaff's been blown, you might yet manage to ride out the aftermath. But don't
hesitate too long, either. If you must move, then: no heroics, no rescues, no
consideration for any living soul. Plain get that information out!" "Aye, aye,
sir." "Sounds more like
Tyi-yi, sir!'," Abrams laughed. He seemed I at ease. "Let's hope the
whole operation proves dull and sordid. Good ones are, you know. Shall we
review a few details?" Later, when twilight
stole across the city, Flandry made his way to the principal guest suite. The
corridor was deserted. Ideally, Lord Hauksberg should come upon his impudence
as a complete surprise. That way, the viscount would be easier to provoke into
rage. However, if this didn't work—if Persis learned he was expected and shooed
Flandry out—the scandal must be leaked to the entire compound. He had a scheme
for arranging that. He chimed on the door.
After a while, her voice came il drowsy. "Who's there?" He waved at
the scanner. "Oh. What is it, Ensign?" "May I come in,
Donna?" She stopped to throw on
a robe. Her hair was tumbled and she was charmingly flushed. He entered and
closed the door. "We needn't be so careful," he said. "Nobody
watching. My boss is gone for the night and a good part of tomorrow." He
laid hands on her waist. "I couldn't pass up the chance." "Nor I." She
kissed him at great length. "Why don't we
simply hide in here?" he suggested. "I'd adore to. But
Lord Oliveira—" "Call the butler.
Explain you're indisposed and want to be alone till tomorrow. Hm?" "Not very polite.
Hell, I'll do it. We have so little time, darling." Flandry stood in back of
the vidiphone while she talked. If the butler should mention that Hauksberg was
due in, he must commence Plan B. But that didn't happen, as curt as Persis was.
She ordered food and drink 'chuted here and switched off. He deactivated the
instrument. "I don't want any distractions," he explained. "What wonderful
ideas you have," she smiled. "Right now I have
still better ones." "Me too."
Persis rejoined him. Her thoughts included
refreshments. The Embassy larder was lavishly stocked, and the suite had a
small server to prepare meals which she knew well how to program. They began
with eggs Benedict, caviar, akvavit, and champagne. Some hours later followed
Perigordian duck, with trimmings, and Bordeaux. Flandry's soul expanded.
"My God," he gusted, "where has this sort of thing been all my
life?" Persis chuckled. "I
believe I have launched you on a new career. You have the makings of a gourmet
first class." "So, two causes why
I shall never forget you." "Only two?" "No, I'm being
foolish, Aleph-null causes at the minimum. Beauty, brains, charm—Well, why'm I
just talking?" "You have to rest
sometime. And I do love to hear you talk." "Hm? I'm not much
in that line. After the people and places you've known—" "What places?"
she said with a quick, astonishing bitterness. "Before this trip, I was
never further than Luna. And the people, the articulate, expensive, brittle
people, their intrigues and gossip, the shadow shows that are their adventures,
the words they live by—words, nothing but words, on and on and on—No, Dominic
my dearest, you've made me realize what I was missing. You've pulled down a
wall for me that was shutting off the universe." Did I do you any favor?
He dared not let conscience stir, he drowned it in the fullness of this moment. They were lying side by
side, savoring an ancient piece of music, when the door recognized Lord
Hauksberg and admitted him. "Persis? I say,
where—Great Emperor!" He stopped cold in the
bedroom archway. Persis smothered a scream and snatched for her robe. Flandry
jumped to his feet. But it's still dark! What's happened? The blond man looked
altogether different in green hunting clothes and belted blaster. Sun and wind
had darkened his face. For an instant that visage was fluid with surprise. Then
the lines congealed. The eyes flared like blue stars. He clapped hand to weapon
butt. "Well, well," he said. "Mark—" Persis
reached out. He ignored her. "So
you're the indisposition she had," he said to Flandry. Here we go. Off
schedule, but lift gravs anyway. The boy felt blood course thickly, sweat
trickle down ribs; worse than fear, he was aware how ludicrous he must look. He
achieved a grin. "No, my lord. You are." "What d'you
mean?" "You weren't being
man enough." Flandry's belly grew stiff, confronting that gun. Strange to
hear Mozart lilting on in the background. The blaster stayed
sheathed. Hauksberg moved only to breathe. "How long's this been between
you?" "It was my fault,
Mark," Persis cried. "All mine." Tears whipped over her cheeks. "No, my sweet, I
insist," Flandry said. "My idea entirely. I must say, my lord, you
weren't nice to arrive unannounced. Now what?" "Now you're under
nobleman's arrest, you whelp," Hauksberg said. "Put on some clothes.
Go to your quarters and stay there." Flandry scrambled to
obey. On the surface, everything had gone smoothly, more so than expected. Too
much more so. Hauksberg's tone was not furious; it was almost absent-minded. Persis groped toward
him. "I tell you, Mark, I'm to blame," she wept. "Let him alone.
Do what you want to me, but not him!" Hauksberg shoved her
away. "Stop blubberin'," he snapped. "D' you think I care a pip
on a 'scope about your peccadillos, at a time like this?" "What's
happened?" Flandry asked sharply. Hauksberg turned and
looked at him, up and down, silent for an entire minute. "Wonder if you
really don't know," he said at the end. "Wonder quite a lot." "My lord, I
don't!" Flandry's mind rocked. Something was wrong. "When word came to
Dhangodhan, natur'lly we flitted straight back," Hauksberg said.
"They're after Abrams this minute, on my authority. But you—what was your
part?" I've got to get out.
Abrams' agent has to be able to reach me. "I don't know anything, my lord.
I'll report to my room." "Stop!" Persis sat on the bed,
face in hands, and sobbed. She wasn't loud. "Stay right
here," Hauksberg said. "Not a step, understand?" His gun came
free. He edged from the chamber, keeping Flandry in sight, and went to the
phone. "Hm. Turned off, eh?" He flipped the switch. "Lord Oliveira." Silence lay thick while
the phone hunted through its various scanner outlets. The screen flickered, the
ambassador looked forth. "Hauksberg! What the devil?" "Just
returned," said the viscount. "We heard of an attempt to rifle
Premier Brechdan's files. May have been a successful attempt, too; and the
agent escaped. The premier accused me of havin' a finger in it. Obvious
thought. Somebody wants to sabotage my mission." "I—" Oliveira
collected himself. "Not necessarily. Terra isn't the only rival Merseia
has." "So I pointed out.
Prepare to do likewise at length when you're notified officially. But we've got
to show good faith. I've deputed the Merseians to arrest Commander Abrams.
He'll be fetched back here. Place him under guard." "Lord Hauksberg!
He's an Imperial officer, and accredited to the diplomatic corps." "He'll be detained
by Terrans. By virtue of my commission from his Majesty, I'm assumin' command.
No back talk if you don't want to be relieved of your position." Oliveira whitened but
bowed. "Very good, my lord. I must ask for this in properly recorded
form." "You'll have it
when I get the chance. Next, this young fella Flandry, Abrams' assistant.
Happens I've got him on deck. Think I'll quiz him a while myself. But have a
couple of men march him to detention when I give the word. Meanwhile, alert
your staff, start preparin' plans, explanations, and disclaimers, and stand by
for a visit from Brechdan's foreign office." Hauksberg cut the
circuit. "Enough," he said. "C'mon out and start talkin',
you." Flandry went. Nightmare
hammered at him. In the back of his head ran the thought: Abrams was right. You
don't really want drama in these things. What'll happen to him? To me? To Persis? To
Terra? "Sit down."
Hauksberg pointed his gun at a lounger and swung the barrel back at once. With
his free hand he pulled a flat case from his tunic pocket. He appeared a little
relaxed; had he begun to enjoy the tableau? Flandry lowered himself.
Psychological disadvantage, looking upward. Yes, we underestimated his Lordship
badly. Persis stood in the archway, red-eyed, hugging herself and gulping. Hauksberg flipped open
the case—an unruly part of Flandry noticed how the chased silver shone beneath
the fluoro-ceiling—and stuck a cheroot between his teeth. "What's your
role in this performance?" he asked. "Nothing, my
lord," Flandry stammered. "I don't know—I mean, if—if I were
concerned, would I have been here tonight?" "Might."
Hauksberg returned the case and extracted a lighter. His glance flickered to
Persis. "What about you, m' love?" "I don't know
anything," she whispered. "And neither does he. I swear it." "Inclined to
b'lieve you." The lighter scritted and flared. "In this case, though,
you've been rather cynic'lly used." "He wouldn't!" "Hm."
Hauksberg dropped the lighter on a table and blew smoke from his nostrils.
"Could be you both were duped. We'll find that out when Abrams is
probed." "You can't!"
Flandry shouted. "He's an officer!" "They certainly can
on Terra, my boy. I'd order it done this very hour, and risk the repercussions,
if we had the equipment. 'Course, the Merseians do. If necess'ry, I'll risk a
much bigger blowback and turn him over to them. My mission's too important for
legal pettifoggin". You might save the lot of us a deal of grief by
tellin' all, Ensign. If your testimony goes to prove we Terrans are not
involved—d' you see?" Give him a story, any
story, whatever gets you away. Flandry's brain was frozen. "How could we
have arranged the job?" he fumbled. "You saw what kind of
surveillance we've been under." "Ever hear about
agents provocateurs? I never believed Abrams came along for a ride."
Hauksberg switched the phone to Record. "Begin at the beginnin",
continue to the end, and stop. Why'd Abrams co-opt you in the first
place?" "Well, I—that is,
he needed an aide." What actually did happen? Everything was so gradual.
Step by step. I never really did decide to go into Intelligence. But somehow,
here I am. Persis squared her
shoulders. "Dominic had proven himself on Starkad," she said
wretchedly. "Fighting for the Empire." "Fine, sonorous
phrase." Hauksberg tapped the ash from his cheroot. "Are you really
infatuated with this lout? No matter. P'rhaps you can see anyhow that I'm
workin' for the Empire myself. Work sounds less romantic than fight, but's a
bit more useful in the long haul, eh? Go on, Flandry. What'd Abrams tell you he
meant to accomplish?" "He … he
hoped to learn things. He never denied that. But spying, no. He's not so
stupid, my lord." He's simply been outwitted. "I ask you, how could
he arrange trouble?" "Leave the
questions to me. When'd you first get together with Persis, and why?" "We—I—" Seeing
the anguish upon her, Flandry knew in full what it meant to make an implement
of a sentient being. "My fault. Don't listen to her. On the way—" The door opened. There
was no more warning than when Hauksberg had entered. But the thing which glided
through, surely the lock was not keyed to that! Persis shrieked.
Hauksberg sprang back with an oath. The thing, seared and twisted metal, blood
starting afresh from the cauterized fragment of an arm, skin drawn tight and
gray across bones in what was left of a face, rattled to the floor. "Ensign
Flandry," it called. The voice had volume yet, but no control, wavering
across the scale and wholly without tone. Light came and went in the scanners
which were eyes. Flandry's jaws locked.
Abrams' agent? Abrams' hope, wrecked and dying at his feet? "Go on,"
Hauksberg breathed. The blaster crouched in his fist. "Talk to him." Flandry shook his head
till the sweat-drenched hair flew. "Talk, I say,"
Hauksberg commanded. "Or I'll kill you and most surely give Abrams to the
Merseians." The creature which lay
and bled before the now shut main door did not seem to notice. "Ensign
Flandry. Which one is you? Hurry. Meshuggah. He told me to say meshuggah." Flandry moved without
thinking, from his lounger, down on his knees in the blood. "I'm
here," he whispered. "Listen." The
head rolled, the eyes flickered more and more dimly, a servomotor rattled dry
bearings inside the broken shell. "Memorize. In the Starkad file, these
numbers." As they coughed forth,
one after the next in the duodecimals of Eriau, Flandry's training reacted. He
need not understand, and did not; he asked for no repetitions; each phoneme was
burned into his brain. "Is that
everything?" he asked with someone else's throat. "Aye. The whole."
A hand of metal tendrils groped until he clasped it. "Will you remember my
name? I was Dwyr of Tanis, once called the Merry. They made me into this. I was
planted in your airboat. Commander Abrams sent me. That is why he left this
place, to release me unobserved. But an alarm order was on the Starkad reel. I
was ruined in escaping. I would have come sooner to you but I kept fainting.
You must phone for the boat and … escape, I think. Remember
Dwyr." "We will always
remember." "Good. Now let me
die. If you open the main plate you can turn oft my heart." The words
wobbled insanely, but they were clear enough. "I cannot hold Sivilla long
in my brain. It is poisoned and oxygen starved. The cells are going out, one by
one. Turn off my heart." Flandry disengaged the
tendrils around his hand and reached for the hinged plate. He didn't see very
well, nor could he smell the oil and scorched insulation. "Hold off,"
Hauksberg said. Flandry didn't hear him. Hauksberg stepped close and kicked
him. "Get away from there, I say. We want him alive." Flandry lurched erect.
"You can't." "Can and
will." Hauksberg's lips were drawn back, his chest rose and fell, the
cheroot had dropped from his mouth into the spreading blood. "Great
Emperor! I see the whole thing. Abrams had this double agent. He'd get the
information, it'd be passed on to you, and you'd go home in disgrace when I
caught you with Persis." He took a moment to give the girl a look of
triumph. "You follow, my dear? You were nothin' but an object." She strained away from
them, one hand to her mouth, the other fending off the world. "Sivilla,
Sivilla," came from the floor. "Oh, hurry!" Hauksberg backed toward
the phone. "We'll call a medic. I think if we're fast we can save this
chap." "But don't you
understand?" Flandry implored. "Those numbers—there is something
about Starkad—your mission never had a chance. We've got to let our people
know!" "Let me worry 'bout
that," Hauksberg said. "You face a charge of treason." "For trying to bail
out the Empire?" "For tryin' to
sabotage an official delegation. Tryin' to make your own policy, you and
Abrams. Think you're his Majesty? You'll learn better." Flandry took a
step forward. The gun jerked. "Stand back! Soon blast you as not, y'
know." Hauksberg's free hand reached for the phone. Flandry stood over Dwyr,
in a private Judgment Day. Persis ran across the
floor. "Mark, no!" "Get away."
Hauksberg held his gun on the boy. Persis flung her arms
around him. Suddenly her hands closed on his right wrist. She threw herself
down, dragging the blaster with her. "Nicky!" she screamed. Flandry sprang.
Hauksberg hit Persis with his fist. She took the blow on her skull and hung on.
Flandry arrived. Hauksberg struck at him. Flandry batted the hand aside with
one arm. His other, stiff-fingered, drove into the solar plexus. Hauksberg
doubled. Flandry chopped him behind the ear. He fell in a heap. Flandry scooped up the
blaster and punched the phone controls. "Airboat to Embassy," he
ordered in Eriau. Turning, he strode back
to Dwyr, knelt, and opened the frontal plate. Was this the switch he wanted? He
undid its safety lock. "Good-bye, my friend," he said. "One moment,"
wavered from the machine. "I lost her. So much darkness.
