"Drake,.David.-.Through.The.Breech" - читать интересную книгу автора (Drake David)

    




    7
    
                      BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF HAMMER'S SLAMMERS
                              AND IGNITING THE REACHES
                                       GH
             BRfAcff
    
         DAVID 0 BAK[

    




                     ISBN 0-441-00171-8
                               > $19.95
                         (> *25.95 CAN)
              THROUGH
                    T R E
               RRfACH
         David Drake's acclaimed novel Hammer's
         Slarnmers is considered one of the classics
         of military science fiction. In his 1994
         novel, Igniting the Reaches, he took us on
         an epic journey to. the farthest reaches of
         space where pirates ruled a new age of
        *expansion and opportunity. Now, Drake
         returns to that world, a universe of untold
         possibility, wealth, and danger..
    
         Their mission is called the Venus Asteroid
         Expedition, but it has little to do with legiti-
         mate trade. General Commander Piet
         Ricimer and Stephen Gregg are leading an
         armada of four ships from the relatively
         civilized clouds of Venus out beyond the
         orbit of Pluto, deep into the Reaches where
         trade and piracy are one and the some-
         and expedited with a gun.
    
         Their destination is the Mirror, an impene-
         trable membrane covering another universe
         -0 universe where all the riches of the
         Federation are held in ports, ripe for plun-
         dering. There is only one place where the
         expedition can cross the Mirror, a weak-
         ened point known as LandolpHs Breach. The
         last one to pass through was Landolph
         himself ... over eighty years ago. And most
         of his men never returned...
  MENIMMut the war with the Federation. is raging,
          and the glory of Venus is at hand. Ricimer
          and Gregg are going forward into the
          hands of fate, going to claim the wealth and
          glory that is theirs to take ... going hell-bent
          and full speed ahead through the Breach...

    




           TT It E
    HROUGH
    BRfAulff

    




    Aw
                         Ace Books by David Drake
    
                                HAMMER'S SLAMMERS
                                      DAGGER
                                  SURFACE ACTION
                                   NORTHWORLD,
                             NORTHWORLD 2: VENGEANCE
                              NORTHWORLD 3: JUSTICE
                               IGNITING THE REACHES
                                THROUGH THE BREACH
    
                   Ace Books by David Drake and Janet Morris
    
                                    KILL RATIO
                                      TARGET
    
                 Ace Books Edited by David Drake and Bill Fawcett
    
                            The Fleet Series
    
                                    THE FLEET
                                  COUNTERATTACK
                                   BREAKTHROUGH
                                   SWORN ALLIES
                                    TOTAL WAR
                                      CRISIS
    
                          The BattleStation Series
    
                                  BATTLESTATION
                                     VANGUARD
                                     
    
    




                              T If E
    
    tt
    
                    DAVID DRAK[
    
                                N E V! f, S Ir L 77.
    
                                    MAY 1995
    
                             ACE BOOKS, NEW YORK
             THROUGH
                     BRfArlff

    




                     -Nunn--
    
    THROUGH THE BREACH
    
    An Ace Book
    Published by The Berkley Publishing Group
    200 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    
    Copyright (D 1995 by David Drake.
    
    All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced
    in any form without permission.
    First Edition: April 1995
    Library of Congress Catalogi ng-i n-Publ i cation Data
    Drake, David.
     Through the breach / David Drake.-Ist ed.
      P. cm.
     ISBN 0-441-00171-8 : $19.95
     1. Title.
    PS3554.RI96T47 1995             94-25744
    813'.54---dc2O                      CIP
    
    Printed in the United States of America
    
    10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 21

    




                           To Allyn Vogel
    
                     Most of my friends are smart, competent,
                        and unfailingly helpful to me when
                      I need it. Allyn is all those things.
                 She is also a gentle and genuinely good person,
                    which puts her in a much smaller category.
    
    ed
    
    144
     IP
 
    
    





    




           BETAPORT, VENUS
    
    7 Days Before Sailing
    
    "Mister Jeremy Moore," announced the alien slave as he
    ushered me into the private chamber of the Blue Rose
    Tavern. The public bar served as a waiting room and
    hiring hall for the Venus Asteroid Expedition, while Gen-
    eral Commander Piet Ricimer used the back room as an
    office.
     I'd heard that the aide now with Ricimer, Stephen
    Gregg, was a conscienceless killer. My first glimpse of
    the man was both a relief and a disappointment. Gregg
    was big, true; but he looked empty, no more dangerous
    than a suit of ceramic armor waiting for someone to put
    it on. Blond and pale, Gregg could have been handsome
    if his features were more animated.
     Whereas General Commander Ricimer wasn't ...
    pretty, say, the way women enough have found me, but
    the fire in the man's soul gleamed through every atom of
    his physical person. Ricimer's glance and quick smile
    were genuinely friendly, while Gregg's more lingering
    appraisal was ...
     Maybe Stephen Gregg wasn't as empty as I'd first
    thought.
     "Thank you, Guillermo," said Ricimer. "Has Captain
    Macquerie arrived?"
     Not yet," the slave replied. "I'll alert you when he
    does." Guillermo's diction was excellent, though his
    tongueless mouth clipped the sibilant. He closed the
    door behind him, shutting out the bustle of the pub-
    lic bar.

    




    2             David Drake
    
     Guillermo was a chitinous biped with a triangular face
    and a pink sash-of-office worn bandolier fashion over one
    shoulder. I'd never been so close to a Molt slave before.
    There weren't many in the Solar System and fewer still
    on Venus. Their planet of origin was unknown, but their
    present province was the entire region of space mankind
    had colonized before the Collapse.
     Molts remained and prospered on worlds from which
    men had vanished. Now, with man's return to the stars, the
    aliens' racial memory made them additionally valuable:
    Molts could operate the pre-Collapse machinery which
    survived on some outworlds.
     "Well, Mister Moore," Ricimer said. "What are your
    qualifications for the Asteroid Expedition?"
     "Well, I've not myself been involved in off-planet trade,
    sir," I said, trying to look earnest and superior, "but I'm a
    gentleman, you see, and thus an asset to any proposal. My
    father-may he continue well-is Moore of Rhadicund.
    Ah-"
     The two spacemen watched me: Ricimer with amuse-
    ment, Gregg with no amusement at all. I didn't understand
    their coolness. I'd thought this was the way to build
    rapport, since Gregg was a gentleman also, member of a
    factorial family, and Ricimer at least claimed the status.
     "Ah . . ." I repeated. Carefully, because the subject could
    easily become a can of worms, I went on, "I've been a
    member of the household of Councilor Duneen--chief
    advisor to the Governor of the Free State of Venus."
     "We know who Councilor Duneen is, Mister Moore,"
    Ricimer said dryly. "We'd probably know of him even if
    he weren't a major backer of the expedition."
     The walls of the room were covered to shoulder height
    in tilework. The color blurred upward from near black at
    floor level to smoky gray shot with wisps of silver. The
    ceiling and upper walls were coated with beige sealant that
    might well date from the tavern's construction.
     The table behind which Ricimer and Gregg sat-they
    hadn't offered me a chair-was probably part of the tayern
    furnishings. The communications console in a back corner
    was brand-new. The cera m-ic chassis marked the console

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH       3
    
              as of Venerian manufacture, since an off-planet unit would
              have been made. of metal or organic resin instead, but its
              electronics were built from chips stockpiled on distant
              worlds where automated factories continued to produce
              even after the human colonies perished.
               Very probably, Piet Ricimer himself had brought those
              chips to Venus on an earlier voyage. Earth, with a popula-
              tion of twenty millions after the Collapse, had returned to
              space earlier than tiny Venus. Now that all planets outside
              the Solar System were claimed by the largest pair of ram-
              shackle Terran states, the North American Federation and
              the Southern Cross, other men traded beyond Pluto only
              with one hand on their guns.
               Piet Ricimer and his cohorts had kept both hands on
              their guns, and they traded very well indeed. Whatever
              the cover story-Venus and the Federation weren't techni-
              cally at war-the present expedition wasn't headed for the
              Asteroid Belt to bring back metals that Venus had learned
              to do without during the Collapse.
               I changed tack. I'd prepared for this interview by trad-
              ing my floridly expensive best suit for clothing of more
              sober cut and material, though I'd have stayed with the
              former's purple silk plush and gold lace if the garments
              had fit my spare frame just a little better. The suit had
              been a gift from a friend whose husband was much more
              portly, and there's a limit to what alterations can accom-
              plish.
               "I believe it's the duty of every man on Venus," I said
              loudly, "to expand our planet's trade beyond the orbit
              of Pluto. We owe this to Venus and to God. The duty
              is particularly upon those like the three of us who are
    t         members of factorial families."
               I struck the defiant pose of a man ashamed of the
              strength of his principles. I'd polished the expression over
              years of explaining-to women-why honor forbade me
              to accept money from my father, the factor. In truth, the
    Y         little factory of Rhadicund in Beta Regio had been aban-
    n         doned three generations before, and the family certainly
    ,r
              hadn't prospered in the governor's court the way my
    ,e        grandfather had hoped.