Noise … Now." Flandry pulled the
switch. The lights went out in the eyes and Dwyr lay still. Persis sprawled by
Hauksberg, shaken with crying. Flandry returned and raised her. "I'll have
to make a dash," he said. "Might not finish it. Do you want to
come?" She clung to him.
"Yes, yes, yes. They'd have killed you." He embraced her
one-armed, his other hand holding the blaster on Hauksberg, who stirred and
choked. Wonder broke upon him like morning. "Why did you help me?" he
asked low. "I don't know. Take
me away from here!" "Well … you
may have done something great for the human race. If that information really is
important. It has to be. Go put on a dress and shoes. Comb your hair. Find me a
clean pair of pants. These are all bloody. Be quick." She gripped him
tighter and sobbed. He slapped her. "Quick, I said! Or I'll have to leave
you behind." She ran. He nudged
Hauksberg with his foot. "Up, my lord." Hauksberg crawled to a
stance. "You're crazy," he gasped. "Do you seriously expect to
escape?" "I seriously expect
to try. Give me that holster belt." Flandry clipped it on. "We'll
walk to the boat. If anyone asks, you're satisfied with my story, I've given
you news which can't wait, and we're off to report in person to the Merseian
authorities. At the first sign of trouble, I'll start shooting my way through,
and you'll get the first bolt. Clear?" Hauksberg rubbed the
bruise behind his ear and glared. With action upon him,
Flandry lost every doubt. Adrenaline sang in his veins. Never had he perceived
more sharply—this over-elegant room, the bloodshot eyes in front of him, the
lovely sway of Persis re-entering in a fire-red gown, odors of sweat and anger,
sigh of a ventilator, heat in his skin, muscle sliding across muscle, the angle
of his elbow where he aimed the gun, by eternity, he was alive! Having changed pants, he
said, "Out we go. You first, my lord. Me a pace behind, as fits my rank.
Persis next to you. Watch his face, darling. He might try to signal with it. If
he blows a distress rocket from his nose, tell me and I'll kill him." Her lips trembled.
"No. You can't do that. Not to Mark." "He'd've done it to
me. We're committed, and not to any very genteel game. If he behaves himself he'll
live, maybe. March." As they left, Flandry
saluted that which lay on the floor. But he did not forget to
screen the view of it with his body on his way out to the corridor, until the
door shut behind him. Around a corner, they met a couple of young staffmen
headed in their direction. "Is everything well, my lord?" one asked.
Flandry's fingers twitched near his sheathed gun. He cleared his throat loudly. Hauksberg made a nod.
"Bound for Afon," he said. "Immediately. With these
people." "Confidential
material in the suite," Flandry added. "Don't go in, and make sure
nobody else does." He was conscious of
their stares, like bullets hitting his back. Could he indeed bluff his way
clear? Probably. This was no police or military center, wasn't geared to
violence, only created violence for others to quell. His danger lay beyond the
compound. Surely, by now, the place was staked out. Dwyr had wrought a miracle
in entering unseen. They were stopped again
in the lobby, and again got past on words. Outside, the garden lay aflash with
dew under Lythyr and a sickle Neihevin. The air was cool. It quivered with
distant machine sounds. Abrams' speedster had arrived. O God, I have to leave
him behind! It sat on the parking strip, door open. Flandry urged Hauksberg and
Persis aboard. He closed the door and waved on the lights. "Sit down at
the console," he ordered his prisoner. "Persis, bring a towel from
the head. My lord, we're about to talk our way through their security cordon.
Will they believe we're harmlessly bound for Dhangodhan?" Hauksberg's face
contorted. "When Brechdan is here? Don't be ridiculous. C'mon, end the
comedy, surrender and make things easier for yourself." "Well, we'll do it
the hard way. When we're challenged, tell 'em we're headed back to your ship to
fetch some stuff we need to show Brechdan in connection with this
episode." "D' you dream
they'll swallow that?" "I think they
might. Merseians aren't as rule-bound as Terrans. To them, it's in character
for a boss noble to act on his own, without filing twenty different
certificates first. If they don't believe us, I'll cut out the safety locks and
ram a flier of theirs; so be good." Persis gave Flandry the towel.
"I'm going to tie your hands. Cooperate or I'll slug you." He grew conscious, then,
of what power meant, how it worked. You kept the initiative. The other fellow's
instinct was to obey, unless he was trained in self-mastery. But you dared not
slack off the pressure for a second. Hauksberg slumped in his seat and gave no
trouble. "You won't hurt
him, Nicky?" Persis begged. "Not if I can avoid
it. Haven't we troubles enough?" Flandry took the manual-pilot chair. The
boat swung aloft. A buzz came from the
console. Flandry closed that circuit. A uniformed Merseian looked from the
vidscreen. He could see nothing but their upper bodies. "Halt!" he
ordered. "Security." Flandry nudged
Hauksberg. The viscount said, "Ah … we must go to my ship—"
No human would have accepted a tale so lamely delivered. Nor would a Merseian
educated in the subtleties of human behavior. But this was merely an officer of
planetary police, assigned here because he happened to be on duty at the time
of the emergency. Flandry had counted on that. "I shall
check," said the green visage. "Don't you
realize?" Hauksberg snapped. "I am a diplomat. Escort us if you like.
But you have no right to detain us. Move along, pilot." Flandry gunned the
gravs. The boat mounted. Ardaig fell away beneath, a glittering web, a spot of
light. Tuning in the after viewscreen, Flandry saw two black objects circle
about and trail him. They were smaller than this vessel, but they were armed
and armored. "Nice work, there
at the end, my lord," he said. Hauksberg was rapidly
regaining equilibrium. "You've done rather well yourself," he
answered. "I begin to see why Abrams thinks you've potentialities." "Thanks."
Flandry concentrated on gaining speed. The counteracceleration field was not
quite in tune; he felt a tug of weight that, uncompensated, would have left him
hardly able to breathe. "But it won't tick,
y' know," Hauksberg continued. "Messages are flyin' back and forth.
Our escort'll get an order to make us turn back." "I trust not. If I
were them, I'd remember Queen Maggy was declared harmless by her Merseian
pilot. I'd alert my forces, but otherwise watch to see what you did. After all,
Brechdan must be convinced you're sincere." Ardaig was lost.
Mountains gleamed in moonlight, and high plains, and cloud cover blanketing the
planet in white. The wail of air grew thin and died. Stars trod forth, wintry
clear. "More I think about
it," Hauksberg said, "more I'd like to have you on the right side.
Peace needs able men even worse'n war does." "Let's establish
peace first, huh?" Flandry's fingers rattled computer keys. As a matter of
routine, he had memorized the six elements of the spaceship's orbit around
Merseia. Perturbation wouldn't have made much difference yet. "That's what I'm
tryin' for. We can have it, I tell you. You've listened to that fanatic Abrams.
Give me a turn." "Sure."
Flandry spoke with half his attention. "Start by explaining why Brechdan
keeps secrets about Starkad." "D' you imagine
we've no secrets? Brechdan has to defend himself. If we let mutual fear and
hate build up, of course we'll get the big war." "If we let Terra be
painted into a corner, I agree, my lord, the planet incinerators will
fly." "Ever look at it
from the Merseian viewpoint?" "I didn't say it's
wise to leave them with no out but to try and destroy us." Flandry
shrugged. "That's for the statesmen, though, I'm told. I only work here.
Please shut up and let me figure my approach curve." Korych flamed over the
edge of the world. That sunrise was gold and amethyst, beneath a million stars. The communicator buzzed
anew. "Foreseer," said the Merseian, "you may board your ship
for a limited time provided we accompany you." "Regrets,"
Hauksberg said. "But quite impossible. I'm after material which is for the
eyes of Protector Brechdan alone. You are welcome to board as soon as I have it
in this boat, and escort me straight to Castle Afon." "I shall convey the
foreseer's word to my superiors and relay their decision." Blankoff. "You're
wonderful," Persis said. Hauksberg barked a
laugh. "Don't fancy this impetuous young hero of yours includin' me in his
Divine Wind dive." Seriously: "I s'pose you figure to escape in an
auxiliary. Out of the question. Space patrol'll overhaul you long before you
can go hyper." "Not if I go hyper
right away," Flandry said. "But—snakes alive,
boy! You know what the concentration of matter is, this near a sun. If a
microjump lands you by a pebble, even—" "Chance we take.
Odds favor us, especially if we head out normally to the ecliptic plane." "You'll be in
detection range for a light-year. A ship with more legs can run you down. And
will." "You won't be
there," Flandry said. "Dog your hatch. I'm busy." The minutes passed. He
scarcely noticed when the call came, agreeing that Hauksberg's party might
board alone. He did reconstruct the reasoning behind that agreement. Dronning
Margrete was unarmed and empty. Two or three men could not start her up in less
than hours. Long before then, warcraft would be on hand to blast her. Hauksberg
must be honest. Let him have his way and see what he produced. The great tapered
cylinder swam into sight. Flandry contacted the machines within and made
rendezvous on instruments and trained senses. A boatlock gaped wide. He slid
through. The lock closed, air rushed into the turret, he killed his motor and
stood up. "I'll have to secure you, my lord," he said. "They'll
find you when they enter." Hauksberg regarded him.
"You'll not reconsider?" he asked. "Terra shouldn't lose one
like you." "No. Sorry." "Warn you, you'll
be outlawed. I don't aim to sit idle and let you proceed. After what's
happened, the best way I can show my bona fides is to cooperate with the Merseians
in headin' you off." Flandry touched his
blaster. Hauksberg nodded. "You can delay matters a trifle by killin'
me," he said. "Have no fears.
Persis, another three or four towels. Lie down on the deck, my lord." Hauksberg did as he was
told. Looking at the girl, he said: "Don't involve yourself. Stay with me.
I'll tell 'em you were a prisoner too. Hate to waste women." "They are in short
supply hereabouts," Flandry agreed. "You'd better do it,
Persis." She stood quiet for a
little. "Do you mean you forgive me, Mark?" she asked. "Well, yes,"
Hauksberg said. She bent and kissed him
lightly. "I think I believe you. But no, thanks. I've made my
choice." "After the way your
boy friend's treated you?" "He had to. I have
to believe that." Persis helped bind Hauksberg fast. She and Flandry left the
boat. The passageways glowed and echoed as they trotted. They hadn't far to go
until they entered another turret. The slim hull of a main auxiliary loomed
over them. Flandry knew the model: a lovely thing, tough and versatile, with
fuel and supplies for a journey of several hundred parsecs. Swift, too; not
that she could outpace a regular warcraft, but a stern chase is a long chase
and he had some ideas about what to do if the enemy came near. He made a quick check of
systems. Back in the control room, he found Persis in the copilot's seat.
"Will I bother you?" she asked timidly. "Contrariwise,"
he said. "Keep silent, though, till we're in hyperdrive." "I will," she
promised. "I'm not a complete null, Nicky. You learn how to survive when
you're a low-caste dancer. Different from space, of course. But this is the
first time 145 I've done anything for
anyone but myself. Feels good. Scary, yes, but good." He ran a hand across the
tangled dark hair, smooth cheek and delicate profile, until his fingers tilted
her chin and he bestowed his own kiss on her. "Thanks more'n I can
say," he murmured. "I was doing this mainly on account of Max Abrams.
It'd have been cold, riding alone with his ghost. Now I've got you to live
for." He seated himself. At
his touch, the engine woke. "Here we go," he said. 14 Dawn broke over Ardaig,
and from the tower on Eidh Hill kettledrums spoke their ancient prayer.
Admiralty House cast its shadow across the Oiss, blue upon the mists that still
hid early river traffic. Inland the shadow was black, engulfing Castle Afon. Yet Brechdan Ironrede
chose to receive the Terrans there instead of in his new eyrie. He's shaken,
Abrams thought. He's rallying quick, but he needs the help of his ancestors. Entering the audience
chamber, a human was at first dazed, as if he had walked into a dream. He
needed a moment to make sense of what he saw. The proportions of long, flagged
floor, high walls, narrow windows arched at both top and bottom, sawtoothed vaulting
overhead, were wrong by every Terran canon and nonetheless had a Tightness of
their own. The mask helmets on suits of armor grinned like demons. The patterns
of faded tapestries and rustling battle banners held no human symbology. For
this was Old Wilwidh, before the machine came to impose universal sameness. It
was the wellspring of Merseia. You had to see a place like this if you would
understand, in your bones, that Merseians would never be kin to you. I wish my ancestors were
around. Approaching the dais beside a silent Hauksberg, his boots resounding
hollow, bitter incense in his nostrils, Abrams conjured up Dayan in his head. I
too have a place in the cosmos. Let me not forget. Black-robed beneath a
dragon carved in black wood, the Hand of the Vach Ynvory waited. The men bowed
to him. He lifted a short spear and crashed it down in salute. Brusquely, he
said: "This is an evil thing that has happened." "What news,
sir?" Hauksberg asked. His eyes were sunken and a tic moved one corner of
his mouth. "At latest report,
a destroyer had locked detectors on Flandry's hyperwake. It can catch him, but
time will be required, and meanwhile both craft have gone beyond detection
range." "The Protector is
assured anew of my profoundest regrets. I am preferring charges against this
malefactor. Should he be caught alive, he may be treated as a common
pirate." Yah, Abrams thought.
Dragged under a hypnoprobe and wrung dry. Well, he doesn't have any vital
military secrets, and testimony about me can't get me in any deeper than I am.
But please, let him be killed outright. "My lord," he
said, "to you and the Hand I formally protest. Dominic Flandry holds an
Imperial commission. At a minimum the law entitles him to a court-martial. Nor
can his diplomatic immunity be removed by fiat." "He was not
accredited by his Majesty's government, but myself," Hauksberg snapped.
"The same applies to you, Abrams." "Be still,"
Brechdan ordered him. Hauksberg gaped unbelieving at the massive green
countenance. Brechdan's look was on Abrams. "Commander," the Merseian
said, "when you were seized last night, you insisted that you had
information I must personally hear. Having been told of this, I acceded. Do you
wish to talk with me alone?" Hang on, here we go. I
boasted to Dom once, they wouldn't take me in any condition to blab, and they'd
pay for whatever they got. Nu, here I am, whole-skinned and disarmed. If I'm to
justify my brag, these poor wits will have to keep me out of the interrogation
cell. "I thank the Hand," Abrams said, "but the matter concerns
Lord Hauksberg also." "Speak freely.