    




    4             David Drake
    
     Piet Ricimer's face stilled. It took me a moment to
    realize how serious a mistake I'd made in falsely claiming
    an opinion which Ricimer felt as strongly as he hoped for
    salvation.
     Stephen Gregg stretched his arm out on the table before
    Ricimer, interposing himself between his friend and a
    problem that the friend needn't deal with. Gregg wasn't
    angry. Perhaps Gregg no longer had the capacity for anger
    or any other human emotion.
     "About the manner of your leaving Councilor Duneen's
    service, Moore," Gregg said. He spoke quietly, his voice
    cat-playful. "A problem with the accounts, was there?"
     I met the bigger man's eyes. What I saw there shocked
    me out of all my poses, my calculations. "My worst
    enemies have never denied that their purse would be safe
    in my keeping," I said flatly. "There was a misunderstand-
    ing about a woman of the household. As a gentleman---2'
     My normal attitudes were reasserting themselves. I
    couldn't help it.
         can say no more."
     The Molt's three-fingered hand tapped on the door.
    "Captain Macquerie has arrived, sir."
     "You have no business here, Mister Jeremy Moore,"
    Gregg said. He rose. to his feet. Gregg moved with a
    slight stiffness which suggested that more than his soul
    had been scarred beyond Pluto; but surely his soul as
    well. "There'll be no women where we're going. While
    there may be opportunities for wealth, it won't be what
    one would call easy money."
     "Good luck in your further occupations, Mister Moore,"
    Ricimer said. "Guillermo, please show in Captain Mac-
    querie."
     Ricimer and his aide were no more than my own age,
    27 Earth years. In this moment they seemed to be from a
    different generation.
     "Good day, gentlemen," I said. I bowed and stepped
    quickly from the room as a squat fellow wearing coveralls
    and a striped neckerchief entered. Macquerie moved N~ith
    the gimballed grace of a spacer who expects the deck to
    shift beneath him at any moment.

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH       5
    
                I knew that arguing with Ricimer and Gregg wouldn't
               have gained me anything. I knew also that Mister Stephen
               Gregg would literally just as soon kill me as look at me.
               There were more than thirty men in the tavern's public
    [a         room-and one woman, a spacer's wife engaged in a
    It         low-voiced but obviously acrimonious attempt to drag her
               husband away. The noise of the crowd blurred whenever
               the outer door opened onto Dock Street and its heavy
    Is         traffic.
    ~e          I pushed my way to one comer of the bar, my prog-
               ress aided somewhat by the fact I was a gentleman-
    , ~d       but only somewhat. Betaport was more egalitarian than
    rst        Ishtar City, the capital; and spacers are a rough lot any-
    ~e         where.
                The tapster drew beer and took payment with an effi-
               ciency that seemed more fluid than mechanical. His eyes
               were sleepy, but the fashion in which he chalked a tab
               or held out his free hand in a silent demand for scrip
               before he offered the glass showed he was fully aware
               of his surroundings.
                I opened my purse and took out the 10-Mapleleaf coin.
    e,5)       That left me only twenty Venerian consols to live on for
    i a        the next week, but I'd find a way. Eloise, I supposed. I
    oul        hadn't planned to see her again after the problem with her
               maid, but she'd come around.
    as
    lile        "Barman," I said crisply. "I want the unrestricted use
               of your phone, immediately and for the whole of the
    ,hat       afternoon."
    re,"        I rang the coin on the rippling blue translucence of the
    Iac-       bar's ceramic surface.
                The barman's expression sharpened into focus. He took
    age,       the edges of the coin between the thumb and index fingers
    rn a       of his right hand, turning it to view both sides. "Where'd
               you get Fed money?" he demanded.
    )ped        "Gambling with an in-system trader on the New Troy
    ralls      run," I said truthfully. "Now, if you don't want the  IF.
    with       coin. .
    .k to       That was a bluff-I needed this particular phone for
               what I intended to do.

    




    6             David Drake
    
     The tapster shrugged. He had neither cause nor inten-
    tion to refuse, merely a general distaste for strangers; and
    perhaps for gentlemen as well. He flipped up the gate in
    the bar so that I could slip through to the one-piece phone
    against the wall.
     "It's local net only," the tapster warned. "I'm not con-
    nected to the planetary grid."
     "Local's what I want," I said.
     Very local indeed. The tool kit on my belt looked like a
    merchant's papersafe. I took from it a device of my own
    design and construction.
     The poker game three weeks before had been with
    a merchant/captain and three of his officers, in a sail-
    ors' tavern in Ishtar City. The four spacers were using
    a marked deck. If I'd complained or even tried to leave
    the game, they would have beaten me within an inch of
    my life.
     The would-be sharpers had thought I was wealthy and
    a fool; and were wrong on both counts, They let me win
    for the first two hours. The money I'd lived on since the
    game came from that pump priming. Much of it was in
    Federation coin.
     The captain and his henchmen ran the betting up and
    cold-decked me, their pigeon. I weepingly threw down a
    huge roll of Venerian scrip and staggered out of the tavern.
    I'd left Ishtar City for Betaport before the spacers realized
    that I'd paid them in counterfeit-and except for the top
    bill, very poor counterfeit.
     I attached to the phone module's speaker a contact
    transducer which fed a separate keypad and an earpiece.
    The tapster looked at me and said, "Hey! What d'ye think
    you're doing?"
     "What I paid you for the right to do," I said. I pivoted
    deliberately so that my body blocked the tapster's view of
    what I was typing on the keypad-not that it would have
    meant anything to the fellow.
     On my third attempt at the combination, the plug in
    my ear said in Piet Ricimer's voice, " . . . not just as a
    Venerian patriot, Captain Macquerie. All mankind needs
    you.

    




       RL
    
                               THROUGH THE BREACH 7
    The communications console in the private room was
    patched into the tavem's existing phone line. The com
    mands I sent through the line converted Ricimer's own
    electronics into a listening device. I could have accessed
    the console from anywhere in Betaport, but not as quickly
    as I needed to hear the interview with Macquerie.
    "Look, Captain Ricimer," said an unfamiliar voice that
    must by elimination be Macquerie, "I'm flattered that
    you'd call for me the way you have, but I gave up voy
    aging to the Reaches when I married the daughter of my
    supplier on Cls Sertoes. Long runs are no life for a married
    man. From here on out, I'm shuttling my Bahia between
    Betaport and Buenos Aires."
    "We mean no harm to the Southern Cross," said Stephen
     Gregg. "Your wife's family won't be affected."
    With Macquerie, there was obviously no pretense that
    -the expedition had anything to do with asteroids. Cls Sertoes
    was little more than a name to me. I vaguely thought that it
    was one of the most distant Southern colonies, uninterest
    ing and without exports of any particular value.
    n"Look," said Macquerie, "you gentlemen've been to the
    Reaches yourself. You don't need me to pilot you-except
    dto Os Sertoes, and who'd want to go there? It's stuffed
    fight in the neck of the Breach, so the transit gradients
    won't let you go anywhere but back."
    "Captain," said Ricimer, "I wouldn't ask you if I didn't
    pbelieve I needed you. Venus must take her place in the
    greater universe. If most of the wealth of the outworlds
    ctcontinues to funnel into the Federation, President Pleyal
    e.will use it to impose his will on all men. VvFhether Pleyal
    succeeds or fails, the attempt will lead to a second Col
    lapse-one from which there'll be no returning. The Lord
    dcan't want that, nor can any man who fears Him."
    ofA chair scraped. "I'm sorry, gentlemen," Macquerie
    vesaid. His voice was subdued, but firm. Ricimer's enthu
    siasm had touched but not won the man. "If you really
    inneed a pilot for the Reaches, well-you can pick one up
    a on Punta Verde or Decades. But not me."
    dsThe door opened at the corner of my eye. The Molt
    standing there stepped aside as noise from the public

    




    8             David Drake
    
    bar boomed through the pickup on my earpiece. Captain
    Macquerie strode past, his face forming into a scowl of
    concern as he left the Blue Rose.
     "No one just yet, Guillermo," called Piet Ricimer, his
    words slightly out of synchrony as they reached my ears
    through different media.
     The door closed.
     "I could bring him along, you know," Gregg said calmly
    in the relative silence.
     "No," said Ricimer. "We won't use force against our
    own citizens, Stephen."
     "Then you'll have to feel your way into the Breach
    without help," Gregg said. "You know we won't find
    a pilot for Os Sertoes at any of the probable stopovers.
    There's not that much trade to the place."
     "Captain Macquerie may change his mind, Stephen,"
    Ricimer replied. "There's still a week before we lift."
     :'He won't," snapped Gregg. "He feels guilty, sure; but
    he s not going to give up all he has on a mad risk. And
    if he doesn't-what? The Lord will provide?"
     "Yes, Stephen," said Piet Ricimer. "I rather think He
    will. Though perhaps not for us as individuals, I'll admit."
     In a brighter, apparently careless voice, Ricimer went
    on, "Now, Guillermo has the three bidders for dried rations
    waiting outside. Shall we-"
     I quickly disconnected my listening device and slipped
    from behind the bar, keeping low. If Ricimer-or worse,
    Gregg-saw me through the open door, they might won-
    der why I'd stayed in the tavern after they dismissed me.
     "Hey!" called the barman to my back. "What is it you
    think you're doing, anyway?"
     I only wished I knew the answer myself.

    




           BETAPORT, VENUS
    
    6 Days Before Sailing
    
    The brimstone smell of Venus's atmosphere clung to the
    starships' ceramic hulls.
     Betaport's storage dock held over a hundred vessels,
    ranging in size from featherboats of under 20 tonnes to
    a bulk freighter of nearly 150. The latter vessel was as
    large as Betaport's domed transfer docks on the surface
    could accommodate for landings and launches.
     Many of the ships were laid up, awaiting parts or con-
    signment to the breakers' yard, but four vessels at one
    end of the cavernous dock bustled with the imminence of
    departure. The cylindrical hulls of two were already on
    roller-equipped cradles so that tractors could drag them
    to the transfer docks.
     I eyed the vessels morosely, knowing there was nothing
    in the sight to help me make up my mind. I'd familiarized
    myself with the vessels' statistics, but I wasn't a spacer
    whose technical expertise could judge the risks of an
    expedition by viewing the ships detailed for it.
     I supposed as much as anything I was forcing myself
    to think about what I intended to do. I rubbed my palms
    together with the fingers splayed and out of contact.
     A lowboy rumbled slowly past. It was carrying cannon
    to the expedition's flagship, the 100-tonne Porcelain. The
    hull of Ricimer's vessel gleamed white, unstained by the
    sulphur compounds which would bake on at first exposure
    to the Venerian atmosphere. She was brand-new, purpose-
    built for distant exploration. Her frames and hull plating
    were of unusual thickness for her burden.
    