Today is no time for circumlocutions." Abrams' heart thudded
but he held his words steady. "Point of law, Hand. By the Covenant of
Alfzar, Merseia confirmed her acceptance of the rules of war and diplomacy
which evolved on Terra. They evolved, and you took them over, for the excellent
reason that they work. Now if you wish to declare us personae non gratae and
deport us, his Majesty's government will have no grounds for complaint. But
taking any other action against any one of us, no matter what the source of our
accreditation, is grounds for breaking off relations, if not for war." "Diplomatic
personnel have no right to engage in espionage," Brechdan said. "No, Hand. Neither
is the government to which they are sent supposed to spy on them. And in fact,
Dwyr the Hook was planted on me as a spy. Scarcely a friendly act, Hand, the
more so when urgent negotiations are under way. It happened his sympathies were
with Terra—" Brechdan's smile was
bleak. "I do not believe it merely happened, Commander. I have the
distinct impression that you maneuvered to get him posted where he would be in
contact with you. Compliments on your skill." "Hand, his
Majesty's government will deny any such allegation." "How dare you speak
for the Empire?" Hauksberg exploded. "How dare you, my
lord?" Abrams replied. "I am only offering a prediction. But will the
Hand not agree it is probably correct?" Brechdan rubbed his
chin. "Charge and counter-charge, denial and
counter-denial … yes, no doubt. What do you expect the Empire to
maintain?" "That rests with
the Policy Board, Hand, and how it decides will depend on a number of factors,
including mood. If Merseia takes a course which looks reasonable in Terran
eyes, Terra is apt to respond in kind." "I presume a
reasonable course for us includes dropping charges against yourself,"
Brechdan said dryly. Abrams lifted his
shoulders and spread his palms. "What else? Shall we say that Dwyr and
Flandry acted on impulse, without my knowledge? Isn't it wise to refrain from
involving the honor of entire planets?" "Khraich. Yes. The
point is well taken. Though frankly, I am disappointed in you. I would stand by
a subordinate." "Hand, what happens
to him is outside your control or mine. He and his pursuer have gone past
communication range. It may sound pompous, but I want to save myself for
further service to the Empire." "We'll see about
that," Hauksberg said venomously. "I told you to be
silent," Brechdan said. "No, Commander, on Merseia your word is not
pompous at all." He inclined his head. "I salute you. Lord Hauksberg
will oblige me by considering you innocent." "Sir," the
viscount protested, "surely he must be confined to the Embassy grounds for
the duration of our stay. What happens to him on his return will lie with his
service and his government." "I do request the
commander to remain within the compound," Brechdan said. He leaned
forward. "Now, delegate, comes your turn. If you are willing to continue
present discussions, so are we. But there are certain preconditions. By some
accident, Flandry might yet escape, and he does carry military secrets. We must
therefore dispatch a fast courier to the nearest Terran regional headquarters,
with messages from us both. If Terra disowns him and cooperates with Merseia in
his capture or destruction, then Terra has proven her desire for peaceful
relations and the Grand Council of His Supremacy will be glad to adjust its
policies accordingly. Will you lend your efforts to this end?" "Of course, sir! Of
course!" "The Terran Empire
is far away, though," Brechdan continued. "I don't imagine Flandry
would make for it. Our patrols will cover the likeliest routes, as insurance.
But the nearest human installation is on Starkad, and if somehow he eludes our
destroyer, I think it probable he will go either there or to Betelgeuse. The
region is vast and little known. Thus our scouts would have a very poor chance
of intercepting him—until he is quite near his destination. Hence, if he should
escape, I shall wish to guard the approaches. But as my government has no more
desire than yours to escalate the conflict, your commandant on Starkad must be
told that these units are no menace to him and he need not send for
reinforcements. Rather, he must cooperate. Will you prepare such orders for
him?" "At once,
sir," Hauksberg said. Hope was revitalizing him. He paid no attention to
Abrams' stare. "Belike this will
all prove unnecessary," Brechdan said. "The destroyer estimated she
would overtake Flandry in three days. She will need little longer to report
back. At such time we can feel easy, and so can his Majesty's government. But
for certainty's sake, we had best get straight to work. Please accompany me to
the adjacent office." He rose. For a second he locked eyes with Abrams.
"Commander," he said, "your young man makes me proud to be a sentient
creature. What might our united races not accomplish? Hunt well." Abrams could not speak.
His throat was too thick with unshed tears. He bowed and left. At the door,
Merseian guards fell in, one on either side of him. Stars crowded the
viewscreens, unmercifully brilliant against infinite night. The spaceboat
thrummed with her haste. Flandry and Persis
returned from their labor. She had been giving him tools, meals, anything she
could that seemed to fit his request, "Just keep feeding me and fanning
me." In a shapeless coverall, hair caught under a scarf, a smear of grease
on her nose, she was somehow more desirable than ever before. Or was that
simply because death coursed near? The Merseian destroyer
had called the demand to stop long ago, an age ago, when she pulled within
range of a hyper-vibration 'cast. Flandry refused. "Then prepare your
minds for the God," said her captain, and cut off. Moment by moment, hour
by hour, he had crept in on the boat, until instruments shouted his presence. Persis caught Flandry's
hand. Her own touch was cold. "I don't understand," she said in a
thin voice. "You told me he can track us by our wake. But space is so big.
Why can't we go sublight and let him hunt for us?" "He's too
close," Flandry said. "He was already too close when we first knew he
was on our trail. If we cut the secondaries, he'd have a pretty good idea of
our location, and need only cast about a small volume of space till he picked
up the neutrino emission of our powerplant." "Couldn't we turn
that off too?" "We'd die inside a
day. Everything depends on it. Odds-on bet whether we suffocated or froze. If
we had suspended-animation equipment—But we don't. This is no warcraft, not
even an exploratory vessel. It's just the biggest lifeboat-cum-gig Queen Maggy
could tote." They moved toward the
control room. "What's going to happen?" she asked. "In theory, you
mean?" He was grateful for a chance to talk. The alternative would have
been that silence which pressed in on the hull. "Well, look. We travel
faster than light by making a great many quantum jumps per second, which don't
cross the intervening space. You might say we're not in the real universe most
of the time, though we are so often that we can't notice any difference. Our
friend has to phase in. That is, he has to adjust his jumps to the same
frequency and the same phase angle as ours. This makes each ship a completely
solid object to the other, as if they were moving sub-light, under ordinary
gravitic drive at a true velocity." "But you said
something about the field." "Oh, that. Well,
what makes us quantum-jump is a pulsating force-field generated by the
secondary engine. The field encloses us and reaches out through a certain
radius. How big a radius, and how much mass it can affect, depends on the
generator's power. A big ship can lay alongside a smaller one and envelop her
and literally drag her at a resultant pseudo-speed. Which is how you carry out
most capture and boarding operations. But a destroyer isn't that large in relation
to us. She does have to come so close that our fields overlap. Otherwise her
beams and artillery can't touch us." "Why don't we
change phase?" "Standard procedure
in an engagement. I'm sure our friends expect us to try it. But one party can
change as fast as another, and runs a continuous computation to predict the
pattern of the opposition's maneuvers. Sooner or later, the two will be back in
phase long enough for a weapon to hit. We're not set up to do it nearly as well
as he is. No, our solitary chance is the thing we've been working on." She pressed against him.
He felt how she trembled. "Nicky, I'm afraid." "Think I'm
not?" Both pairs of lips were dry when they touched. "Come on, let's
to our posts. We'll know in a few minutes. If we go out—Persis, I couldn't ask
for a better traveling companion." As they sat down, Flandry added,
because he dared not stay serious: "Though we wouldn't be together long.
You're ticketed for heaven, my destination's doubtless the other way." She gripped his hand
again. "Mine too. You won't escape me th-th-that easily." Alarms blared. A shadow
crossed the stars. It thickened as phasing improved. Now it was a torpedo
outline, still transparent; now the gun turrets and missile launchers showed
clear; now all but the brightest stars were occulted. Flandry laid an eye to
the crosshairs of his improvised fire-control scope. His finger rested on a
button. Wires ran aft from it. The Merseian destroyer
became wholly real to him. Starlight glimmered off metal. He knew how thin that
metal was. Force screens warded off solid matter, and nothing protected against
nuclear energies: nothing but speed to get out of their way, which demanded low
mass. Nevertheless he felt as if a dinosaur stalked him. The destroyer edged
nearer, swelling in the screens. She moved leisurely, knowing her prey was
weaponless, alert only for evasive tactics. Flandry's right hand went to the
drive controls. So … so … he was zeroed a trifle forward of
the section where he knew her engines must be. A gauge flickered.
Hyperfields were making their first tenuous contact. In a second it would be
sufficiently firm for a missile or a firebolt to cross from one hull to
another. Persis, reading the board as he had taught her, yelled, "Go!"
Flandry snapped on a braking vector. Lacking the instruments and computers of a
man-of-war, he had estimated for himself what the thrust should be. He pressed
the button. In the screen, the
destroyer shot forward in relation to him. From an open hatch in his boat plunged
the auxiliary's auxiliary, a craft meant for atmosphere but propellable
anywhere on gravity beams. Fields joined almost at the instant it transitted
them. At high relative velocity, both pseudo and kinetic, it smote. Flandry did not see what
happened. He had shifted phase immediately, and concentrated on getting the
hell out of the neighborhood. If everything worked as hoped, his airboat ripped
through the Merseian plates, ruinously at kilometers per second. Fragments
howled in air, flesh, engine connections. The destroyer was not destroyed.
Repair would be possible, after so feeble a blow. But before the ship was
operational again, he would be outside detection range. If he zigzagged, he
would scarcely be findable. He hurtled among the
stars. A clock counted one minute, two, three, five. He began to stop fighting
for breath. Persis gave way to tears. After ten minutes he felt free to run on
automatic, lean over and hold her. "We did it,"
he whispered. "Satan in Sirius! One miserable gig took a navy
vessel." Then he must leap from
his seat, caper and crow till the boat rang. "We won! Ta-ran-tu-la! We
won! Break out the champagne! This thing must have champagne among the rations!
God is too good for anything else!" He hauled Persis up and danced her
over the deck. "Come on, you! We won! Swing your lady! I gloat, I gloat, I
gloat!" Eventually he calmed
down. By that time Persis had command of herself. She disengaged from him so
she could warn: "We've a long way to Starkad, darling, and danger at the
end of the trip." "Ah," said
Ensign Dominic Flandry, "but you forget, this is the beginning of the
trip." A smile crept over her
mouth. "Precisely what do you mean, sir?" He answered with a leer.
"That it is a long way to Starkad." 15 Saxo glittered white
among the myriads. But it was still so far that others outshone it. Brightest
stood Betelgeuse. Flandry's gaze fell on that crimson spark and lingered. He
sat at the pilot board, chin in hand, for many minutes; and only the throb of
the engine and murmur of the ventilators were heard. Persis entered the
control room. During the passage she had tried to improvise a few glamorous
changes of garment from the clothes in stock, but they were too resolutely
utilitarian. So mostly, as now, she settled for a pair of shorts, and those
mostly for the pockets. Her hair swept loose, dark-bright as space; a lock
tickled him when she bent over his shoulder, and he sensed its faint sunny
odor, and her own. But this time he made no response. "Trouble,
darling?" she asked. " 'It ain't the
work, it's them damn decisions,' " he quoted absently. "You mean which way
to go?" "Yes. Here's where
we settle the question. Saxo or Betelgeuse?" He had threshed the
arguments out till she knew them by heart, but he went on anyhow: "Got to
be one or the other. We're not set up to lie doggo on some undiscovered planet.
The Empire's too far; every day of travel piles up chances for a Merseian to
spot our wake. They'll have sent couriers in all directions—every kind of ship
that could outrun our skulker's course—soon's they learned we escaped. Maybe
before, even. Their units must be scouring these parts. "Saxo's the closer.
Against heading there is the consideration they can keep a pretty sharp watch
on it without openly using warcraft in the system. Any big, fast merchantman
could gobble us, and the crew come aboard with sidearms. However, if we were in
call range, I might raise Terran HQ on Starkad and pass on the information
we're carrying. Then we might hope the Merseians would see no further gain in
damaging us. But the whole thing is awful iffy. "Now Betelgeuse is
an unaligned power, and very jealous of her neutrality. Foreign patrols will
have to keep their distance, spread so thin we might well slip through. Once on
Alfzar, we could report to the Terran ambassador. But the Betelgeuseans won't
let us enter their system secretly. They maintain their own patrols. We'd have
to go through traffic procedures, starting beyond orbital radius of the
outermost planet. And the Merseians can monitor those com channels. A raider
could dash in quick-like and blast us." "They wouldn't
dare," Persis said. "Sweetheart, they'd
dare practically anything, and apologize later. You don't know what's at
stake." She sat down beside him.
"Because you won't tell me." "Right." He had gnawed his way to
the truth. Hour upon hour, as they fled through Merseia's dominions, he hunched
with paper, penstyl, calculator, and toiled. Their flight involved nothing
dramatic. It simply meandered through regions where one could assume their
enemies rarely came. Why should beings with manlike biological requirements go
from a dim red dwarf star to a planetless blue giant to a dying Cepheid
variable? Flandry had ample time for his labors. Persis was complaining
about that when the revelation came. "You might talk to me." "I do," he
muttered, not lifting his eyes from the desk. "I make love to you as well.
Both with pleasure. But not right now, please!" She flopped into a seat.
"Do you recall what we have aboard for entertainment?" she said.
"Four animations: a Martian travelogue, a comedian routine, a speech by
the Emperor, and a Cynthian opera on the twenty-tone scale. Two novels: Outlaw
Blastman and Planet of Sin. I have them memorized. They come back to me in my
dreams. Then there's a flute, which I can't play, and a set of operation
manuals." "M-hm." He
tried putting Brechdan's figures in a different sequence. It had been easy to
translate from Merseian to Terran arithmetic. But what the devil did the
symbols refer to? Angles, times, several quantities with no dimensions
specified … rotation? Of what? Not of Brechdan; no such luck. A nonhuman could have
been similarly puzzled by something from Terra, such as a periodic table of
isotopes. He wouldn't have known which properties out of many were listed, nor
the standardized order in which quantum numbers were given, nor the fact that
logarithms were to the base ten unless e was explicit, nor a lot of other things
he'd need to know before he could guess what the table signified. "You don't have to
solve the problem," Persis sulked. "You told me yourself, an expert
can see the meaning at a glance. You're just having fun." Flandry raised his head,
irritated. "Might be hellish important for us to know. Give us some idea
what to expect. How in the name of Copros can Starkad matter so much? One
lonesome planet!" And the idea came to
him. He grew so rigid, he
stared so wildly out into the universe, that Persis was frightened.
"Nicky, what's wrong?" He didn't hear. With a convulsive motion, he
grabbed a fresh sheet of paper and started scrawling. Finished, he stared at
the result. Sweat stood on his brow. He rose, went into the control room,
returned with a reel which he threaded into his microreader. Again he wrote,
copying off numbers. His fingers danced on the desk computer. Persis held
herself moveless. Until at last he nodded.
"That's it," he said in a cold small voice. "Has to be." "What is?" she
could then ask. He twisted around in his
chair. His eyes took a second to focus on her. Something had changed in his
face. He was almost a stranger. "I can't tell
you," he said. "Why not?" "We might get
captured alive. They'd probe you and find you knew. If they didn't murder you
out of hand, they'd wipe your brain—which to my taste is worse." He took a lighter from
his pocket and burned every paper on the desk and swept the ashes into a
disposal. Afterward he shook himself, like a dog that has come near drowning,
and went to her. "Sorry," he
smiled. "Kind of a shock for me there. But I'm all right now. And I really
will pay attention to you, from here on in." She enjoyed the rest of
the voyage, even after she had identified the change in him, the thing which
had gone and would never quite come back. Youth. The detector alarm
buzzed. Persis drew a gasp and caught Flandry's arm. He tore her loose,
reaching for the main hyper-drive switch. But he didn't pull it,
returning them to normal state and kinetic velocity. His knuckles stood white
on the handle. A pulse fluttered in his throat. "I forgot what I'd already
decided," he said. "We don't have an especially good detector. If
she's a warship, we were spotted some time ago." "But this time she
can't be headed straight at us." Her tone was fairly level. She had grown
somewhat used to being hunted. "We have a big sphere to hide in." "Uh-huh. We'll try
that if necessary. But first let's see which way yonder fellow is bound."
He changed course. Stars wheeled in the viewports, otherwise there was no
sensation. "If we can find a track on which the intensity stays constant,
we'll be running parallel to him and he isn't trying to intercept." Saxo
burned dead ahead. "S'pose he's going there—" Minutes crawled. Flandry
let himself relax. His coverall was wet. "Whew! What I hoped. Destination,
Saxo. And if he's steered on a more or less direct line, as is probable, then
he's come from the Empire." He got busy,
calculating, grumbling about rotten civilian instrumentation. "Yes, we can
meet him. Let's go." "But he could be
Merseian," Persis objected. "He needn't have come from a Terran
planet." "Chance we take.
The odds aren't bad. He's slower than us, which suggests a merchant
vessel." Flandry set the new path, leaned back and stretched. A grin
spread across his features. "My dilemma's been
solved for me. We're off to Starkad." "Why? How?" "Didn't mention it
before, for fear of raising false hopes in you. When I'd rather raise something
else. But I came here first, instead of directly to Saxo or Betelgeuse, because
this is the way Terran ships pass, carrying men and supplies to Starkad and
returning home. If we can hitch a ride … you see?" Eagerness blossomed in
her and died again. "Why couldn't we have found one going home?" "Be glad we found
any whatsoever. Besides, this way we deliver our news a lot sooner."
Flandry rechecked his figures. "We'll be in call range in an hour. If he
should prove to be Merseian, chances are we can outspeed and lose him." He
rose. "I decree a good stiff drink." Persis held her hands
up. They trembled. "We do need something for our nerves," she agreed,
"but there are psycho-chemicals aboard." "Whisky's more fun.
Speaking of fun, we have an hour." She rumpled his hair.
"You're impossible." "No," he said.
"Merely improbable." The ship was the
freighter Rieskessel, registered on Nova Germania but operating out of the
Imperial frontier world Irumclaw. She was a huge, potbellied, ungainly and
unkempt thing, with a huge, potbellied, ungainly and unkempt captain. He
bellowed a not quite sober welcome when Flandry and Persis came aboard. "Oh, ho, ho, hoi
Humans! So soon I did not expect seeing humans. And never this gorgeous." One
hairy hand engulfed Flandry's, the other chucked Persis under the chin.
"Otto Brummelmann is me." Flandry looked past the
bald, wildly bearded head, down the passageway from the airlock. Corroded metal
shuddered to the drone of an ill-tuned engine. A pair of multi-limbed beings
with shiny blue integuments stared back from their labor; they were actually
swabbing by hand. The lights were reddish orange, the air held a metallic tang
and was chilly enough for his breath to smoke. "Are you the only Terran,
sir?" he asked. "Not Terran. Not
me. Germanian. But for years now on Irumclaw. My owners want Irumclagian
spacehands, they come cheaper. No human language do I hear from end to end of a
trip. They can't pronounce." Brummelmann kept his little eyes on Persis,
who had donned her one gown, and tugged at his own soiled tunic in an effort at
getting some wrinkles out. "Lonely, lonely. How nice to find you. First we
secure your boat, next we go for drinks in my cabin, right?" "We'd better have a
private talk immediately, sir," Flandry said. "Our boat—no, let's
wait till we're alone." "You wait. I be
alone with the little lady, right? Ho, ho, hoi" Brummelmann swept a paw
across her. She shrank back in distaste. On the way, the captain
was stopped by a crew member who had some question. Flandry took the chance to
hiss in Persis' ear: "Don't offend him. This is fantastic luck." "This?" Her
nose wrinkled. "Yes. Think. No
matter what happens, none of these xenos'll give us away. They can't. All we
have to do is stay on the good side of the skipper, and that shouldn't be
hard." He had seen pigpens, in
historical dramas, better kept up than Brummelmann's cabin. The Germanian
filled three mugs, ignoring coffee stains, with a liquid that sank fangs into
stomachs. His got half emptied on the first gulp. "So!" he belched.
"We talk. Who sent you to deep space in a gig?" Persis took the remotest
corner. Flandry stayed near Brummelmann, studying him. The man was a failure, a
bum, an alcoholic wreck. Doubtless he kept his job because the owners insisted
on a human captain and couldn't get anyone else at the salary they wanted to
pay. Didn't matter greatly, as long as the mate had some competence. For the
most part, antiquated though her systems must be, the ship ran herself. "You are bound for
Starkad, aren't you, sir?" Flandry asked. "Yes, yes. My
company has a Naval contract. Irumclaw is a transshipment point. This trip we
carry food and construction equipment. I hope we go on another run soon. Not
much pleasure in Highport. But we was to talk about you." "I can't say
anything except that I'm on a special mission. It's vital for me to reach
Highport secretly. If Donna d'Io and I can ride down with you, and you haven't
radioed the fact ahead, you'll have done the Empire a tremendous service." "Special
mission … with a lady?" Brummelmann dug a blackrimmed thumb into
Flandry's ribs. "I can guess what sort of mission. Ho, ho, ho!" "I rescued
her," Flandry said patiently. "That's why we were in a boat. A Merseian
attack. The war's sharpening. I have urgent information for Admiral
Enriques." Brummelmann's laughter
choked off. Behind the matted whiskers, that reached to his navel, he
swallowed. "Attack, you said? But no, the Merseians, they have never
bothered civilian ships." "Nor should they
bother this one, Captain. Not if they don't know I'm aboard." Brummelmann wiped his
pate. Probably he thought of himself as being in the high, wild tradition of
early spacefaring days. But now his daydreams had orbited. "My
owners," he said weakly. "I have obligation to my owners. I am
responsible for their ship." "Your first duty is
to the Empire." Flandry considered taking over at blaster point. No; not
unless he must; too chancy. "And all you need do is approach Starkad in
the usual fashion, make your usual landing at Highport, and let us off. The
Merseians will never know, I swear." "I—but I—" Flandry snatched an idea
from the air. "As for your owners," he said, "you can do them a
good turn as well. Our boat had better be jettisoned out here. The enemy has
her description. But if we take careful note of the spot, and leave her
power-plant going for neutrino tracing, you can pick her up on your way home
and sell her there. She's worth as much as this entire ship, I'll bet." He
winked. "Of course, you'll inform your owners." Brummelmann's eyes
gleamed. "Well. So. Of course." He tossed off the rest of his drink.
"By God, yes! Shake!" He insisted on shaking
hands with Persis also. "Ugh," she said to Flandry when they were
alone, in an emptied locker where a mattress had been laid. She had refused the
captain's offer of his quarters. "How long to Starkad?" "Couple days."
Flandry busied himself checking the spacesuits he had removed from the boat
before she was cast adrift. "I don't know if I
can stand it." "Sorry, but we've
burned our britches. Myself, I stick by my claim that we lucked out." "You have the
strangest idea of luck," she sighed. "Oh, well, matters can't get any
worse." They could. Fifteen hours later,
Flandry and Persis were in the saloon. Coveralled against the chill but
nonetheless shivering, mucous membranes aching from the dryness, they tried to
pass time with a game of rummy. They weren't succeeding very well. Brummelmann's voice
boomed hoarse from the intercom: "You! Ensign Flandry! To the
bridge!" "Huh?" He
sprang up. Persis followed his dash, down halls and through a companionway.
Stars glared from the viewports. Because the optical compensator was out of
adjustment, they had strange colors and were packed fore and aft, as if the
ship moved through another reality. Brummelmann held a
wrench. Beside him, his first mate aimed a laser torch, a crude substitute for
a gun but lethal enough at short range. "Hands high!" the captain
shrilled. Flandry's arms lifted.
Sickness caught at his gullet. "What is this?" "Read."
Brummelmann thrust a printout at him. "You liar, you traitor, thought you
could fool me? Look what came." It was a standard form,
transcribed from a hypercast that must have originated in one of several
automatic transmitters around Saxo. Office of Vice Admiral Juan Enriques,
commanding Imperial Terrestrial Naval forces in region—Flandry's glance flew to
the text. General directive issued
under martial law: By statement of his Excellency Lord Markus Hauksberg,
Viscount of Ny Kalmar on Terra, special Imperial delegate to the Roidhunate of
Merseia … Ensign Dominic Flandry, an officer of his Majesty's Navy
attached to the delegation … mutinied and stole a spaceboat belonging
to the realm of Ny Kalmar; description as follows … charged with high
treason … Pursuant to interstellar law and Imperial policy, Ensign
Flandry is to be apprehended and returned to his superiors on
Merseia … All ships, including Terran, will be boarded by Merseian
inspectors before proceeding to Starkad … Terrans who may apprehend
this criminal are to deliver him promptly, in their own persons, to the nearest
Merseian authority … secrets of state— Persis closed her eyes
and strained fingers together. The blood had left her face. "Well?"
Brummelmann growled. "Well, what have you to say for yourself?" Flandry leaned against
the bulkhead. He didn't know if his legs would upbear him.
"I … can say … that bastard Brechdan thinks of
everything." "You expected you
could fool me? You thought I would do your traitor's work? No, no!" Flandry looked from him,
to the mate, to Persis. Weakness vanished in rage. But his brain stayed machine
precise. He lowered the hand which held the flimsy. "I'd better tell you
the whole truth," he husked. "No, I don't want
to hear, I want no secrets." Flandry let his knees
go. As he fell, he yanked out his blaster. The torch flame boomed blue where he
had been. His own snap shot flared off that tool. The mate yowled and dropped
the red-hot thing. Flandry regained his feet. "Get rid of your
wrench," he said. It clattered on the
deck. Brummelmann backed off, past his mate who crouched and keened in pain.
"You cannot get away," he croaked. "We are detected by now.
Surely we are. You make us turn around, a warship comes after." "I know,"
Flandry said. His mind leaped as if across ice floes. "Listen. This is a
misunderstanding. Lord Hauksberg's been fooled. I do have information, and it
does have to reach Admiral Enriques. I want nothing from you but transportation
to Highport. I'll surrender to the Terrans. Not to the Merseians. The Terrans.
What's wrong with that? They'll do what the Emperor really wants. If need be,
they can turn me over to the enemy. But not before they've heard what I have to
tell. Are you a man, Captain? Then behave like one!" "But we will be
boarded," Brummelmann wailed. "You can hide me. A thousand possible
places on a ship. If they have no reason to suspect you, the Merseians won't
search everywhere. That could take days. Your crew won't blab. They're as alien
to the Merseians as they are to us. No common language, gestures, interests,
anything. Let the greenskins come aboard. I'll be down in the cargo or
somewhere. You act natural. Doesn't matter if you show a bit of strain. I'm
certain everybody they've checked has done so. Pass me on to the Terrans. A
year from now you could have a knighthood." Brummelmann's eyes
darted back and forth. The breath rasped sour from his mouth. "The alternative,"
Flandry said, "is that I lock you up and assume command." "I … no—"
Tears started forth, down into the dirty beard. "Please. Too much
risk—" Abruptly, slyly, after a breath: "Why, yes. I will. I can find
a good hiding spot for you." And tell them when they
arrive, Flandry thought. I've got the upper hand and it's worthless. What am I
to do? Persis stirred. She
approached Brummelmann and took his hands in hers. "Oh, thank you,"
she caroled. "Eh? Ho?" He gawped at her. "I knew you were a
real man. Like the old heroes of the League, come back to life." "But
you—lady—" "The message
doesn't include a word about me," she purred. "I don't feel like
sitting in some dark hole." "You … you
aren't registered aboard. They will read the list. Won't they?" "What if they do?
Would I be registered?" Hope rushed across
Flandry. He felt giddy with it. "There are some immediate rewards, you
see," he cackled. "I—why, I—"
Brummelmann straightened. He caught Persis to him. "So there are. Oh, ho,
ho! So there are!" She threw Flandry a look
he wished he could forget. He crept from the
packing case. The hold was gut-black. The helmet light of his spacesuit cast a
single beam to guide him. Slowly, awkward in armor, he wormed among crates to
the hatch. The ship was quiet.
Nothing spoke but powerplant, throttled low, and ventilators. Shadows bobbed
grotesque where his beam cut a path. Orbit around Starkad, awaiting clearance
to descend—must be. He had survived. The Merseians had passed within meters of
him, he heard them talk and curled finger around trigger; but they had gone
again and the Rieskessel resumed acceleration. So Persis had kept Brummelmann
under control; he didn't like to think how. The obvious course was
to carry on as he had outlined, let himself be taken planetside and turn
himself in. Thus he would be certain to get his message through, the word which
he alone bore. (He had wondered whether to give Persis those numbers, but
decided against it. A list for her made another chance of getting caught; and
her untrained mind might not retain the figures exactly, even in the
subconscious for narcosynthesis to bring forth.) But he didn't know how
Enriques would react. The admiral was no robot; he would pass the information
on to Terra, one way or another. But he might yield up Flandry. He would most
likely not send an armed scout to check and confirm, without authorization from
headquarters. Not in the face of Hauksberg's message, or the command laid on
him that he must take no escalating action save in response to a Merseian
initiative. So at best, the obvious
course entailed delay, which the enemy might put to good use. It entailed a
high probability of Brechdan Ironrede learning how matters stood. Max Abrams
(Are you alive yet, my father?) had said, "What helps the other fellow
most is knowing what you know." And, finally, Dominic Flandry wasn't about
to become a God damned pawn again! He opened the hatch. The
corridor stretched empty. Unhuman music squealed from the forecastle. Captain
Brummelmann was in no hurry to make planetfall, and his crew was taking the
chance to relax. Flandry sought the
nearest lifeboat. If anyone noticed, well, all right, he'd go to Highport. But
otherwise, borrowing a boat would be the smallest crime on his docket. He
entered the turret, dogged the inner valve, closed his faceplate, and worked
the manual controls. Pumps roared, exhausting air. He climbed into the boat and
secured her own airlock. The turret's outer valve opened automatically. Space blazed at him. He
nudged through on the least possible impetus. Starkad was a huge wheel of
darkness, rimmed with red, day blue on one edge. A crescent moon glimmered
among the stars. Weightlessness caught Flandry in an endless falling. It vanished as he turned
on interior gravity and applied a thrust vector. He spiraled downward. The
planetary map was clear in his recollection. He could reach Ujanka without
trouble—Ujanka, the city he had saved. 16 Dragoika flowed to a
couch, reclined on one elbow, and gestured at Flandry. "Don't pace in that
caged way, Domma-neek," she urged. "Take ease by my side. We have
scant time alone together, we two friends." Behind her throaty
voice, up through the window, came the sounds of feet shuffling about, weapons
rattling, a surflike growl. Flandry stared out. Shiv Alley was packed with
armed Kursovikians. They spilled past sight, among gray walls, steep red roofs,
carved beams: on into the Street Where They Fought, a cordon around this house.