                     9
    W,

    




    10            David Drake
    
     The four 15-cm plasma cannon on the lowboy were
    heavy guns for a 100-tonne vessel, and the Long Tom
    which pivoted to fire through any of five ports in the
    bow was a still-larger 17-cm weapon. The Porcelain's
    hull could take the shock of the cannons' powerful ther-
    monuclear explosions, but the guns' bulk filled much of
    the ship's internal volume. The most casual observer could
    see that the Porcelain wasn't fitting out for a normal trad-
    ing voyage.
     I ambled along the quay. Pillars of living rock supported
    the ceiling of the storage dock, but the huge volume wasn't
    subdivided by bulkheads. The sounds of men, machinery,
    and the working of the planetary mantle merged as a low-
    frequency hum that buffered me from my surroundings.
     The Absalom 231 was a cargo hulk: a ceramic box with
    a carrying capacity as great as that of the flagship. She
    was already in a transport cradle. Food and drink for
    the expedition filled the vessel's single cavernous hold.
    Lightly and cheaply built, the Absalom 231 could be
    stripped and abandoned when the supplies aboard her
    were exhausted.
     The expedition's personnel complement was set at a
    hundred and eighty men. I wondered how many of them,
    like the hulk, would be used up on the voyage.
     A bowser circled on the quay, heading back to the water
    point. Its huge tank had filled the Porcelain with reaction
    mass. I moved closer to the vessels to avoid the big ground
    vehicle. I walked on.
     The Kinsolving was a sharp-looking vessel of 80 tonnes.
    A combination of sailors and ground crew were loading
    sections of three knocked-down featherboats into her cen-
    tral bay. Though equipped with star drive, a 15-tonne
    featherboat's cramped quarters made it a hellish prison on
    a long voyage. The little vessels were ideal for short-range
    exploration from a central base, and they were far handier
    in an atmosphere than ships of greater size.
     What would it be like to stand on a world other than
    Venus? The open volume of the Betaport storage dock
    made me uncomfortable. What would it be like to walk
    under an open sky?

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH
    
     Why in God's name was I thinking of doing this?
     The last of the expedition's four vessels was the 80-
    tonne Mizpah, also in a transport cradle. She was much
    older than the Porcelain and the Kinsolving. Clearly-
    even to a layman like me-the Mizpah wasn't in peak
    condition.
     The Mizpah's main lock and boarding ramp amidships
    couldn't be used because of the transport cradle, but her
    personnel hatch forward stood open. On the hatch's inner
    surface, safe from reentry friction and corrosive atmos-
    pheres, were the painted blazons of her co-owners: the
    pearl roundel of Governor Halys, and the bright orange
    banderol-the oriflamme-of Councilor Frederic Duneen.
     The Mizpah wasn't an impressive ship in many ways,
    but she brought with her the overt support of the two
    most important investors on the planet. If nothing else,
    the Mizpah's participation meant the survivors wouldn't
    be hanged as pirates when they returned to Venus.
     If anyone survived. When I eavesdropped on the private
    discussion between Ricimer and Gregg, I'd heard enough
    to frighten off anyone sane.
     Thomas Hawtry-Factor Hawtry of Hawtry-stepped
    from the Mizpah's personnel hatch. Two generations
    before, Hawtry had been a name to reckon with. Thomas,
    active and ambitious to a fault, had mortgaged what
    remained of the estate in an attempt to recoup his
    family's influence by attaching himself to the great of
    the present day.
     He was a man I wanted to meet as little as I did any
    human being on Venus.
     Hawtry was large and floridly handsome, dressed now
    in a tunic of electric blue with silver lam6 trousers and
    calf-high boots to match the tunic. On his collar was a
    tiny oriflamme to indicate his membership in Councilor
    Duneen's household.
     Hawtry's belt and holster were plated. The pistol was
    for show, but I didn't doubt that it was functional none-
    theless.
     "Moore!" Hawtry cried, framed by the hatch coaming
    two paces away. Hawtry's face was blank for an instant

    




                 12            David Drake
    
    AW,         as the brain worked behind it. The Factor of Hawtry was
                a thorough politician; though not, in my opinion, subtle
                enough to be a very effective one.
                  "Jeremy!" Hawtry decided aloud, reforming his visage
                in a smile. "Say, I haven't had an opportunity to thank you
                for the way you covered me in the little awkwardness with.
                Lady Melinda."
                  He stepped close and punched me playfully on the
                shoulder, a pair of ladies' men sharing a risque memory.
                "Could have been ve-ry difficult for me. Say, I told my
    i4N         steward to pass you a little something to take the sting
                out. Did he. ' 1 9"
                  Lady Melinda was an attractive widow of 29 who lived
                with her brother-Councilor Duneen. Hawtry'd thought to
                use me as his go-between in the lady's seduction. 1, on the
                other hand-,
                  I would never have claimed I was perfect, but I liked
                women too much to lure one into the clutches of Thomas
                Hawtry. And as it turned out, I liked the Lady Melinda a
                great deal more than was sensible for a destitute member
                of the lesser gentry.
                  "Regrettably, I d ' idn't hear from your steward, Thom,",
                I said. No point in missing a target of opportunity. "And
                you know, I'm feeling a bit of a pinch right now. If-_2'
                  Not much of a target. "Aren't we all, Jeremy, aren't we
                all!" Hawtry boomed. "After I bring my expedition back,
                though, all my friends will live like kings! Say, you know
                about the so-called 'asteroids expedition,' don't you?"
                  He waved an arm toward the docked ships. A hydraulic
                pump began to squeal as it shifted the Absalom 231 in its
                cradle.
                  "Captain Ricimer's. . ." I said, hiding my puzzlement.
                  "And mine," said Hawtry, tapping himself on the breast
                significantly. "I'm co-leader, though we're keeping it quiet
                for the time being. A very political matter, someone of my
                stature in charge of a voyage like this."
                  Hawtry linked his arm familiarly with mine and began
                pacing back along the line of expedition vessels. His
                friendliness wasn't sincere. In the ten months I knew
                Hawtry intimately in the Duneen household, the man had

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH      13
    
    never been sincere about anything except his ambition and
    his self-love.
     But neither did Hawtry seem to be dissembling the hatred
    I'd expected. Irritated at his go-between's lack of progress
    and very drunk, Hawtry had forced the Lady Melinda's
    door on a night when her brother was out of the house.
    The racket brought the servants to the scene in numbers.
     1, the gentleman who was sharing the lady's bed that
    night, escaped in the confusion-but my presence hadn't
    gone unremarked. The greater scandal saved Hawtry from
    the consequences of his brutal folly, but I scarcely expected
    the fellow to feel grateful. Apparently Hawtry's embarrass-
    ment was so great that he'd recast the incident completely
    in his own mind.
     "I'm going to take the war to the Federation," Hawtry
    said, speaking loudly to be heard over the noise in the stor-
    age dock. He accompanied the words with broad gestures
    of his free hand. "And it is a war, you know. Nothing less
    than that!"
     A dozen common sailors examined the Porcelain's hull
    and thruster nozzles, shouting comments to one another.
    The men weren't on duty; several of them carried liquor
    bottles in pockets of their loose garments. They might
    simply be spectators. Ricimer's flagship was an unusual
    vessel, and the expedition had been the only subject of
    conversation in Betaport for a standard month.
     "Asteroids!" Hawtry snorted. "The Feds bring their
    microchips and pre-Collapse artifacts into the system in
    powerful convoys, Jeremy ... but I'm going to hit them
    where they aren't prepared for it. They don't defend the
    ports on the other side of the Mirror where the wealth
    is gathered. I'll go through the Breach and take them
    unawares!"
     Hawtry wasn't drunk, and he didn't have a hidden rea-
    son to blurt this secret plan. Because I was a gentleman
    of sorts and an acquaintance, I was someone for Hawtry
    to brag to; it was as simple as that.
     Of course, the proposal was so unlikely that I would
    have discounted it completely if I hadn't heard Ricimer
    and Gregg discussing the same thing.
                                                  J
    
    




    14            David Drake
    
     "I didn't think it was practical to transit the Breach,"
    I said truthfully. "Landolph got through with only one
    ship of seven, and nobody has succeeded again in the
    past eighty years. It's simpler to voyage the long way,
    even though that's a year and a half either way."
     Interstellar travel involved slipping from the sidereal*
    universe into other bubbles of sponge space where the
    constants for matter and energy differed. Because a vessel
    which crossed a dimensional membrane retained its rela-
    tive motion, acceleration under varied constants translated
    into great changes in speed and distance when the vessel
    returned to the human universe.
     No other bubble universe was habitable or even con-
    tained matter as humans understood the term. The sidereal
    universe itself had partially mitosed during the process of
    creation, however, and it was along that boundary-the
    Mirror-that the most valuable pre-Collapse remains were
    to be found.
     Populations across the Mirror had still been small when
    the Revolt smashed the delicate fabric of civilization.
    Often a colony's death throes weren't massive enough
    to complete the destruction of the automated factories,
    as had happened on the larger outworlds and in the Solar
    System itself.
     For the most part the Mirror was permeable only to
    objects of less than about a hundred kilograms. Three
    generations before, Landolph had found a point at which it
    was possible to transit the Mirror through sponge space.
     Landolph's Breach wasn't of practical value, since ener-
    gy gradients between the bubble universes were higher
    than ships could easily withstand. Perhaps it - had been
    different for navigators of the civilization before the Col-
    lapse.
     "Oh, the Breach," Hawtry said dismissively. "Say, that's
    a matter for sailors. Our Venus lads can do things that
    cowards from Earth never dreamed of. If they were real
    men, they wouldn't kiss the feet of a tyrant like Pleyal!"
     "I see," I said in a neutral voice.
     I supposed there was truth in what Hawtry said. The
    ships of today were more rugged than Landolph's, and

    