Spearheads and axes, helmets and byrnies flashed in the harsh light of Saxo;
banners snapped to the wind, shields bore monsters and thunderbolts luridly
colored. It was no mob. It was the fighting force of Ujanka, summoned by the
Sisterhood. Warriors guarded the parapets on Seatraders' Castle and the ships
lay ready in Golden Bay. Lucifer! Flandry
thought, half dismayed. Did I start this? He looked back at
Dragoika. Against the gloom of the chamber, the barbaric relics which crowded
it, her ruby eyes and the striped orange-and-white fur seemed to glow, so that
the curves of her body grew disturbingly rich. She tossed back her blonde mane,
and the half-human face broke into a smile whose warmth was not lessened by the
fangs. "We were too busy since you came," she said. "Now, while
we wait, we can talk. Come." He crossed the floor,
strewn with aromatic leaves in his honor, and took the couch by hers. A small
table in the shape of a flower stood between, bearing a ship model and a
flagon. Dragoika sipped. "Will you not share my cup, Dom-maneek?" "Well … thanks."
He couldn't refuse, though Starkadian wine tasted grim on his palate. Besides,
he'd better get used to native viands; he might be living off them for a long
while. He fitted a tube to his chowlock and sucked up a bit. It was good to wear a
regular sea-level outfit again, air helmet, coverall, boots, after being penned
in a spacesuit. The messenger Dragoika sent for him, to the Terran station in
the High Housing, had insisted on taking back such a rig. "How have you
been?" Flandry asked lamely. "As always. We
missed you, I and Ferok and your other old comrades. How glad I am the Archer
was in port." "Lucky for
me!" "No, no, anyone
would have helped you. The folk down there, plain sailors, artisans, merchants,
ranchers, they are as furious as I am." Dragoika erected her tendrils. Her
tail twitched, the winglike ears spread wide. "That those vaz-gira-dek
would dare bite you!" "Hoy," Flandry
said. "You have the wrong idea. I haven't disowned Terra. My people are
simply the victims of a lie and our task is to set matters right." "They outlawed you,
did they not?" "I don't know what
the situation is. I dare not communicate by radio. The vaz-Merseian could
overhear. So I had your messenger give our men a note which they were asked to
fly to Admiral Enriques. The note begged him to send a trustworthy man
here." "You told me that
already. I told you I would make quite plain to the vaz-Terran, they will not
capture my Domma-neek. Not unless they want war." "But—" "They don't. They
need us worse than we need them, the more so when they failed to reach an
accord with the vaz-Siravo of the Zletovar." "They did?"
Flandry's spirit drooped. "Yes, as I always
said would happen. Oh, there have been no new Merseian submarines. A Terran
force blasted the Siravo base, when we vaz-Kursovikian were unable to. The
vaz-Merseian fought them in the air. Heaven burned that night. Since then, our
ships often meet gunfire from swimmers, but most of them get through. They tell
me combat between Terran and Merseian has become frequent—elsewhere in the
world, however." Another step up the
ladder, Flandry thought. More men killed, Tigeries, seajolk. By now, I suppose,
daily. And in a doomed cause. "But you have given
me small word about your deeds," Dragoika continued. "Only that you
bear a great secret. What?" "I'm sorry."
On an impulse, Flandry reached out and stroked her mane. She rubbed her head
against his palm. "I may not tell even you." She sighed. "As you
wish." She picked up the model galley. Her fingers traced spars and
rigging. "Let me fare with you a ways. Tell me of your journey." He tried. She struggled
for comprehension. "Strange, that yonder," she said. "The little
stars become suns, this world of ours shrunk to a dustmote; the weirdness of
other races, the terrible huge machines—" She clutched the model tight.
"I did not know a story could frighten me." "You will learn to
live with a whole heart in the universe." You must. "Speak on,
Domma-neek." He did, censoring a
trifle. Not that Dragoika would mind his having traveled with Persis; but she
might think he preferred the woman to her as a friend, and be hurt. "—trees on Merseia
grow taller than here, bearing a different kind of leaf—" His wristcom buzzed. He
stabbed the transmitter button. "Ensign Flandry." His voice sounded
high in his ears. "Standing by." "Admiral
Enriques," from the speaker. "I am approaching in a Boudreau X-7 with
two men. Where shall I land?" Enriques in person? My
God, have I gotten myself caught in the gears! "A-a-aye, aye, sir." "I asked where to
set down, Flandry." The ensign stammered out
directions. A flitter, as his letter had suggested, could settle on the "Your doing?" "No, sir. I mean,
not really. But, well, you'll see everyone gathered. In combat order. They
don't want to surrender me to … uh … to anyone they think
is hostile to me. They threaten, uh, attack on our station if—Honest, sir, I
haven't alienated an ally. I can explain." "You'd
better," Enriques said. "Very well, you are under arrest but we won't
take you into custody as yet. We'll be there in about three minutes. Out." "What did he
say?" Dragoika hissed. Her fur stood on end. Flandry translated. She
glided from her couch and took a sword off the wall. "I'll call a few
warriors to make sure he keeps his promise." "He will. I'm
certain he will. Uh … the sight of his vehicle might cause
excitement. Can we tell the city not to start fighting?" "We can."
Dragoika operated a communicator she had lately acquired and spoke with the
Sisterhood centrum across the river. Bells pealed forth, the Song of Truce. An
uneasy mutter ran through the Tigeries, but they stayed where they were. Flandry headed for the
door. "I'll meet them on the tower," he said. "You will
not," Dragoika answered. "They are coming to see you by your gracious
permission. Lirjoz is there, he'll escort them down." Flandry seated himself,
shaking his head in a stunned fashion. He rocketed up to salute
when Enriques entered. The admiral was alone, must have left his men in the
flitter. At a signal from Dragoika, Lirjoz returned to watch them. Slowly, she
laid her sword on the table. "At ease,"
Enriques clipped. He was gray, bladenosed, scarecrow gaunt. His uniform hung
flat as armor. "Kindly present me to my hostess." "Uh … Dragoika,
captain-director of the Janjevar va-Radovik … Vice Admiral Juan
Enriques of the Imperial Terrestrial Navy." The newcomer clicked his
heels, but his bow could have been made to the Empress. Dragoika studied him a
moment, then touched brow and breasts, the salute of honor. "I feel more
hope," she said to Flandry. "Translate,"
Enriques ordered. That narrow skull held too much to leave room for many
languages. "She … uh … likes
you, sir," Flandry said. Behind the helmet, a
smile ghosted at one corner of Enriques' mouth. "I suspect she is merely
prepared to trust me to a clearly defined extent." "Won't the Admiral
be seated?" Enriques glanced at
Dragoika. She eased to her couch. He took the other one, sitting straight.
Flandry remained on his feet. Sweat prickled him. "Sir," he
blurted, "please, is Donna d'Io all right?" "Yes, except for
being in a bad nervous state. She landed soon after your message arrived. The
Rieskessel's captain had been making one excuse after another to stay in orbit.
When we learned from you that Donna d'Io was aboard, we said we would loft a
gig for her. He came down at once. What went on there?" "Well, sir—I mean,
I can't say. I wasn't around, sir. She told you about our escape from
Merseia?" "We had a private
interview at her request. Her account was sketchy. But it does tend to bear out
your claims." "Sir, I know what the
Merseians are planning, and it's monstrous. I can prove—" "You will need
considerable proof, Ensign," Enriques said bleakly. "Lord Hauksberg's
communication laid capital charges against you." Flandry felt nervousness
slide from him. He doubled his fists and cried, with tears of rage stinging his
eyes: "Sir, I'm entitled to a court-martial. By my own people. And you'd
have let the Merseians have me!" The lean visage beneath
his hardly stirred. The voice was flat. "Regulations provide that
personnel under charges are to be handed over to their assigned superiors if
this is demanded. The Empire is too big for any other rule to work. By virtue
of being a nobleman, Lord Hauksberg holds a reserve commission, equivalent rank
of captain, which was automatically activated when Commander Abrams was posted
to him. Until you are detached from your assignment, he is your senior
commanding officer. He declared in proper form that state secrets and his
mission on behalf of the Imperium have been endangered by you. The Merseians
will return you to him for examination. It is true that courts-martial must be
held on an Imperial ship or planet, but the time for this may be set by him
within a one-year limit." "Will be never!
Sir, they'll scrub my brain and kill me!" "Restrain yourself,
Ensign." Flandry gulped. Dragoika
bared teeth but stayed put. "May I hear the exact charges against me,
sir?" Flandry asked. "High
treason," Enriques told him. "Mutiny. Desertion. Kidnapping. Threat
and menace. Assault and battery. Theft. Insubordination. Shall I recite the
entire bill? I thought not. You have subsequently added several items. Knowing
that you were wanted, you did not surrender yourself. You created dissension
between the Empire and an associated country. This, among other things,
imperils his Majesty's forces on Starkad. At the moment, you are resisting
arrest. Ensign, you have a great deal to answer for." "I'll answer to
you, sir, not to … to those damned gatortails. Nor to a Terran who's
so busy toadying to them he doesn't care what happens to his fellow human
beings. My God, sir, you let Merseians search Imperial ships!" "I had my
orders," Enriques replied. "But Hauksberg, you
rank him!" "Formally and in
certain procedural matters. He holds a direct Imperial mandate, though. It
empowers him to negotiate temporary agreements with Merseia, which then become
policy determinants." Flandry heard the least
waver in those tones. He pounced. "You protested your orders, sir. Didn't
you?" "I sent a report on
my opinion to frontier HQ. No reply has yet been received. In any event, there
are only six Merseian men-of-war here, none above Planet class, plus some
unarmed cargo carriers told off to help them." Enriques smacked hand on
knee. "Why am I arguing with you? At the very least, if you wanted to see
me, you could have stayed aboard the Rieskessel." "And afterward been
given to the Merseians, sir?" "Perhaps. The
possibility should not have influenced you. Remember your oath." Flandry made a circle
around the room. His hands writhed behind his back. Dragoika laid fingers on
sword hilt. "No," he said to her in Kursovikian. "No matter what
happens." He spun on his heel and
looked straight at Enriques. "Sir, I had another reason. What I brought
from Merseia is a list of numbers. You'd undoubtedly have passed them on. But
they do need a direct check, to make sure I'm right about what they mean. And
if I am right, whoever goes to look may run into a fight. A space battle.
Escalation, which you're forbidden to practice. You couldn't order such a
mission the way things have been set up to bind you. You'd have to ask for the
authority. And on what basis? On my say-so, me, a baby ex-cadet, a mutineer, a
traitor. You can imagine how they'd buckpass. At best, a favorable decision
wouldn't come for weeks. Months, more likely. Meanwhile the war would drag on.
Men would get killed. Men like my buddy, Jan van Zuyl, with his life hardly
begun, with forty or fifty years of Imperial service in him." Enriques spoke so softly
that one heard the wind whittering off the sea, through the ancient streets
outside. "Ensign van Zuyl was killed in action four days ago." "Oh, no."
Flandry closed his eyes. "Conflict has
gotten to the point where—we and the Merseians respect each other's base areas,
but roving aircraft fight anyplace else they happen to meet." "And still you let
them search us." Flandry paused. "I'm sorry, sir. I know you hadn't
any choice. Please let me finish. It's even possible my information would be
discredited, never acted on. Hard to imagine, but … well, we have so
many bureaucrats, so many people in high places like Lord Hauksberg who insists
the enemy doesn't really mean harm … and Brechdan Ironrede, God, but
he's clever … I couldn't risk it. I had to work things so you, sir,
would have a free choice." "You?"
Enriques raised his brows. "Ensign Dominic Flandry, all by himself?" "Yes, sir. You have
discretionary power, don't you? I mean, when extraordinary situations arise,
you can take what measures are indicated, without asking HQ first. Can't
you?" "Of course. As
witness these atmospheric combats." Enriques leaned forward, forgetting to
stay sarcastic. "Well, sir, this is
an extraordinary situation. You're supposed to stay friends with the
Kursovikians. But you can see I'm the Terran they care about. Their minds work
that way. They're barbaric, used to personal leadership; to them, a distant
government is no government; they feel a blood obligation to me—that sort of
thing. So to preserve the alliance, you must deal with me. I'm a renegade, but
you must." "And so?" "So if you don't
dispatch a scout into space, I'll tell the Sisterhood to dissolve the
alliance." "What?"
Enriques started. Dragoika bristled. "I'll sabotage the
whole Terran effort," Flandry said. "Terra has no business on
Starkad. We've been trapped, conned, blued and tattooed. When you present
physical evidence, photographs, measurements, we'll all go home. Hell, I'll
give you eight to one the Merseians go home as soon as you tell old Runei what
you've done. Get your courier off first, of course, to make sure he doesn't use
those warships to blast us into silence. But then call him and tell him." "There are no
Terran space combat units in this system." Flandry grinned. The
blood was running high in him. "Sir, I don't believe the Imperium is that
stupid. There has to be some provision against the Merseians suddenly
marshaling strength. If nothing else, a few warcraft orbiting 'way outside. We
can flit men to them. A roundabout course, so the enemy'll think it's only
another homebound ship. Right?" "Well—"
Enriques got up. Dragoika stayed where she was, but closed hand on hilt.
"You haven't yet revealed your vast secret," the admiral declared. Flandry recited the
figures. Enriques stood
totem-post erect. "Is that everything?" "Yes, sir.
Everything that was needed." "How do you
interpret it?" Flandry told him. Enriques was still for a
long moment. The Tigeries growled in Shiv Alley. He turned, went to the window,
stared down and then out at the sky. "Do you believe
this?" he asked most quietly. "Yes, sir,"
Flandry said. "I can't think of anything else that fits, and I had plenty
of time to try. I'd bet my life on it." Enriques faced him
again. "Would you?" "I'm doing it,
sir." "Maybe. Suppose I
order a reconnaissance. As you say, it's not unlikely to run into Merseian
pickets. Will you come along?" A roar went through
Flandry's head. "Yes, sir!" he yelled. "Hm. You trust me
that much, eh? And it would be advisable for you to go: a hostage for your
claims, with special experience which might prove useful. Although if you
didn't return here, we could look for trouble." "You wouldn't need
Kursoviki any longer," Flandry said. He was beginning to tremble. "If you are
truthful and correct in your assertion." Enriques was motionless a while
more. The silence grew and grew. All at once the admiral
said, "Very good, Ensign Flandry. The charges against you are held in
abeyance and you are hereby re-attached temporarily to my command. You will
return to Highport with me and await further orders." Flandry saluted. Joy
sang in him. "Aye, aye, sir!" Dragoika rose.
"What were you saying, Domma-neek?" she asked anxiously. "Excuse me, sir, I
have to tell her." In Kursovikian: "The misunderstanding has been
dissolved, for the time being anyhow. I'm leaving with my skipper." "Hr-r-r." She
looked down. "And then what?" "Well, uh, then
we'll go on a flying ship, to a battle which may end this whole war." "You have only his
word," she objected. "Did you not judge
him honorable?" "Yes. I could be
wrong. Surely there are those in the Sisterhood who will suspect a ruse, not to
speak of the commons. Blood binds us to you. I think it would look best if I
went along. Thus there is a living pledge." "But—but—" "Also,"
Dragoika said, "this is our war too. Shall none of us take part?" Her
eyes went back to him. "On behalf of the Sisterhood and myself, I claim a
right. You shall not leave without me." "Problems?"
Enriques barked. Helplessly, Flandry
tried to explain. 17 The Imperial squadron
deployed and accelerated. It was no big force to cast out in so much blackness.
True, at the core was the Sabik, a Star-class, what some called a pocket
battleship; but she was old and worn, obsolete in several respects, shunted off
to Saxo as the last step before the scrap orbit. No one had really expected her
to see action again. Flanking her went the light cruiser Umbriel, equally
tired, and the destroyers At first the squadron
moved on gravities. It would not continue thus. The distance to be traversed
was a few light-days, negligible under hyperdrive, appalling under true
velocity. However, a sudden burst of wakes, outbound from a large orbit, would
be detected by the Merseians. Their suspicions would be excited. And their
strength in the Saxonian System, let alone what else they might have up ahead,
was fully comparable to Captain Einarsen's command. He wanted to enter this
water carefully. It was deep. But when twenty-four
hours had passed without incident, he ordered the New Brazil to proceed at
superlight toward the destination. At the first sign of an enemy waiting there,
she was to come back. Flandry and Dragoika sat
in a wardroom of the Sabik with Lieutenant (j.g.) Sergei Karamzin, who happened
to be off watch. He was as frantic to see new faces and hear something new from
the universe as everyone else aboard. "Almost a year on station," he
said. "A year out of my life, bang, like that. Only it wasn't sudden, you
understand. Felt more like a decade." Flandry's glance
traveled around the cabin. An attempt had been made to brighten it with
pictures and home-sewn draperies. The attempt had not been very successful.
Today the place had come alive with the thrum of power, low and bone-deep. A
clean tang of oil touched air which circulated briskly again. But he hated to
think what this environment had felt like after a year of absolutely eventless
orbit. Dragoika saw matters otherwise, of course; the ship dazzled, puzzled,
frightened, delighted, enthralled her, never had she known such wonder! She
poised in her chair with fur standing straight and eyes bouncing around. "You had your
surrogates, didn't you?" Flandry asked. "Pseudosensory inputs and the
rest." "Sure,"
Karamzin said. "The galley's good, too. But those things are just
medicine, to keep you from spinning off altogether." His young features
hardened. "I hope we meet some opposition. I really do." "Myself,"
Flandry said, "I've met enough opposition to last me for quite a
while." His lighter kindled a
cigaret. He felt odd, back in horizon blue, jetflares on his shoulders and no
blaster at his waist: back in a ship, in discipline, in tradition. He wasn't
sure he liked it. At least his position
was refreshingly anomalous. Captain Einarsen had been aghast when Dragoika
boarded—an Iron Age xeno on his vessel? But the orders from Enriques were
clear. This was a vip who insisted on riding along and could cause trouble if
she wasn't humored. Thus Ensign Flandry was appointed "liaison officer,"
the clause being added in private that he'd keep his pet savage out of the way
or be busted to midshipman. (Nothing was said on either side about his being
technically a prisoner. Einarsen had received the broadcast, but judged it
would be dangerous to let his men know that Merseians were stopping Terran
craft. And Enriques' message had clarified his understanding.) At the age of
nineteen, how could Flandry resist conveying the impression that the vip really
had some grasp of astronautics and must be kept posted on developments? So he
was granted communication with the bridge. Under all cheer and
excitement, a knot of tension was in him. He figured that word from the New
Brazil would arrive at any minute. "Your pardon,"
Dragoika interrupted. "I must go to the—what you say—the head." She
thought that installation the most amusing thing aboard. Karamzin watched her
leave. Her supple gait was not impeded by the air helmet she required in a
Terran atmosphere. The chief problem had been coiling her mane to fit inside.
Otherwise her garments consisted of a sword and a knife. "Way-hay,"
Karamzin murmured. "What a shape! How is she?" "Be so good as not
to talk about her like that," Flandry rapped. "What? I didn't
mean any harm. She's only a xeno." "She's my friend.
She's worth a hundred Imperial sheep. And what she's got to face and survive,
the rest of her life—" Karamzin leaned across
the table. "How's that? What sort of cruise are we on, anyway? Supposed to
check on something the gatortails might have out in space; they didn't tell us
more." "I can't,
either." "I wasn't ordered
to stop thinking. And you know, I think this Starkad affair is a blind. They'll
develop the war here, get our whole attention on this sinkhole, then bang,
they'll hit someplace else." Flandry blew a smoke
ring. "Maybe." I wish I could tell you. You have no military right to
know, but haven't you a human right? "What's Starkad
like, anyway? Our briefing didn't say much." "Well—"
Flandry hunted for words. They were bloodless things at best. You could
describe, but you could not make real: dawn white over a running sea, slow
heavy winds that roared on wooded mountainsides, an old and proud city,
loveliness on a shadowy ocean floor, two brave races, billions of years since
first the planet coalesced, the great globe itself … He was still
trying when Dragoika returned. She sat down quietly and watched him. "—and, uh, a very
interesting paleolithic culture on an island they call Rayadan—" Alarms hooted. Karamzin was through the
door first. Feet clattered, metal clanged, voices shouted, under the shrill
woop-woop-woop that echoed from end to end of the long hull. Dragoika snatched
the sword off her shoulder. "What's happening?" she yelled. "Battle
stations." Flandry realized he had spoken in Anglic. "An enemy has
been … sighted." "Where is he?" "Out there. Put
away that steel. Strength and courage won't help you now. Come." Flandry
led her into the corridor. They wove among men who
themselves pelted toward their posts. Near the navigation bridge was a
planetary chartroom equipped for full audiovisual intercom. The exec had
decided this would serve the vip and her keeper. Two spacesuits hung ready. One
was modified for Starkadian use. Dragoika had gotten some drill with it en
route to the squadron, but Flandry thought he'd better help her before armoring
himself. "Here; this fastens so. Now hold your breath till we change
helmets on you … Why did you come?" "I would not let
you fare alone on my behalf," Dragoika said after her faceplate was
closed. Flandry left his own
open, but heard her in his radio earplugs. The alarm penetrated them; and,
presently, a voice: "Now hear this. Now
hear this. Captain to all officers and men. The New Brazil reports two hyperdrives
activated as she approached destination. She is returning to us and the bogies
are in pursuit. We shall proceed. Stand by for hyper-drive. Stand by for
combat. Glory to the Emperor." Flandry worked the com
dials. Tuning in on a bridge view-screen, he saw space on his own panel, black
and star-strewn. Briefly, as the quantum field built up, the cosmos twisted.
Compensators clicked in and the scene grew steady; but now Sabik outran light
and kilometers reeled aft more swiftly than imagination could follow. The power
throb was a leonine growl through every cell of his body. "What does this
mean?" Dragoika pressed close to him, seeking comfort. Flandry switched to a
view of the operations tank. Seven green dots of varying size moved against a
stellar background. "See, those are our ships. The big one, that's
this." Two red dots appeared. "Those are the enemy, as near as we can
tell his positions. Um-m-m, look at their size. That's because we detect very
powerful engines. I'd say one is roughly equal to ours, though probably newer
and better armed. The other seems to be a heavy destroyer." Her gauntlets clapped
together. "But this is like magic!" she cried with glee. "Not much use,
actually, except to give a quick overall picture. What the captain uses is
figures and calculations from our machines." Dragoika's enthusiasm
died. "Always machines," she said in a troubled voice. "Glad I
am not to live in your world, Dom-maneek." You'll have to, I'm
afraid, he thought. For a while, anyway. If we live. He scanned the
communications office. Men sat before banks of meters, as if hypnotized.
Occasionally someone touched a control or spoke a few words to his neighbor.
Electromagnetic radio was mute beyond the hull. But with hyperdrive going, a slight
modulation could be imposed on the wake to carry messages. Sabik could transmit
instantaneously, as well as receive. As Flandry watched, a
man stiffened in his seat. His hands shook a little when he ripped off a
printout and gave it to his pacing superior. That officer strode to an intercom
and called the command bridge. Flandry listened and nodded. "Tell me,"
Dragoika begged. "I feel so alone here." "Shhh!" Announcement: "Now
hear this. Now hear this. Captain to all officers and men. It is known that
there are six Merseian warships in Saxo orbit. They have gone hyper and are
seeking junction with the two bogies in pursuit of New Brazil. We detect
scrambled communication between these various units. It is expected they will
attack us. First contact is estimated in ten minutes. Stand by to open fire
upon command. The composition of the hostiles is—" Flandry showed Dragoika
the tank. Half a dozen sparks drove outward from the luminous globelet which
represented her sun. "They are one light cruiser, about like our Umbriel,
and five destroyers. Then ahead, remember, we have a battleship and a quite
heavy destroyer." "Eight against five
of us." Tendrils rose behind the faceplate, fur crackled, the lost child
dropped out of her and she said low and resonant: "But we will catch those
first two by themselves." "Right. I
wonder … " Flandry tried a different setting. It should have
been blocked off, but someone had forgotten and he looked over Captain
Einarsen's shoulder. Yes, a Merseian in the
outercom screen! And a high-ranking one, too. "—interdicted
region," he said in thickly accented Anglic. "Turn back at
once." "His Majesty's
government does not recognize interdictions in unclaimed space," Einarsen
said. "You will interfere with us at your peril." "Where are you
bound? What is your purpose?" "That is of no
concern to you, Fodaich. My command is bound on its lawful occasions. Do we
pass peacefully or must we fight?" Flandry translated for
Dragoika as he listened. The Merseian paused, and she whispered: "He will
say we can go on, surely. Thus he can join the others." Flandry wiped his brow.
The room felt hot, and he stank with perspiration in his suit. "I wish
you'd been born in our civilization," he said. "You have a Navy
mind." "Pass, then,"
the Merseian said slowly. "Under protest, I let you by." Flandry leaned forward,
gripping a table edge, struggling not to shout what Einarsen must do. The Terran commander
said, "Very good. But in view of the fact that other units are moving to
link with yours, I am forced to require guarantees of good faith. You will
immediately head due galactic north at full speed, without halt until I return
to Saxo." "Outrageous! You
have no right—" "I have the right
of my responsibility for this squadron. If your government wishes to protest to
mine, let it do so. Unless you withdraw as requested, I shall consider your
intentions hostile and take appropriate measures. My compliments to you, sir.
Good day." The screen was blanked. Flandry switched away
from Einarsen's expressionless countenance and stood shaking. There trickled
through the turmoil in him, I guess an old-line officer does have as much sense
as a fresh-caught ensign. When he brought Dragoika
up to date, she said coolly, "Let us see that tank again." The Merseians ahead were
not heeding the Terran order. They were, though, sheering off, one in either
direction, obviously hoping to delay matters until help arrived. Einarsen
didn't cooperate. Like a wolf brought to bay, New Brazil turned on her lesser
pursuer. Murdoch's Land hurried to her aid. On the other side, Umbriel and
Sabik herself accelerated toward the Merseian battlewagon. "Here we go,"
Flandry said between clenched jaws. His first space battle, as terrifying,
bewildering, and exalting as his first woman. He lusted to be in a gun turret.
After dogging his faceplate, he sought an exterior view. For a minute, nothing
was visible but stars. Then the ship boomed and shuddered. She had fired a
missile salvo: the monster missiles which nothing smaller than a battleship
could carry, which had their own hyperdrives and phase-in computers. He could
not see them arrive. The distance was as yet too great. But close at hand,
explosions burst in space, one immense fireball after another, swelling,
raging, and vanishing. Had the screen carried their real intensity, his
eyeballs would have melted. Even through airlessness, he felt the buffet of
expanding gases; the deck rocked and the hull belled. "What was
that?" Dragoika cried. "The enemy shot at
us. We managed to intercept and destroy his missiles with smaller ones. Look
there." A lean metal thing prowled across the screen. "It seeks its
own target. We have a cloud of them out." Again and again energies
ran wild. One blast almost knocked Flandry off his feet. His ears buzzed from
it. He tuned in on damage control. The strike had been so near that the hull was
bashed open. Bulkheads sealed off that section. A gun turret was wrecked, its
crew blown to fragments. But another nearby reported itself still functional.
Behind heavy material and electromagnetic shielding, its men had not gotten a
lethal dose of radiation: not if they received medical help within a day. They
stayed at their post. Flandry checked the tank
once more. Faster than either battleship, Umbriel had overhauled her giant foe.
When drive fields touched, she went out of phase, just sufficient to be
unhittable, not enough that her added mass did not serve as a drag. The
Merseian must be trying to get in phase and wipe her out before—No, here Sabik
came! Generators that powerful
extended their fields for a long radius. When she first intermeshed, the enemy
seemed a toy, lost among so many stars. But she grew in the screen, a shark, a
whale, Leviathan in steel, bristling with weapons, livid with lightnings. The combat was not waged
by living creatures. Not really. They did nothing but serve guns, tend
machines, and die. When such speeds, masses, intensities met, robots took over.
Missile raced at missile; computer matched wits with computer in the weird
dance of phasing. Human and Merseian hands did operate blaster cannon, probing,
searing, slicing through metal like a knife through flesh. But their chance of
doing important harm, in the short time they had, was small. Fire sheeted across
space. Thunder brawled in hulls. Decks twisted, girders buckled, plates melted.
An explosion pitched Flandry and Dragoika down. They lay in each other's arms,
bruised, bleeding, deafened, while the storm prevailed. And passed. Slowly, incredulously,
they climbed to their feet. Shouts from outside told them their eardrums were
not ruptured. The door sagged and smoke curled through. Chemical extinguishers
rumbled. Someone called for a medic. The voice was raw with pain. The screen still worked.
Flandry glimpsed Umbriel before relative speed made her unseeable. Her bows
gaped open, a gun barrel was bent in a quarter circle, plates resembled
sea-foam where they had liquefied and congealed. But she ran yet. And so did
Sabik. He looked and listened
awhile before he could reconstruct the picture for Dragoika. "We got them.