                             THROUGH THE BREACH      15
    
    reach,"        if half of Captain Ricimer's reputation was founded on
    Ily one        fact, he was a sailor like no one bom to woman before
    in the         him. But the notion that a snap of the fingers would send
    g way,         a squadron through the Breach was-
                   Well, Hawtry's reality testing had always been notable
    ;idereal       for its absence. His notion of using the Lady Melinda as
                 a shortcut to power, for example 
    ,ere the                                            The Porcelain's crew was shifting the first of the plasma
    a vessel       cannon from the lowboy. A crane lifted the gun tube onto
    its rela-      a trolley in the hold, but from there on the weapon would
    inslated       be manhandled into position.
    vessel                                              The Porcelain's ceramic hull was pierced with more
    en con-        than a score of shuttered gunports, but like most vessels
                 she canied only one gun for every four or more ports.
    sidereal
                 The crew would shift the weapons according to need.
    Deess of                                            "They'll get their use soon!" Hawtry said, eyeing the
    wy-the         guns with smirking enthusiasm. "And when I come back,
    ins were       well-it'll be Councilor Hawtry, see if it isn't, Moore. Say,
    ill when       there'll be nothing too good for the leader of the Breach
    lization.      Expedition!"
    enough                                              I felt the way I had the night I let the spacers inveigle
    actories,      me into the crooked card game, where there was a great
    he Solar       deal to gain and my life to lose. I said, "I can see that you
                 and Captain Ricimer-"
    only to        "Ricimer!" Hawtry snorted. "That man, that artisan's
    s. Three       son? Surely you don't think that a project of this magnitude
    which it     wouldn't have a gentleman as its real head!"
                   "There's Mister Stephen Gregg, of course," I said judi-
    r space.       ciously.
    ace ener-                                           "The younger son of a smallholder in the Atalanta
    .e higher      Plains!" Hawtry said. "Good God, man! As well have
    iad been       you commander of the expedition as that yokel!"
    the Col-       "I take your point," I said. "Well, I have to get back
    ay, that's   now, Thom. Need to dress for dinner, you see."
    ings that      "Yes, say, look me up when I return, Moore," Hawtry
    were real    said. "I'll be expanding my household, and I shouldn't
    Pleyal!"     wonder that I'd have a place for a clever bugger like
                 YOU."
                   Hawtry turned and stared at the ships which he claimed
    said. The
    ph's, and    to command. He stood arms akimbo and with his feet

    




        . .............
        ........16            David Drake
    IF          spread wide, a bold and possessive posture.
                I walked on quickly, more to escape Hawtry than for
                any need of haste. Dinner was part of Eloise's agenda,
                though dressing was not. Quite the contrary.
                In an odd way, the conversation had helped settle my
                mind. I wasn't a spacer: I couldn't judge the risks of thi&
                expedition.
                 But I could judge men.
                Hawtry was a fool if he thought he could brush asidc
                Piet Ricimer. And if Hawtry thought he could ride rough,
                shod over Stephen Gregg, he was a dead man.
    
                     I 0i

    




    for                      BETAPORT, VENUS
    nda,
    e my
    f this
    aside        The Night Before Sailing
    ough-
                 Three sailors guarded the city side of Dock 22. Two of the
                 men carried powered cutting bars. The third had stuck for-
                 ty centimeters of high-pressure tubing under his belt, and
                 a double-barreled shotgun leaned against the wall behind
                 him.
                   On the other side of the airlock, a tubular personnel
                 bridge stretched to the Porcelain's hatch. Though Dock
                 22 was closed and the interior had been purged, too much
                 of the hellish Venerian atmosphere leaked past the domed
                 clamshell doors for the dock to be open onto the city
                 proper.
                   Traffic on Dock Street was sparse at this hour. The
                 airlock guards watched me with mild interest. That turned
                 to sharp concern when they realized that I was guiding
                 directly toward them the drunk I supported. The sailor
                 with the length of tubing closed the pocket Bible he'd
                 been reading and threw his shoulders back twice to loosen
                 the muscles.
                   "My name doesn't matter," I said. "But I've an impor-
                 tant message for Mister Gregg. I need to see him in per-
                 son."
                   "Piss off," said one of the sailors. He touched the trig-
                 ger of his cutting bar. The ceramic teeth whined a bitter
                 sneer.
                   "This the Bahia?" mumbled the drunk.
                   I held a flask to the lips of the man draped against me.
                 "Here you go, my friend," I said reassuringly. "We'll be
                 aboard shortly."
                                   17

    




    18            David Drake
    
     "Gotta lift shipthe drunk said. He began to cough
    rackingly.
     "I wouldn't mind a sip of that," said one of the guards.
     "Shut up, Pinter," said the man with the tubing. "You
    know better than that."
     He turned his attention to me and my charge. "No one
    boards the Porcelain now, sir," he said. "Why don't you
    and your friend go about your business?"
     "This is our business," I said. "Call Mister Gregg. Tell
    him there's a man here with information necessary to the
    success of the expedition."
     Pinter frowned, leaned forward, and sniffed at the neck
    of the open flask. "Hey, buddy," he said. "What d'ye have
    in that bottle, anyhow?"
     "You wouldn't like the vintage," I said. "Call Mister
    Gregg now. We need to get this gentleman in a bunk as
    soon as possible."
     The sailor who'd initially ordered me away looked
    uncertain. "What's going on, Lightbody?" he asked the
    man with the tubing. "He's a gentleman, isn't he?"
     "All right, Pinter," Lightbody said in sudden decision.
    He gestured to the wired communicator which was built
    into the personnel bridge. "Call him."
     He smiled with a grim sort of humor. "Nobody asks for
    Mister Gregg because, they want to waste his time."
    
    Gregg arrived less than two minutes after the summons.
    His blue trousers and blue-gray tunic were old and worn.
    Both garments were of heavy cloth and fitted with many
    pockets.
     Gregg didn't wear a protective suit, though the air that
    puffed out when he opened the lock was hot and stank
    of hellfire. He didn't carry a weapon, either; but Stephen
    Gregg was a weapon.
     Sulphurous gases leaking into the personnel bridge had
    brought tears to Gregg's eyes. He blinked to control them.
    "Mister Jeremy Moore," he said softly. The catch in his
    voice might also have been a result of the corrosive atmos-
    phere.
     I lifted the face of the man I supported so that the light

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH      19
    
    gh         fell fully on it. "I'm bringing,Captain Macquerie aboard,"
               I said. "We're together. 1, ah, thought it would be wise
    S.         not to trouble the general commander."
                 "Where's 'a Bahfa?" Macquerie mumbled. "Gotta lift
               tonight. . ."
                 "Ali," said Gregg. I couldn't see any change in his
               expression; the three common sailors, who knew Gregg
    ou
               better, visibly relaxed. "Yes, that was good of you. Piet's
               resting now. The two of us can get our pilot aboard quietly,
    ell        I think."
    the          He lifted the shanghaied captain out of my grip. "Piet's
               too good a man for this existence, I- sometimes think. But
               he's got friends."
                 Gregg cycled the airlock open. The inner chamber was
    ister      large enough to hold six men in hard suits. He paused.
    as         "Lightbody? Pinter and Davies, all of you. You did well
               here, but don't report the-arrival-until after we've lifted
    ed         in the morning. Do you understand?"
    the          "Whatever you say, Mister Gregg," Lightbody replied;
               the other two sailors nodded agreement. The men treated
    sion.      Gregg with respect due to affection, but they were also
    built      quite clearly afraid of him.
                 As the airlock's outer door closed behind us, Gregg
    s for        looked over the head of the slumping Macquerie and said,
               "You say you want to come with us, Moore. I'd rather
               pay you. I've got more money than I know what to do
    ons.         with, now."
    worn.                                             The inner door undogged and began to open even as
               the outer panel latched. The atmosphere of the personnel
    inany        bridge struck me like the heart of a furnace.
     that        The bridge was a 3-meter tube of flexible material,
    stank        stiffened by a helix of glass fiber which also acted as a
     phen      light guide. The reinforcement was a green spiral spin-
               ning dizzily outward until the arc of the sagging bridge
               began to rise again. A meter-wide floor provided a flat
    ge had     walkway.
    them.        I sneezed violently. My nose began to run. I rubbed it
    in his     angrily with the back of my hand.
    atmos-       "I'll come, thank you," I said. My voice was already
    e light    hoarse from the harshness of the air. "I'll find my own
    ou
    
    ne

    




                              -3-
    
    20            David Drake
    
    wealth in the Reaches, where you found yours."
     "Oh, you're a smart one, aren't you?" Gregg said harsh-
    ly. "You think you know where we're really going . . and
    perhaps you do, Mister Moore, perhaps you do. Buto you
    don't know what it is that the Reaches cost, Take the
    money. I'll give you three hundred Mapleleaf dollars for
    this night's work."
     The big man paced himself to walk along the bridge
    beside me. The walkway was barely wide enough for two,
    but Gregg held Macquerie out to the side where the tube's
    bulge provided room.
     "I'm not afraid," I said. I was terribly afraid. The per-
    sonnel bridge quivered sickeningly underfoot, and the air
    that filled it was a foretaste of Hell. "I'm a gentleman of
    Venus. I'll willing to take risks to liberate the outworlds
    from President Pleyal's tyranny!"
     The effect of my words was like triggering a detonator.
    Stephen Gregg turned fast and gripped me by the throat
    with his free left hand. He lifted me and slammed me
    against the side of the bridge.
     "I wasn't much for social graces even before I shipped
    out to the Reaches for the first time," Gregg said softly.,
    "And I never liked wormThe wall of the bridge seared my back thro gh the
                                    u' ~ I
    clothing. The spiral of reinforcing fiber felt like a hite
    slash against the general scarlet pain.
     Macquerie, somnolent from the drugged liquor, dangled
    limply from Gregg's right arm. "Now," Gregg said in the
    same quiet, terrible voice. "This expedition is important
    to my friend Piet, do you understand? Perhaps to Venus,
    perhaps to mankind, perhaps to God-but certainly to my
    friend."
     I nodded. I wasn't sure I could speak. Gregg wasn't
    deliberately choking me, but the grip required to keep my
    feet above the walkway also cut off most of my air.
     "I don't especially want to kill you right now," Gregg
    continued. "But I certainly feel no need to let you live.
    Why do you insist on coming with us, Mister Moore?",,
     "You can let me down now," I croaked.
     The words were an inaudible rasp. Gregg either read MA

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH      21
    
                lips or took the meaning from my expression. He lowered
    sh-         me to the walkway and released me.
    and          I shrugged my shoulders. I didn't reach up to rub my
                throat. I am a gentleman!
                 1-" 1 said. I paused, not because I was afraid to go
                on, but because I'd never articulated the reason driving
                me. Not even to myself, in the dead of night.
    dge          "I have a talent for electronics," I continued. I fought
    0,          the need to blink, lest Gregg think I was afraid to meet
                his gaze. "I couldn't work at that, of course. Only arti-
                sans work with their hands. And there was no money; the
    per-         Moores have never really had money."
    e air                                              "Go on," Gregg said. He wiped the palm of his left hand
    of          on the breast of his tunic.
    orlds                                              "So I've had to find ways to live," I continued, "and I've
                done so. Mostly women. And the problem with that is that
    ator.        when I found a woman I really cared about-there was no
    oat         place the relationship could go except the way they've all
    d me         gone, to bed and then nowhere. Because there's no me!
                Doesn't that make you want to laugh, Mister Gregg?"
    pped                                               "I'm not judging you, Moore," Gregg said. He shifted
    oftly.       Macquerie, not for his own comfort but for that of the
                snoring captain. Gregg's effortless strength would have
    h -the       been the most striking thing about him, were it not for
    white        his eyes.
                 "I'm twenty-seven," I said. My bitterness surprised me.
    ngled        "I want to put myself in a place where I have to play the
    in the       man. I pretended it was the money that was pulling me,
    ortant       but that was a lie. A lie for myself"
    enus,        "Let's walk on," Gregg said, suiting his action to his
    to my        words. "The air in this tube isn't the worst I've breathed,
                but that's not a reason to hang around out here either."
    wasn't       I managed a half smile as I fell into step beside the
    ep my       bigger man. Now I massaged the bruises on my throat.
                 "You don't have to play the man when you're out beyond
    Gregg       Pluto, Moore," Gregg said reflectively. "You can become a
    u live.     beast-or die. Plenty do. But if you're detennined to come,
    ore?"        I won't stop you."
                 He looked over his shoulder at me. His expression could
    ead my      be called a smile. "Besides, you might be useful."
                                                             IF7
    
                b
                b

    




                 22            David Drake
    
                  The Porcelain's airlock was directly ahead of us. I
    W            dropped back a step to let Gregg open the hatch.
                  I thought about the cold emptiness of Stephen Gregg's
                 eyes. I had an idea now what Gregg meant when he spoke
                 of what the Reaches cost.
    
           MW

    




              VENUS ORBIT
    
    Day 1
    
    I'd never been weightless before. My stomach was already
    queasy from the shaking the Porcelain took from the 500
    kph winds of the upper Venerian atmosphere. I hadn't
    eaten since early the night before, but I wasn't sure that
    would keep me from spewing yellow bile across the men
    working nonchalantly around me.
     I clung to the tubular railing around the attitude-control
    console. The starship's three navigational consoles were in
    the extreme bow; the heavy plasma cannon was shipped
    in traveling position between the consoles and the attitude
    controls.
     Guillermo was at the right-hand console. Ricimer,
    Hawtry, and the vessel's navigator, Salomon, stood behind
    the Molt, discussing the course.
     "We need to blood the force, blood it," Hawtry said.
    He was the only member of the group speaking loudly
    enough for me to hear.
     Hawtry wore a rubidium-plated revolver and the silver
    brassard which identified him as an officer in the Gover-
    nor's Squadron. He had at least enough naval experience
    to keep his place without clutching desperately at a support
    the way I did.
     A sailor carrying a tool kit slid along the axis of the ship,
    dabbing effortlessly at stanchions for control. "Careful,
    sir!" he warned in a bored voice before he batted my
    legs-which had drifted upward--out of his way.
     Because the sailor balanced his motion by swinging the
    heavy tools, his course didn't change. My feet hit the shell
    locker and rebounded in a wild arc.
    
                    23

    




    24            David Drake
    
     Stephen Gregg stood in the center of the three-faced
    attitude-control console. He reached out a long arm over
    Lightbody, reading placidly in one of the bays, caught my
    ankle, and tugged. I released my own grip and thumped
    to the deck beside Gregg.
     Gregg's right boot was thrust under one of three 20-cm
    staples in the deck. I hooked my toes through both of the
    others. My hands hurt from the force with which I'd been
    holding on since liftoff. ,
     "Want to go home now, Moore?" Gregg asked dryly.
     "Would it matter if I did?" I said. The spacer who'd
    pushed past me was working on the Long Tom's traversing
    mechanism. A hydraulic fitting spit tiny iridescent drops
    which would shortly settle and spread over the Porcelain's
    inner bulkheads.
     "Not in the least," said Gregg. His voice was calm, but
    his head turned as he spoke and his gaze rippled across
    everything, everything in his field of view.
     "Then I'm happy where I am," I said. I glanced, then
    stared, at the controls around me. "These are fully
    automated units," I said in surprise. "Is that normal?"
     "It will be," Gregg said, "if Piet has his way-and if
    we start bringing back enough chips from the outworlds
    to make the price more attractive than paying sailors tc
    do the work."
     "What we should be doing," I said bitterly, "is setting
    up large-scale microchip production ourselves."
     Gregg looked at me. "Perhaps," he said. "But that's i
    long-term proposition. For now it's cheaper to use th(
    stockpiles-and the operating factories, there are some-
    on the outworlds. And it's important that men return t(
    the stars, too, Piet thinks."
     In a normal starship installation, there was a three-mal
    console for each band of attitude jets-up to six band
    in a particularly large vessel. The crewmen fired the jet
    on command to change the ship's heading and attitudc
    while the main thrusters, plasma motors, supplied powe
    for propulsion.
     On the Porcelain, a separate artificial intelligenc6 cor
    trolled the jets. The Al's direction was both faster an

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      25
    a         more subtle than that of even the best-trained crew-but
    ; Ir       spacers are conservative men, those who survive, and they
    y         tend to confuse. purpose-built attitude Als with attitude
    d         control through the main navigational unit.
               The latter could be rough because the equipment wasn't
              configured for the purpose. Even so, I believed machine
    ie         control was better nine times out of ten than anything
              humans could manage.
               "You do know something about electronics, then,"
              Gregg said, though he wasn't looking at me when he
    ;d         spoke.
    1g,              "Do people often lie to you?" I snapped.
    Ps               "Not often, no," the bigger man agreed, unperturbed.
    I is             "Usually there's an officer to command each control
              bank," Gregg continued mildly. "Here, I'm just to keep
    iut        the crew from being bothered by-gentlemen who feel a
    )SS        need to give orders. Lightbody, Jeude, Dole."
               The sailors looked up as Gregg called their names.
               "Dole's our bosun," Gregg said. "These three have been
    ien
              with Piet since before I met him, when he had a little
    Ily                                                     1 1~
              intrasystem trader. He put them on the controls because
     if       they can be trusted not to get in the way of the elec-
    Ids        tronics."
     to        Jeude, a baby-faced man (and he certainly wasn't very
              old to begin with), wore a blue-and-white striped stocking
    ing       cap. He doffed it in an ironic salute.
               "Boys, meet Mister Jeremy Moore," Gregg went on. "I
              think you'll find him a resourceful gentleman."
               "A friend of yours, Mister Gregg?" Jeude asked.
    the
      e-       Gregg snorted. Instead of answering the question, he
    I to
      0       said, "Do you have any friends, Moore?"
               "A few women, I suppose," I said. "Not like he means,
               15
    man        no.
    inds                                            My guts no longer roiled, but they'd knotted themselves
    jets      tightly in my lower abdomen. I focused my eyes on the
    ude,      viewscreen above the navigational console. Half the field
    )wer      was bright with stars, two of which were circled with
              blue overlays. A three-quarter view of Venus, opalescent
    con-      with the dense, bubbling atmosphere, filled the rest of the
    and       screen.

    




    26            David Drake
    
     "That's a very high resolution unit," I said aloud. 1'~
    amazed at the clarit~."
     "Piet doesn't skimp on the tools he needs," Gregg sai
    "It's a perfect view of the hell that wraps the world th
    bore us, that's certainly true."
     He paused, staring at the lustrous, lethal surface
    gas. "Does your family have records from the Collap-,;
    Moore?" he asked.
     "No," I said, "no. My grandfather sold the factory nine
    years ago and moved to Ishtar City. If there were ai
    records, they were lost then."
     "My family does," Gregg said. "The histories say it vy
    the atmosphere that protected Venus during the Revolt, y
    know. Outworld raiders knew that our defenses wouldi
    stop them, but they couldn't escape our winds. The Had]
    Cells take control from any unfamiliar pilot and, fling I
    ship as apt as not into the ground. The raiders learned
    hit softer targets that only men protected."
     "Isn't it true, then?" I said, responding to the bittemi
    in Gregg's voice. "That's how I'd already heard it."
     "Oh, the atmosphere saved us from the rebels, that nit
    was true," Gregg said. "But when the histories go i
    'Many died because off-planet trade was disrupted. .
    That's not the same as reading your own ancestors' chrc
    cle of those days. Venus produced twenty percent of
    own food before'the Collapse. Afterwards, well, the f(
    supply couldn't expand that fast, so the populat
    dropped. Since the distribution system was disrupted a]
    the drop was closer to nine in ten than eight in ten."
     "We're past that now," I said. "That was a thou&
    years ago. A thousand Earth years."
     A third spark in a blue highlight snapped into place
    the star chart. "The Kinsolving," said Dole, ostensibli
    the sailors to either side of him at the console. "And at
    fucking time."
     Lightbody sniffed.
     Piet Ricinier raised a handset and began speaking
    it, his eyes fixed on a separate navigational tank ben(
    the viewscreen.                I
     "Bet they just now got around to turning on their loc