Our two destroyers took care of the enemy's without suffering much damage.
We're hulled in several places ourselves, three turrets and a missile launcher
are knocked out, some lines leading from the main computer bank are cut, we're
using auxiliary generators till the engineers can fix the primary one, and the
casualties are pretty bad. We're operational, though, sort of." "What became of the
battleship we fought?" "We sank a warhead
in her midriff. One megaton, I believe … no, you don't know about
that, do you? She's dust and gas." The squadron reunited
and moved onward. Two tiny green flecks in the tank detached themselves and
hastened ahead. "See those? Our scoutboats. We have to screen them while
they perform their task. This means we have to fight those Merseians from
Saxo." "Six of them to
five of us," Dragoika counted. "Well, the odds are improving. And
then, we have a bigger ship, this one, than remains to them." Flandry watched the
green lights deploy. The objective was to prevent even one of the red sparks
from getting through and attacking the scouts. This invited annihilation in
detail, but—Yes, evidently the Merseian commander had told off one of his
destroyers to each of Einarsen's. That left him with his cruiser and two
destroyers against Sabik and Umbriel, which would have been fine were the
latter pair not half crippled. "I'd call the odds even, myself,"
Flandry said. "But that may be good enough. If we stand off the enemy
for … a couple of hours, I'd guess … we've done what we
were supposed." "But what is that,
Domma-neek? You spoke only of some menace out here." Dragoika took him by
the shoulders and regarded him levelly. "Can you not tell me?" He could, without
violating any secrecy that mattered any longer. But he didn't want to. He tried
to stall, and hoped the next stage of combat would begin before she realized
what he was doing. "Well," he said, "we have news about, uh, an
object. What the scouts must do is go to it, find out what it is like, and plot
its path. They'll do that in an interesting way. They'll retreat from it,
faster than light, so they can take pictures of it not where it is at this
moment but where it was at different times in the past. Since they know where
to look, their instruments can pinpoint it at more than a light-year. That is,
across more than a year of time. On such basis, they can easily calculate how
it will move for the next several years to come." Again dread stirred
behind her eyes. "They can reach over time itself?" she whispered.
"To the past and its ghosts? You dare too much, you vaz-Terran. One night
the hidden powers will set free their anger on you." He bit his lip—and
winced, for it was swollen where his face had been thrown against a
mouth-control radio switch. "I often wonder if that may not be so,
Dragoika. But what can we do? Our course was set for us ages agone, before ever
we left our home world, and there is no turning back." "Then … you
fare bravely." She straightened in her armor. "I may do no less. Tell
me what the thing is that you hunt through time." "It—" The ship
recoiled. A drumroll ran. "Missiles fired off! We're engaging!" Another salvo and
another. Einarsen must be shooting off every last hyperdrive weapon in his
magazines. If one or two connected, they might decide the outcome. If not, then
none of his present foes could reply in kind. Flandry saw, in the
tank, how the Merseian destroyers scattered. They could do little but try to
outdodge those killers, or outphase them if field contact was made. As
formation broke up, Murdoch's Land and The volleys ended.
Dragoika howled. "Look, Domma-neek! A red light went out! There! First
blood for us!" "Yes … yes,
we did get a destroyer. Whoopee!" The exec announced it on the intercom,
and cheers sounded faintly from those who still had their faceplates open. The
other missiles must have been avoided or parried, and by now were destroying
themselves lest they become threats to navigation. Max Abrams would have called
that rule a hopeful sign. Another Merseian ship
sped to assist the one on which the two Terrans were converging, while New
Brazil and a third enemy stalked each other. Umbriel limped on an intercept
course for the heavy cruiser and her attendant. Those drove straight for Sabik,
which lay in wait licking her wounds. The lights flickered and
died. They came back, but feebly. So there was trouble with the spare
powerplant, too. And damn, damn, damn, Flandry couldn't do a thing except watch
that tank! The cruiser's escort
detached herself and ran toward Umbriel to harry and hinder. Flandry clenched
his teeth till his jaws ached. "The greenskins can see we have problems
here," he said. "They figure a cruiser can take us. And they may be
right." Red crept up on green.
"Stand by for straight-phase engagement," said the intercom. "What did that
mean?" Dragoika asked. "We can't dodge
till a certain machine has been fixed." It was as near as Flandry could
come to saying in Kursovikian that phase change was impossible. "We shall
have to sit and shoot." Sabik wasn't quite a
wingless duck. She could revert to sub-light, though that was a desperation
maneuver. At superlight, the enemy must be in phase with her to inflict damage,
and therefore equally vulnerable. But the cruiser did, now, possess an extra
capability of eluding her opponent's fire. Sabik had no shield except her
antimissiles. To be sure, she was better supplied with those. It looked as if a
toe-to-toe match was coming. "Hyperfield contact
made," said the intercom. "All units fire at will." Flandry switched to
exterior view. The Merseian zigzagged among the stars. Sometimes she vanished,
always she reappeared. She was a strictly spacegoing vessel, bulged at the
waist like a double-ended pear. Starlight and shadow picked out her armament.
Dragoika hissed in a breath. Again fire erupted. A titan's fist smote. A
noise so enormous that it transcended noise bellowed through the hull.
Bulkheads split asunder. The deck crashed against Flandry. He whirled into
night. Moments later he
regained consciousness. He was falling, falling forever, and
blind … no, he thought through the ringing in his head, the lights
were out, the gravs were out, he floated free admidst the moan of escaping air.
Blood from his nose formed globules which, weightless, threatened to strangle
him. He sucked to draw them down his throat. "Dragoika!" he rasped.
"Dragoika!" Her helmet beam sprang
forth. She was a shadow behind it, but the voice came clear and taut:
"Domma-neek, are you hale? What happened? Here, here is my hand." "We took a direct
hit." He shook himself, limb by limb, felt pain boil in his body but
marveled that nothing appeared seriously injured. Well, space armor was
designed to take shocks. "Nothing in here is working, so I don't know what
the ship's condition is. Let's try to find out. Yes, hang onto me. Push against
things, not too hard. It's like swimming. Do you feel sick?" "No. I feel as in a
dream, nothing else." She got the basic technique of null-gee motion fast. They entered the
corridor. Undiffused, their lamplight made dull puddles amidst a crowding murk.
Ribs thrust out past twisted, buckled plates. Half of a spacesuited man drifted
in a blood-cloud which Flandry must wipe off his helmet. No radio spoke. The
silence was of a tomb. The nuclear warhead that
got through could not have been very large. But where it struck, ruin was
total. Elsewhere, though, forcefields, bulkheads, baffles, breakaway lines had
given what protection they could. Thus Flandry and Dragoika survived. Did
anyone else? He called and called, but got no answer. A hole filled with stars
yawned before him. He told her to stay put and flitted forth on impellers.
Saxo, merely the brightest of the diamond points around him, transitted the
specter arch of the Milky Way. It cast enough light for him to see. The
fragment of ship from which he had emerged spun slowly—luck, that, or Coriolis
force would have sickened him and perhaps her. An energy cannon turret looked
intact. Further off tumbled larger pieces, ugly against cold serene heaven. He tried his radio
again, now when he was outside screening metal. With her secondary engines
gone, the remnants of Sabik had reverted to normal state. "Ensign Flandry
from Section Four. Come in, anyone. Come in!" A voice trickled
through. Cosmic interference seethed behind it. "Commander Ranjit Singh in
Section Two. I am assuming command unless a superior officer turns out to be
alive. Report your condition." Flandry did. "Shall
we join you, sir?" he finished. "No. Check that
gun. Report whether it's in working order. If so, man it." "But sir, we're
disabled. The cruiser's gone on to fight elsewhere. Nobody'll bother with
us." "That remains to be
seen, Ensign. If the battle pattern should release a bogie, he may decide he'll
make sure of us. Go to your gun." "Aye, aye,
sir." Dead bodies floated in
the turret. They were not mutilated; but two or three thousand roentgens must
have sleeted through all shielding. Flandry and Dragoika hauled them out and
cast them adrift. As they dwindled among the stars, she sang to them the Song of
Mourning. I wouldn't mind such a send-off, he thought. The gun was useable.
Flandry rehearsed Dragoika in emergency manual control. They'd alternate at the
hydraulic aiming system and the handwheel which recharged the batteries that
drove it. She was as strong as he. Thereafter they waited.
"I never thought to die in a place like this," she said. "But my
end will be in battle, and with the finest of comrades. How we shall yarn, in
the Land of Trees Beyond!" "We might survive
yet," he said. Starlight flashed off the teeth in his bruised and
blood-smeared face. "Don't fool
yourself. Unworthy of you." "Unworthy my left
one! I plain don't intend to quit till I'm dead." "I see. Maybe that
is what has made you vaz-Terran great." The Merseian came. She was a destroyer.
Umbriel, locked in combat with the badly hurt enemy cruiser, had inflicted
grave harm on her, too. Murdoch's Land was shattered, Antarctica out of action
until repairs could be made, but they had accounted for two of her fellows. New
Brazil dueled yet with the third. This fourth one suffered from a damaged
hyperdrive alternator. Until her sweating engineers could repair it, which
would take an hour or so, her superlight speed was a crawl; any vessel in
better shape could wipe her from the universe. Her captain resolved he would go
back to where the remnants of Sabik orbited and spend the interim cleaning them
out. For the general order was that none but Merseians might enter this region
and live. She flashed into
reality. Her missiles were spent, but guns licked with fire-tongues and shells.
The main part of the battleship's dismembered hulk took their impact, glowed,
broke, and returned the attack. "Yow-w-w!"
Dragoika's yell was pure exultation. She spun the handwheel demoniacally fast.
Flandry pushed himself into the saddle. His cannon swung about. The bit of hull
counter-rotated. He adjusted, got the destroyer's after section in his
cross-hairs, and pulled trigger. Capacitors discharged.
Their energy content was limited; that was why the gun must be laid by hand, to
conserve every last erg for revenge. Flame spat across kilometers. Steel
sublimed. A wound opened. Air gushed forth, white with condensing water vapor. The destroyer applied
backward thrust. Flandry followed, holding his beam to the same spot, driving
inward and inward. From four other pieces of Sabik, death vomited. "Man," Flandry
chanted, "but you've got a Tigery by the tail!" Remorselessly, spin took
him out of sight. He waited, fuming. When he could again aim, the destroyer was
further away, and she had turned one battleship section into gas. But the rest
fought on. He joined his beam to theirs. She was retreating under gravities.
Why didn't she go hyper and get the hell out of here? Maybe she couldn't. He
himself had been shooting to disable her quantum-field generator. Maybe he'd
succeeded. "Kursoviki!"
Dragoika shrieked at the wheel. "Archers all! Janjevar va-Radovik for aye!" A gun swiveled toward
them. He could see it, tiny at its distance, thin and deadly. He shifted aim.
His fire melted the muzzle shut. The destroyer scuttled
away. And then, suddenly, there was New Brazil. Flandry darted from his seat,
caught Dragoika to him, held her faceplate against his breast and closed his
own eyes. When they looked again, the Merseian was white-hot meteorites. They
hugged each other in their armor. Umbriel, Antarctica, and
New Brazil: torn, battered, lame, filled with the horribly wounded, haunted by
their dead, but victorious, victorious—neared the planet. The scoutships had
long since finished their work and departed Empire-ward. Yet Ranjit Singh would
give his men a look at the prize they had won. On the cruiser's bridge,
Flandry and Dragoika stood with him. The planet filled the forward viewscreen.
It was hardly larger than Luna. Like Terra's moon, it was bereft of air, water,
life; such had bled away to space over billions of years. Mountains bared fangs
at the stars, above ashen plains. Barren, empty, blind as a skull, the rogue
rushed on to its destiny. "One planet,"
the acting captain breathed. "One wretched sunless planet." "It's enough,
sir," Flandry said. Exhaustion pulsed through him in huge soft waves. To
sleep … to sleep, perchance to dream … "On a collision
course with Saxo. It'll strike inside of five years. That much mass, simply
falling from infinity, carries the energy of three years' stellar radiation.
Which will have to be discharged somehow, in a matter of seconds. And Saxo is
an F5, shortlived, due to start expanding in less than a begayear. The
instabilities must already be building up. The impact—Saxo will go nova.
Explode." "And our
fleet—" "Yes, sir. What
else? The thing's wildly improbable. Interstellar distances are so big. But the
universe is bigger still. No matter how unlikely, anything which is possible
must happen sometime. This is one occasion when it does. Merseian explorers
chanced on the datum. Brechdan saw what it meant. He could develop the conflict
on Starkad, step by step, guiding it, nursing it, keeping it on
schedule … till our main strength was marshaled there, just before
the blowup came. We wouldn't be likely to see the invader. It's coming in 'way
off the ecliptic, and has a very low albedo, and toward the end would be lost
in Saxo's glare and traveling at more than 700 kilometers per second. Nor would
we be looking in that direction. Our attention would be all on Brechdan's
forces. They'd be prepared, after the captains opened their sealed orders.
They'd know exactly when to dash away on hyperdrive. Ours—well, the initial
radiation will move at the speed of light. It would kill the crews before they
knew they were dead. An hour or so later, the first wave of gases would vaporize
their ships. The Empire would be crippled and the Merseians could move in.
That's why there's war on Starkad." Ranjit Singh tugged his
beard. The pain seemed to strengthen him. "Can we do anything? Plant bombs
to blow this object apart, maybe?" "I don't know, sir.
Offhand, I doubt it. Too many fragments would stay on essentially the same
path, I believe. Of course, we can evacuate Starkad. There are other
planets." "Yes. We can do
that." "Will you tell me
now?" Dragoika asked. Flandry did. He had not
known she could weep. 18 Highport lay quiet. Men
filled the ugly barracks, drifted along the dusty streets, waited for orders
and longed for home. Clamor of construction work, grumble of traffic, whine of
aircraft bound to battle, were ended. So likewise, after the first tumultuous
celebrations, was most merrymaking. The war's conclusion had left people too
dazed. First, the curt announcement that Admiral Enriques and Fodaich Runei
were agreed on a cease-fire while they communicated with their respective
governments. Then, day after day of not knowing. Then the arrival of ships; the
proclamation that, Starkad being doomed, Empire and Roidhunate joined in hoping
for a termination of the interracial conflict; the quick departure of the
Merseians, save for a few observers; the imminent departure of most Imperial
Navy personnel; the advent of civilian experts to make preliminary studies for
a massive Terran project of another sort. And always the rumors, scuttlebutt,
so-and-so knew somebody who knew for a fact that—How could you carry on as if
this were ordinary? Nothing would ever again be quite ordinary. At night, you
saw the stars and shivered. Dominic Flandry walked
in silence. His boots made a soft, rhythmic thud. The air was cool around him.