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH      27
    
            beacon," Jeude said. "Though they'll claim it was equip-
            Iment failure."
            "Right," said Gregg, his eyes so fixedly on the pearly
            orb of Venus that they drew my gaze with them. "At Eryx,
            that's the family seat, there was a pilot hydroponics farm.
            They figured what the yield would support and drew lots
            for those who could enter the section of the factory where
            the farm was."
            Gregg's face lost all expression."The others . . ." he
            continued. "Some of the others tried to break into the farm
            and get their share of the food. My ancestor's younger
            brother led a team of volunteers that held off the mob
            as long as they could. When they were out of arnmuni-
            tion, they checked the door seals and then blew the roof
            of their own tunnel open to the surface. That's what the
            atmosphere of Venus means to me."
            "It was worse on Earth," I said. "When the centralized
            production plants were disrupted,only one person in a
            thousand survived. There were billions of people on Earth
            before the Revolt, but they almost all died."
            Gregg rubbed his face hard with both hands, as if he
            were massaging life back into his features. He looked at
            me and smiled. "As you say, a thousand years," he said.
            "But in all that time,the Greggs of Eryx have always
    s       named the second son Stephen. In memory of the brother
            who didn't leave descendants."
            "That wasthe past," I said. "There's enough in the
            future to worry about."
            "You'll get along well with Piet," Gregg said. His voice
            was half-mocking, but only half "You're right, of course.
            I shouldn't think about the past the way I do."
            It occurred to me that Gregg wasn't only referring to
            the early history of Eryx Hold.
    Ut      The bisected viewscreen above Ricimer shivered into
            three parts, each the face of a ship's captain: Blakey of
            the Mizpah; Winter of the Kinsolving; and Moschelitz, the
    to      bovine man who oversaw Absalom 231's six crewmen and
    th      automated systems.
            Blakey's features had a glassy, simplified sheen which
    or      I diagnosed as a result of the Mizpah's transmission being
    
              Ki
    n
    to
    
            I U
            U

    




    28            David Drake
    
    static-laden to the point of unintelligibility. The Al control-
    ling the Porcelain's first-rate electronics processed both
    the audio and visual portions of the signal into a false
    clarity. The image of Blakey's black-mustached face was
    in effect the icon of a virtual reality.
     Ricimer raised the handset again. Guillermo switched a
    setting on the control console. The Molt's wrists couldn't
    rotate, but each limb had two more offset joints than a
    human's, permitting the alien the same range of move-
    ment.
     "Gentlemen," Ricimer said. "Fellow venturers. You're
    all brave men, or you wouldn't have joined me, and all
    God-fearing and patriots or I wouldn't have chosen you."
     The general commander's words boomed through the
    tannoy in the ceiling above the attitude-control console;
    muted echoes rustled through the open hatchways to com-
    partments farther aft. No doubt the transmission was being
    piped through the other vessels as well, though I wondered
    whether anybody aboard the Mizpah would be able tc
    understand the words over the static.
     "I regret," Ricimer continued, "that I could not tell yot
    all our real destination before we lifted off, though I don"
    suppose many of you-or many of President Pleyal'!
    spies-will have thought we were setting out for th(
    asteroids. The first stop on our mission to free Venu
    and mankind from Federation tyranny will be Decades."
     "We'll make men out of you there!" Hawtry said ii
    guttural glee. The pickup on Ricimer's handset was eithe
    highly di-ectional or keyed to his voice alone. Not a whis
    per of Hawtry's words was broadcast.
     "A Fed watering station six days out," Jeude said, sped
    ing to me. As an obvious landsman, I was a perfect recipi
    ent for the sort of information that every specialist love
    to retail.
     "They wouldn't need a landfall so close if their shir
    were better found," Dole put in. "Fed ships leak lik
    sieves."
     On the screen, Captain Winter's lips formed an angi
    protest which I thought contained the word p
    racy?"

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      29
    
               This was Ricimer's moment; the equipment Guillermo
              controlled brooked no interruption. Blakey tugged at his
              mustache worriedly-he looked to be a man who would
              worry about the color of his socks in the morning-while
              Moschelitz couldn't have been more stolid in his sleep.
    a          "Our endeavors, with the help of the Lord," Ricimer
    ~t         continued, "will decide the fate of Venus and of man-
    a         kind." He seemed to grow as he spoke, or-it was as
    e-         if Piet Ricimer were the only spot of color in existence.
              His enthusiasm, his belief, turned everything around him
    re         gray.
               "We must be resolute," he said. His eyes swept those
              of us watching him in the flagship's bow compartment,
    e         but the faces on the viewscreen also stiffened. Though his
    e;         back was toward the images, Ricimer was looking straight
              into the camera feeding his transmission.
    ng                                                         "I expect the company of every vessel in the expedition
    ed         to serve God once a day with its prayers," Ricimer said.
    to         "Love one another: we are few against the might of tyr-
              anny. Preserve your supplies, and make all efforts to keep
    ou         the squadron together throughout the voyage."
    n't                                                        The general commander stared out at his dream for a
    al's       future in which mankind populated all the universe under
    the        God. Even Thomas Hawtry looked muted by the blazing
              personality of the man beside whom he stood.
    BUS
    S. 11                                                      "In the name of God, sirs, do your duty!"
     in
    01cl
    his
    eak
    ipl
    oves                                                       "Ti
    
    hips
    like
    
    gry
     pi-
                                                               lq
                                                           ij7f,"

    




    W,
    
                          ABOVE DECADES
    
                  Day 7
    
                  The Porcelain made nineteen individual transits in the
                  final approach series; that is, she slipped nineteen times
                  in rapid succession from the sidereal universe to another
                  bubble of sponge space and back.
                  At each transit, as during every transit of the past sev-
                  en days, my stomach knotted and flapped inside out. I
                  clung to the staple in the attitude-control station, holding
                  a sponge across my open mouth and wishing I were dead.
                  Or perhaps I was dead, and this was the Hell to which so
                  many people over the years had consigned me ...
                  "Oh, God," I moaned into the sponge. My eyes were
                  shut. "Oh, God, please save me." I hadn't prayed in
                  real earnest since the night I found myself trapped in
                  Melinda's room.
                  The transit series ended. Only the vibration of the ves-
                  sel's plasma motors maintaining a normal I-g acceleration
                  indicated that I wasn't standing on solid ground. I opened
                  my eyes.
                  A planet, gray beneath a cloud-streaked atmosphere,
                  filled the forward viewscreen. "Most times the Feds've
                  got women on the staff," Jeude was saying as he and his
                  fellows at the console eyed Decades for the first time.
                  "And they aren't all of them that hostile."
                  I released the staple I was holding and rose to my feet"I
                  I smiled ruefully at Gregg and said, "I'll get used to it, I
                  suppose."
                  Gregg's mouth quirked. "For your sake I hope so," he
                  said. "But I haven't, and I've been doing this for some
                  years now."
    
                                   30

    




        ~k,
    
                              THROUGH THE BREACH 31
    Besides the ship's officers, the forward compart
    ment was crowded by Hawtry and the nine gentlemen
    adventurers who, like him, stood fully equipped with
    firearms and body armor.
    The ceramic chestplates added considerably to the
    men's bulk and awkwardness. Many of them had per
    sonal blazons painted on their armor. Hawtry's own
    chestplate bore a gryphon, the marking of his house,
    and on the upper right clamp the oriflamme of the
    e Duneens.
    s"Now that's navigation!" said Captain-former cap
    rtain-Macquerie with enthusiasm. "We can orbit without
    needing to transit again."
    It had taken Macquerie a few days to come to terms
    Iwith his situation, but since then he'd been an asset to the
    9project. Macquerie was too good a sailor not to be pleased
    with a ship as fine as the Porcelain and a commander as
    famous as Piet Ricimer.
    so
    "The Kinsolving's nowhere to be seen," said Salomon
    reas he leaned toward the three-dimensional navigation tank.
    in"As usual. The Mizpah can keep station, the cargo hulk
    incan keep station, more or less. Winter couldn't find his
    ass with both hands."
    s-"There they are," Ricimer said mildly. He pointed to
    onsomething in the tank that I couldn't see from where I
    edstood. It probably wouldn't have meant anything to me
    anyway. "One, maybe two transits out. It's my fault for
    re,not making sure the Kinsolving's equipment was calibrated
    Ive to the same standards as the rest of ours."
    "If the Absalom can keep station," Salomon muttered,
    his"so could the Kinsolving-if she had a navigator aboard."
    e.
    "Enough of this nonsense," said Thomas Hawtry. Sever
    et.al of the gentlemen about him looked as green as I felt, but
    it, IHawtry was clearly unaffected by the multiple eversions
    of transit. "We don't need a third vessel anyway. Lay us
    healongsi0e the Mizpah, Ricimer, so that I can go aboard
    me and take charge."
    Guillermo looked up from his console. "The cutter
    should be launched in the next three minutes," he said to
    Ricimer in his mechanically perfect speech. "Otherwise

    




    32            David Drake
    
    we'll need to brake now rather than proceeding directly
    into planetary orbit."
     "You'd best get aft to Hold Two, Mister Hawtry,"
    Ricimer said. If he'd reacted to the gentleman's peremp-
    tory tone, there was no sign of it in his voice. "The cutter
    is standing by with two men to ferry you."
     Hawtry grunted. "Come along, men," he ordered as he
    led his fellows shuffling sternward. Watching the sicker-
    looking of the gentlemen helped to settle my stomach.
     "Sure you don't want to go with them?" Gregg said
    archly, "When they transfer to the Mizpah, there won'l
    be any proper gentlemen aboard. Just spacers."
     "I'm a proper gentleman," I snapped. "I just have littl(
    interest in weapons and no training whatever with their.
    If you please, I'll stay close to you and Mister Ricim(
    and do what you direct me."
     "Mister Hawtry?" Ricimer called as the last of Hawtry
    contingent were ducking through the hatchway to the ce
    tral compartment. "Please remember: there'll be no fightii
    if things go as they should. We'll simply march on the be
    from opposite directions and summon them to surrende
     Hawtry's response was a muted grunt.
     Salomon and Macquerie lowered their heads over
    navigation tank and murmured to one another. The N/
    Guillermo touched a control. His viewscreen split ag;
    the right half retaining the orb of Decades, three-quar
    in sunlight, while the left jumped by logarithmic ma
    fications down onto the planetary surface.
     A fenced rectangle enclosed a mixture of green fol
    and soil baked to brick by the exhaust of starships Ian(
    In close-up, the natural vegetation beyond the perir
    had the iridescence of oil on water.
     There were two ships with bright metal hulls ii
    landing area, and a scatter of buildings against the opl
    fence. The morning sun slanted across the Federation
    Obvious gun towers threw stark, black shadows fro
    corners and from the center of both long sides.
     I licked my lips. I didn't know what I was sur
    to do. The Porcelain shuddered like a dog drying
    Lights on the attitude-control panels pulsed in near t

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     33
    
              balancing the shock. The three sailors looked alert but not
    AY        concerned.
                "That's the cutter with Hawtry aboard casting off,"
              Gregg said. He glanced at the bosun. "How long before
    kp-       we begin atmospheric braking, Dole?" he asked.
    ter
                Dole, a stocky, dark man with a beard trimmed to three
    he        centimeters, pursed his lips as he considered the images
              on the viewscreen. "About two hours, sir," he said.
                Jeude, beside him, nodded agreement. "We could go
    aid       into orbit quicker," he said, "but it'll take them that long to
    ~nl t       transfer the fine gentlemen to the Mizpah-good riddance
              to them."
                "Watch your tongue, Aaron Jeude," the bosun said.
    ttle
                Jeude's smile flashed toward Gregg, taking in me beside
    aler        the bigger man as well.
                "What do we do, Gregg?" I asked. My voice was col-
    ry's        orless because of my effort to conceal my fear of the
    ,en-        unfamiliar.
    ting                                                         "We wait," Gregg said. "Ten minutes before landing,
    )ase        we'll put our equipment on. And then we'll march a klick
    [er."       through what Macquerie says is swamp, even on the rela-
              five highlands where the Feds built their base."
    the         "I don't have any equipment," I said. "If you mean
    "Olt        weapons."
    yain:                                                        "We'll find you something," Gregg said. "Never fear."
    rters       He spoke quietly, but there was a disconcerting lilt to
    igni-       his tone.
                Six sailors under Stampfer, the Porcelain's master gun-
    liage       ner, bustled around the Long Tom, opening hydraulic
    ding.       valves and locking down the seats attached to the carriage.
    neter       They were readying the big weapon for action.
                "Will there be fighting, then, Gregg?" I asked, sounding
    n the     even to myself as cool as the sweat trickling down the
              rniddle of my back.
    )osite      "At Decades, I don't know," Gregg said. "Not if they
    base.
    rn the    have any sense. But before this voyage is over-yes, Mis-
              ter Moore. There will be war."
    posed                                                        t
    itself.   The Porcelain's two cargo holds were on the underside of
    nison,    the vessel, bracketed between the pairs of plasma motors
              T
    
              Im
               v
               h
                                                            L11 ~,,J
    
         ~ha'
               tel
    
               thl

    




    34            David Drake
    
    fore and aft, and the quartet of similar thrusters amidshil
    Number Two, the after hold, had been half-emptied wh
    the cutter launched. Now it was filled by a party of twen
    men waiting for action, and it stank.
     "You bloody toad, Easton!" a sailor said to the m
    beside, him. "That warn't no fart. You've shit yourself!
     My nose agreed. Several of the men had vomited fro
    tension and atmospheric buffeting as the ship descende
    and we were all of us pretty ripe after a week on shipboar,
    I clutched the cutting bar Gregg had handed me from d
    arms locker and hoped that I wouldn't be the next to spe
    my guts up.
     The Porcelain's descent slowed to a near-hover. TI
    rapid pulsing of her motors doubled into a roar. "Surfa(
    effect!" Gregg said. "Thrust reflected from the groun
    We'll be touching down-"
     The big gentleman wore back-and-breast armor-tl
    torso of a hard suit that doubled as protection from vacuu.
    and lethal atmospheres-with the helmet locked in plac
    though his visor was raised for the moment. In his arn
    was a flashgun, a cassegrain laser which would pulse d
    entire wattage of the battery in its stock out through
    stubby ceramic barrel. Gregg was shouting, but I need(
    cues from his mouth to make out the words.
     The last word was probably "soon," but it was lo
    in still greater cacophony. The starship touched its pa
    outrigger, hesitated, and settled fully to the ground wii
    a crash of parts reaching equilibrium with gravity inste~
    of thrust.
     I relaxed. "Now what?" I asked.
     "We wait a few minutes for the ground to cool," Grej
    explained. "There was standing water, so the heat oug.
    to dissipate pretty quickly. Sufficient heat."
     It seemed like ten minutes but was probably two befo:
    a sailor spun the undogging controls at a nod from Greg
    The hatch, a section of hull the full length of Hold Tw
    cammed downward to form a ramp. Through the openir
    rushed wan sunshine and a gush of steam evaporated fra
    the soil by the plasma motors.
     It was the first time I'd been on a planet besides Venu

    




                        THROUGH THE BREACH      35
    
             "Let's go!" boomed Stephen Gregg in the sudden damp
             ening of the hold'sechoes. He strode down the ramp,
             a massive figure in his armor."Keep close, but form a
             cordon at the edge of the cleared area."
             I tried to stay near Gregg, but a dozen sailors elbowed
             me aside to exit from the center of the ramp. I realized
             why when I followed them. Though the hatchway was a
             full ten meterswide, the starship's plasma motors had
             raised the ground beneath to oven heat. The center of the
    e        ramp, farthest from where the exhaust of stripped ions
    ?V       struck, was the least uncomfortable place to depart the
             recently-landed vessel.
    ~e       I stumbled on the lip at the end of the ramp. The sur
    .e       roundings steamed like a suburb of Sheol, and the seared
             native vegetation gave off a bitter reek.
             The foliage beyond the exhaust-burned area was tissue
    ie       thin and stiffened with vesicles of gas rather than cellulose.
    m        The veins were of saturated color, with reds, blues, and pur
    e,       pies predominating. Those hues merged with the general
    [IS      pale yellow of leaf surfaces to create the appearance of
    rie      gray when viewed from a distance.
    a        I wore a neck scarf. I put it to my mouth and breathed
    ed       through it. It probably didn't filter any of the sharp poisons
             from the air, but at least it gave me the illusion that I was
    ~st      doing something useful.
    'Drt                                          Sailors clumped together at the margin of the ravaged
    kffi                                          zone instead of spreading out. The forward ramp was low
    ~ad      ered also, but men were filtering slowly down it because
             Hold One was still packed with supplies and equipment.
             "Stephen," called the man stepping from the forward
      ,gg    ramp. "I'll take the lead, if you'll make sure that no one
      ght    straggles from the rear of the line."
             The speaker wore brilliant, gilded body armor over a
     'ore    tunic with puffed magenta sleeves.The receiver of his
      99.    repeating rifle was also gold-washed.Because the garb
     VV0,    was unfamiliar and the man's face was in shadow, it was
     Ling    by his voice that I identified him as Piet Ricimer.
      'OM    Gregg broke off in the middle of an order to a pair of
             grizzled sailors. "Piet, you're not to do this!" he said. "We
    'lus.    talked-"
          4+ 4, v

    




                  36             David Drake
    
                  "You talked, Stephen," Ricimer interrupted with t1
                  crisp tone of the man who was general commander
                  the expedition. "I said I'd decide when the time can
                  Shall we proceed?"
                  Forty-odd men of the Porcelain's complement of eig]
                  now milled in the burned-off area. About seventy-f
                  percent of us had firearms. Most of the rest carried c
                  ting bars like mine, but there were two flashguns besi(
                  Gregg's own. Flashguns were heavy, unpleasant to sh
                  because they scattered actinics, and were certain to atti
                  enemy fire. I found it instructive that Stephen Gregg wc
                  carry such a weapon.
                  The sky over the Federation base to the south sudd(
                  rippled with spaced rainbow flashes. Four seconds L
                  the rumble of plasma cannon discharging shook the sw
                  about the Porcelain.
                  A ship that must have been the Mizpah dropped o'
                  the sky. The sun-hot blaze of her thrusters was v
                  by the ionized glow of their exhaust. Plasma drifte
                  and back from the vessel like the train of a lady in
                  dress.
                  "The stupid whoreson!" said Stephen Gregg. "They
                  to land together with us, not five minutes later!"
                  Ricimer jumped quickly to the ground and t
                  toward Gregg. "Stephen," he said, "you'd bes-
                  me in the lead. I think it's more important th
                  reach the base as quickly as possible than th
                  whole body arrives together. I'm very much
                  that Blakey is trying to land directly on the
                  tive."
                  As the Mizpah lurched downward at a rate mucl
                  than that of the Porcelain before her, a throbbing I
                  yellow light from the ground licked her lower hul
                  where I jogged along a step behind Ricimer and
                  the starship was barely in sight above the low veg
                  but she must have been fifty or more meters at
                  ground.
                  The plume of exhaust dissipated in a shock wa
                  onds later, we could hear a report duller than th
                  Mizpah's cannon but equally loud.
    
    ...........