Saxo spilled radiance from an enormous blue sky. The peaks beyond Mount Narpa
thrust snowfields toward the ghost of a moon. Never had the planet looked so
fair. The door was ajar to the
xenological office. He entered. Desks stood vacant. John Ridenour's staff was
in the field. Their chief stayed behind, replacing sleep with stimulants as he
tried to coordinate their efforts around an entire world. He was in
conversation with a visitor. Flandry's heart climbed into his throat. Lord
Hauksberg! Everyone knew Dronning
Margrete had arrived yesterday, in order that his Majesty's delegate might make
a final inspection tour. Flandry had planned on keeping far out of sight. He
snapped to a salute. "Well, well."
The viscount did not rise from his chair. Only the blond sharp face turned. The
elegantly clad body stayed relaxed, the voice was amused. "What have we
here?" "Ensign Flandry,
sir. I—I beg pardon. Didn't mean to interrupt. I'll go." "No. Sit. Been
meanin' to get hold of you. I do remember your name, strange as that may
seem." Hauksberg nodded at Ridenour. "Go ahead. Just what is this
difficulty you mention?" The xenologist scarcely
noticed the newcomer, miserable on a chair. Weariness harshened his tone.
"Perhaps I can best illustrate with a typical scene, my lord, taken last
week. Here's the Sisterhood HQ in Ujanka." A screen showed a room
whose murals related ancient glories. A Terran and several Tigery females in
the plumes and striped cloaks of authority sat in front of a vidiphone. Flandry
recognized some. He cursed the accident which brought him here at this minute.
His farewells in the city had hurt so much. Ostrova, the mistress,
glared at the piscine face projected before her. "Never," she
snapped. "Our rights and needs remain with us. Better death than surrender
what our mothers died to gain." The view shifted, went
underwater, where also a human team observed and recorded. Again Flandry saw
the Temple of Sky, from within. Light pervaded the water, turned it into one
emerald where the lords of the Seafolk floated free. They had summoned
Isinglass and Evenfall for expert knowledge. Those I never did get a chance to
say good-bye to, Flandry thought, and now I never will. Through the colonnade
he looked down on elfin Shellgleam. "You would steal
everything, then, through the whole cycle, as always you have done," said
he who spoke for them. "It shall not be. We must have those resources,
when great toil is coming upon us. Do not forget, we keep our guns." The record included the
back-and-forth interpretation of Ridenour's men at either end, so Flandry
followed the bitter argument in Kursovikian. Hauksberg could not, and grew
restless. After a few minutes, he said, "Most int'restin', but s'pose you
tell me what's goin' on." "A summary was
prepared by our station in the Chain," Ridenour said. He nicked a switch.
In the screen appeared a lagoon where sunlight glittered on wavelets and trees
rustled behind a wide white beach: heartbreakingly beautiful. It was seen from
the cabin of a waterboat, where a man with dark-rimmed eyes sat. He gave date
and topic, and stated: "Both factions
continue to assert exclusive rights to the archipelago fishing grounds. Largely
by shading their translations, our teams have managed to prevent irrevocable
loss of temper, but no compromise is yet in sight. We shall continue to press
for an equitable arrangement. Success is anticipated, though not for a
considerable time." Ridenour switched off.
"You see, my lord?" he said. "We can't simply load these people
aboard spaceships. We have to determine which of several possible planets are
most suitable for them; and we have to prepare them, both in organization and
education. Under ideal conditions, the psychic and cultural shock will still be
terrible. Groundlaying will take years. Meanwhile, both races have to maintain
themselves." "Squabblin' over
somethin' that'll be a whiff of gas in half a decade? Are such idiots worth
savin'?" "They're not
idiots, my lord. But our news, that their world is under a death sentence, has
been shattering. Most of them will need a long while to adapt, to heal the
wound, before they can think about it rationally. Many never will. And my lord,
no matter how logical one believes he is, no matter how sophisticated he claims
to be, he stays an animal. His forebrain is nothing but the handmaiden of
instinct. Let's not look down on these Starkadians. If we and the Merseians, we
big flashy space-conquering races, had any better sense, there'd be no war
between us." "There isn't,"
Hauksberg said. "That remains to be
seen, my lord." Hauksberg flushed.
"Thank you for your show," he said coldly. "I'll mention it in
my report." Ridenour pleaded.
"If your Lordship would stress the need for more trained personnel
here—You've seen a little bit of what needs doing in this little bit of the
planet. Ahead of us is the whole sphere, millions of individuals, thousands of
societies. Many aren't even known to us, not so much as names, only blank spots
on the map. But those blank spots are filled with living, thinking, feeling
beings. We have to reach them, save them. We won't get them all, we can't, but
each that we do rescue is one more justification for mankind's existence. Which
God knows, my lord, needs every justification it can find." "Eloquent,"
Hauksberg said. "His Majesty's government'll have to decide how big a
bureaucratic empire it wants to create for the benefit of some primitives. Out
o' my department." He got up. Ridenour did too. "Good day." "Good day, my
lord," the xenologist said. "Thank you for calling. Oh. Ensign
Flandry. What'd you want?" "I came to say
good-bye, sir." Flandry stood at attention. "My transport leaves in a
few hours." "Well, good-bye,
then. Good luck." Ridenour went so far as to come shake hands. But even
before Hauksberg, with Flandry behind, was out the door, Ridenour was back at
his desk. "Let's take a
stroll beyond town," Hauksberg said. "Want to stretch my legs. No,
beside me. We've things to discuss boy." "Yes, sir." Nothing further was said
until they halted in a meadow of long silvery quasigrass. A breeze slid from
the glaciers where mountains dreamed. A pair of wings cruised overhead. Were
every last sentient Starkadian rescued, Flandry thought, they would be no more
than the tiniest fraction of the life which joyed on this world. Hauksberg's cloak
flapped. He drew it about him. "Well," he said, looking steadily at
the other. "We meet again, eh?" Flandry made himself
give stare for stare. "Yes sir I trust the remainder of my lord's stay on
Merseia was pleasant." Hauksberg uttered a
laugh. "You are shameless! Will go far indeed, if no one shoots you first.
Yes, I may say Councillor Brechdan and I had some rather int'restin' talks
after the word came from here." "I … I
understand you agreed to, uh, say the space battle was only due to both
commanders mistaking their orders." "Right. Merseia was
astonished as us to learn about the rogue after our forces found it by
accident." Hauksberg's geniality vanished. He seized Flandry's arm with
unexpected force and said sternly: "Any information to the contrary is a
secret of state. Revealin' it to anyone, ever so much as hintin' at it, will be
high treason. Is that clear?" "Yes, my lord. I've
been briefed." "And's to your
benefit, too," Hauksberg said in a milder voice. "Keepin' the secret
necessarily involves quashin' the charges against you. The very fact that they
were ever brought, that anything very special happened after we reached
Merseia, goes in the ultrasecret file also. You're safe, my boy." Flandry put his hands
behind his back, to hide how they doubled into fists. He'd have given ten
years, off this end of his life, to smash that smiling face. Instead he must
say, "Is my lord so kind as to add his personal pardon?" "Oh, my, yes!"
Hauksberg beamed and clapped his shoulder. "You did absolutely right. For
absolutely the wrong reasons, to be sure, but by pure luck you accomplished my
purpose for me, peace with Merseia. Why should I carry a grudge?" He winked.
"Regardin" a certain lady, nothin' between friends, eh?
Forgotten." Flandry could not play
along. "But we have no peace!" he exploded. "Hey? Now, now,
realize you've been under strain and so forth, but—" "My lord, they were
planning to destroy us. How can we let them go without even a scolding?" "Ease down. I'm
sure they'd no such intention. It was a weapon to use against us if we forced
'em to. Nothin' else. If we'd shown a genuine desire to cooperate, they'd've
warned us in ample time." "How can you say
that?" Flandry choked. "Haven't you read any history? Haven't you
listened to Merseian speeches, looked at Merseian books, seen our dead and
wounded come back from meeting Merseians in space? They want us out of the
universe!" Hauksberg's nostrils
dilated. "That will do, Ensign. Don't get above yourself. And spare me the
spewed-back propaganda. The full story of this incident is bein' suppressed
precisely because it'd be subject to your kind of misinterpretation and so
embarrass future relations between the governments. Brechdan's already shown
his desire for peace, by withdrawin' his forces in toto from Starkad." "Throwing the whole
expensive job of rescue onto us. Sure." "I told you to
control yourself, Ensign. You're not quite old enough to set Imperial
policy." Flandry swallowed a foul
taste. "Apologies, my lord." Hauksberg regarded him
for a minute. Abruptly the viscount smiled. "No. Now I was gloatin'.
Apologies to you. Really, I'm not a bad sort. And you mean well too. One day
you'll be wiser. Let's shake on that." Flandry saw no choice. Hauksberg winked again.
"B'lieve I'll continue my stroll alone. If you'd like to say good-bye to
Donna d'Io, she's in the guest suite." Flandry departed with
long strides. By the time he had
reached HQ and gone through the rigamarole of gaining admittance, fury had
faded. In its place lay emptiness. He walked into the living room and stopped.
Why go further? Why do anything? Persis ran to him. She
wore a golden gown and diamonds in her hair. "Oh, Nicky, Nicky!" She
laid her head on his breast and sobbed. He consoled her in a
mechanical fashion. They hadn't had many times together since he came back from
the rogue. There had been too much work for him, in Ujanka on Ridenour's
behalf. And that had occupied him so greatly that he almost resented the
occasions when he must return to Highport. She was brave and intelligent and
fun, and twice she had stepped between him and catastrophe, but she did not
face the end of her world. Nor was her own world the same as his: could never
be. They sat down on a
divan. He had an arm around her waist, a cigaret in his free hand. She looked
at the floor. "Will I see you on Terra?" she asked dully. "I don't
know," he said. "Not for some time anyway, I'm afraid. My orders have
come through officially, I'm posted to the Intelligence academy for training,
and Commander Abrams warns me they work the candidates hard." "You couldn't
transfer out again? I'm sure I could arrange an assignment—" "A nice, cushy
office job with regular hours? No, thanks, I'm not about to become anyone's
kept man." She stiffened as if he
had struck her. "I'm sorry," he floundered. "Didn't mean that.
It's only, well, here's a job I am fitted for, that serves a purpose. If I don't
take it, what meaning has life got?" "I could answer
that," she said low, "but I guess you wouldn't understand." He wondered what the
devil to say. Her lips brushed his
cheek. "Go ahead, then," she said. "Fly." "Uh … you're
not in trouble, Persis?" "No, no. Mark's a
most civilized man. We might even stay together a while longer, on Terra. Not
that that makes any big difference. No matter how censored, some account of my
adventures is bound to circulate. I'll be quite a novelty, quite in demand.
Don't worry about me. Dancers know how to land on their feet." A slight gladness
stirred in him, largely because he was relieved of any obligation to fret about
her. He kissed her farewell with a good imitation of warmth. It was so good, in fact,
that his loneliness returned redoubled once he was in the street again. He fled
to Max Abrams. The commander was in his
office, straightening out details before leaving on the same transport that
would bear Flandry home. From Terra, though, he would go on furlough to Dayan.
His stocky frame leaned back as Flandry burst through the doorway. "Well,
hello, hero," he said. "What ails you?" The ensign flung himself
into a chair. "Why do we keep trying?" he cried. "What's the
use?" "Hey-hey. You need
a drink." Abrarns took a bottle from a drawer and poured into two glasses.
"Wouldn't mind one myself. Hardly set foot on Starkad before they tell me
I'm shipping out again." He lifted his tumbler. "Shalom." Flandry's hand shook. He
drained his whisky at a gulp. It burned on the way down. Abrams made a production
of lighting a cigar. "All right, son," he said. "Talk." "I've seen
Hauksberg," jerked from Flandry. "Nu? Is he that
hideous?" "He … he … the
bastard gets home free. Not a stain on his bloody damned escutcheon. He'll
probably pull a medal. And still he quacks about peace!" "Whoa. He's no
villain. He merely suffers from a strong will to believe. Of course, his
political career is bound up with the position he's taken. He can't afford to
admit he was wrong. Not even to himself, I imagine. Wouldn't be fair to destroy
him, supposing we could. Nor expedient. Our side needs him." "Sir?" "Think. Never mind
what the public hears. Consider what they'll hear on the Board. How they'll
regard him. How neatly he can be pressured if he should get a seat on it, which
I hope he does. No blackmail, nothing so crude, especially when the truth can't
be told. But an eyebrow lifted at a strategic moment. A recollection, each time
he opens his mouth, of what he nearly got us into last time around. Sure, he'll
be popular with the masses. He'll have influence. So, fine. Better him than
somebody else, with the same views, that hasn't yet bungled. If you had any charity
in you, young man—which no one does at your age—you'd feel sorry for Lord
Hauksberg." "But … I … well—" Abrams frowned into a
cloud of smoke. "Also," he said, "in the longer view, we need
the pacifists as a counterweight to the armchair missileers. We can't make
peace, but we can't make real war either. All we can do is hold the line. And
man is not an especially patient animal by nature." "So the entire
thing is for zero?" Flandry nigh screamed. "Only to keep what little
we have?" The grizzled head bent.
"If the Lord God grants us that much," Abrams said, "He is more
merciful than He is just." "Starkad,
though—Death, pain, ruin, and at last, the rotten status quo! What were we
doing here?" Abrams caught Flandry's
gaze and would not let go. "I'll tell you," he said. "We had to
come. The fact that we did, however futile it looked, however distant and alien
and no-business-of-ours these poor people seemed, gives me a little hope for my
grandchildren. We were resisting the enemy, refusing to let any aggression
whatsoever go unpunished, taking the chance he presented us to wear him down.
And we were proving once more to him, to ourselves, to the universe, that we
will not give up to him even the least of these. Oh, yes, we belonged
here." Flandry swallowed and
had no words. "In this particular
case," Abrams went on, "because we came, we can save two whole
thinking races and everything they might mean to the future. We'd no way of
knowing that beforehand; but there we were when the time arrived. Suppose we
hadn't been? Suppose we'd said it didn't matter what the enemy did in these
marches. Would he have rescued the natives? I doubt it. Not unless there
happened to be a political profit in it. He's that kind of people." Abrams puffed harder.
"You know," he said, "ever since Akhnaton ruled in "No, son, we're
mortal—which is to say, we're ignorant, stupid, and sinful—but those are only
handicaps. Our pride is that nevertheless, now and then, we do our best. A few
times we succeed. What more dare we ask for?" Flandry remained silent. Abrams chuckled and
poured two fresh drinks. "End of lecture," he said. "Let's
examine what's waiting for you. I wouldn't ordinarily say this to a fellow at
your arrogant age, but since you need cheering up … well, I will say,
once you hit your stride, Lord help the opposition!" He talked for an hour
longer. And Flandry left the office whistling.
About the Author About the time Poul
Anderson graduated with honors in physics from the He is a member of both
the American Association for the Advancement of Science and The Mystery Writers
of America. His other interests include history and politics, travel,
outdoorsmanship, and, especially, a daughter named—appropriately enough—Astrid. |
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