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH     37
    
                Ricimer held a gyro compass in his left hand. "This
               way," he directed. Twenty meters into the forest, the Por-
               celain was out of sight.
                "The bloody whoreson!" Gregg repeated as he jogged
    ty         along beside his friend and leader.
    ve
        ut-    "How.." I said. My voice was a croaking whisper. I
    des        couldn't see for sweat between the angry passes I made
    oot        across my eyes with my sopping kerchief.
    act          " . . . do you stand this?" I finished, concluding on a
    uld        rising note that suggested panic even to me. I deliber-
               ately lowered my voice to add, "You're wearing armor,
               I mean."
    enly
    ater,                                             Piet Ricimer squeezed my shoulder. Ricimer's face was
    amp        red, and the sleeves of his gorgeous tunic were as wet as
               my kerchief. "You'll harden to it, Moore," he said. He
    t of       spoke in gasps. "A kilometer isn't far. Once you're used
    eiled        to, you know. It."
    d up         "The men won't follow. . ." Gregg said. He was a pace
    court        ahead of us, setting the trail through the flimsy, clinging
               vegetation. He didn't look back over his shoulder as he
    were       spoke. "Unless the leaders lead. So we have to."
                 "A little to the right, Stephen," Ricimer wheezed. "I think
    otted        we're drifting." Then in near anger he added, "Macquerie
    join       says the base was set on the firmest ground of the continent.
        we     What must the rest be like?"
    at the                                            Each of my boots carried what felt like ten kilos of
    afraid       mud. The hilt of the cutting bar had a textured surface,
    objec-       but despite that the weapon kept trying to slide out of my
               grip. I was sure that if I had to use the bar, it would squirt
    faster     into the hands of my opponent.
    ulse of                                           The assault force straggled behind the three of us. How
    1. From      far behind was anybody's guess. About a dozen crewmen,
    Gregg,       laden with weapons and bandoliers of ammunition, slogged
      ion,     along immediately in back of me. They were making heavy
       the     going of it. The mud had stilled their initial chatter, but they
               were obviously determined to keep up or die.
    e. See-      Three of the spacers were the regular watch from the
    of the     attitude-control consoles. I suspected the others were
               among Ricimer's long-time followers also. With their
    
                                                    .................
    e
    of

    




    38            David Drake
    
    share of the wealth from previous voyages, why in God's
    name were they undergoing this punishment and danger?
     And why had Jeremy Moore made the same choice?
    The day before sailing, Eloise had made it clear that there
    was a permanent place for me. On her terms, of course,
    but they weren't such terrible terms.
     The only thing that kept me up with the leaders was that
    I was with the leaders. I was with two undeniable heroes-
    staggering along, but present.
     "If she'd really crashed," Ricimer said, "we'd have-
    she'd shake the ground. The Mizpah."
     "Fired off all ten guns descending," Gregg muttered.
    There was a streak of blood on his right hand and forearm,
    and his sleeve was ripped. "Means they landed with them.
    empty. Feds may be cutting all their throats before we
    come up. Stupid whoresons."
     Then, in a coldly calm voice, he added, "Stop ereA I
    We've reached it."
     I knelt at the base of a spray of huge, rubbery leaves.
    My knees sank into the muck, but I didn't think I could've
    remained upright without the effort of walking to steady
    me. Ricimer halted with his left hand on Gregg's shoulder
    blade. Sailors, puffing and blowing as though they we
    coming up after deep dives, spread out to either side
    the trail we had blazed.
     The native vegetation had been burned away from
    a hundred-meter band surrounding the Federation base.
    Water gleamed in pools and sluggish rivulets a~ross the
    scabrous wasteland. The natural landscape was in2man
    and oppressive; this defensive barrier waThe perimeter fence was of loose mesh four mejershib,
             Judging from the insulators the fence was electrine
                                    t citru
    it didn't provide visual screening. Trees heavy wi h ru
    fruit grew within the enclosure.
     In the center of the fenceline were a gate and a gui
    tower, at present unoccupied. Two men were 11'
    toward the tower up a lane through the tre
    were laughing; one carried a bottle. Both
    slung.
                                  strollin
                                  es. The
                                  had rifl

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH      39
    
    Is                                                      Gregg aimed his flashgun from the concealment of a
              plantainlike growth with blue leaves the size of blankets.
                "Wait, Stephen," Ricimer ordered. He took off his gilt-
              braided beret, wiped his face in the crook of his arm,
    I         and put the beret on again. "Mister Sahagun!" he called,
              stepping out into the cleared area. "Mister Coos!"
    at                                                      At the words, I recognized the pair as two of the gentle-
    s;          men who'd transferred to the Mizpah. They'd taken off
              their heavy armor. I'd thought they were Federation sol-
              diers whose bullets might kill me in the next seconds.
                Sahagun groped in startlement for his slung weapon
    d.          before he recognized the speaker. "Ricimer, is that you?"
    I         he called. "Say, we're supposed to bring you in, but I just
    M         see that this bloody gate is locked. We'll-"
    e           Gregg had shifted infinitesimally when Sahagun touched
              his rifle. Now he moved an equally slight amount. His
    re.         flashgun fired, a pulse of light so intense that the native fo-
              liage wilted from the side-scatter. Great leaves sagged away,
    es.         fluttering in the echoes of the laser's miniature thunder.
                I tried to jump to my feet. I slipped and would have
              fallen except that a sailor I didn't know by name caught
    der         my arm.
    ere                                                     The bolt hit the crossbar where it intersected the left
     of       gatepost. Metal exploded in radiant fireballs which trailed
              smoke as they arced away. Coos and Sahagun fell flat on
    om          ground as wet as that through which we'd been tramping.
    ase.                                                    "That's all right," Gregg called as he switched the bat-
    the         tery in his weapon's stock for a fresh one. As with his
              friend and leader, there was no hint of exhaustion in his
     an
    s a       voice now. "We'll open it ourselves."
                "I think," said Piet Ricimer softly, "that we'll wait till
    igh.      our whole force has come up before any of us enter the
    but       base."
      s         There was nothing menacing in his words or tone, but
              I felt myself shiver.
    uard
    Iling     "Ah, glad you've made it, Ricirner," said Thomas Hawtry
    hey       as he rose from the porch of the operations building.
    rifles    A score of men stood about him. Many of them were
              frightened-looking and dressed in tags of white Federation  OIL
    
         AMR
                                                               11 g"11

    




    40            David Drake
    
    uniforms. "I've got some very valuable information here,
    very valuable!"
     Hawtry spoke with an enthusiasm that showed he under-
    stood how chancy the next moments were likely to be. Like
    the others of the Mizpah's gentlemen, he'd put aside his
    breastplate and rifle.
     "In a moment, Mister Hawtry," said Piet Ricimer. He
    wiped his face again with his sleeve. "Captain Blakey.
    Present yourself at once!"
     The Mizpah had come down within a hundred and fifty
    meters of the administration buildings and base housing,
    blowing sod and shrubbery out in a shallow crater. The
    multitube laser that slashed the descending vessel from a
    guard tower had shattered a port thruster nozzle.
     Yawing into the start of a tumble, the Mizpah had struck
    hard. The port outrigger fractured, though the vessel's hull:
    appeared undamaged. Our men and Molts from the basq
    labor force now surveyed the damage.
     I bubbled with relief at having gotten this far. Clouds~
    scudded across the pale sky. It felt odd to know that therel
    was no solid roof above, but it didn't bother me the way'
    I'd been warned it might.
     I wondered where I could find a hose to clean my boots..
    I glanced down. My legs. They were covered in mud from
    mid-thigh.
     Blakey broke away from the group beside the Mizpa,
    and trotted toward Ricimer. The Mizpah's plasma carm
    were still run out through the horizontal bank of gunports.
    To fire paired broadsides into the Federation base as th4
    ship descended, Blakey must have rolled the Mizpah on
    her axis, then counter-rolled.
     "There's a treasure right here on Decades," Hawtry said~l
    pretending that he didn't realize he was being ignore(~-6,,,'
    "and I've located it. The Feds here are too cowardly,11a,
                                       "M
    grab it up themselves!"           'a
     A freighter was docked at the far edge of the perimeter,A
    nearly a kilometer from the administration buil
    ship had taken much of the Mizpah gunners'
    One blast of charged particles had struck he
    vaporizing a huge hole.- The shock of exploding met9
                                  di
                                   ng.
                                 att, ntl
                                 r sqorel~

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     41
    
              dished in the light-metal hull for half its length and set
              fire to the vessel's interior. Dirty smoke billowed from
              the wreck and drifted through the nearby fenceline.
                I couldn't imagine any purpose in shooting at the freight-
    s         er beyond a general desire to terrorize the defenders. In
              all likelihood, the Feds stationed here wouldn't have
    e         been aroused to defense except for the sudden blaze of
              cannonfire.
                Blakey whipped off the broad-brimmed hat which he,
              like many experienced Venerian travelers, wore under an
              open sky. "Mister Ricimer," he blurted, "I didn't have any
    e         choice. It was Mister Hawtry who-"
    a           "May I remind you that I gave you specific direction
              to land a kilometer north of the Federation compound,
    k         Captain Blakey?" Ricimer said in a knife-edged voice.
              "No one but the Lord God Almighty takes precedence to
    se          the orders I give on this expedition!"
                "No sir, no sir," Blakey mumbled, wringing his hat up
    ds          in a tight double roll. The spacer's hair was solidly dark,
    re          but there was a salting of white hair in his beard and
    ay          mustache.
                "Now, wait a minute, Ricimer," Hawtry said. He
    ts.         remained on the porch, ten meters away. The Feder-
    M         ation personnel about him were easing away, leaving the
              gentlemen exposed like spines of basalt weathered out of
    A         softer stone.
    on                                              "The Mizpah's condition?" Ricimer snapped.
    rts.                                            "We'll jack up the port side to repair the outrigger,"
    the         Blakey said. He grimaced at his crumpled hat. "Then we'll
     on       switch the thruster nozzle, we've spares aboard, it's no-"
                "You lost only one thruster?" Ricimer demanded, his
    aid,      tongue sharp as the blade of a microtome.
    red,        "Well, maybe shock cooling from the soil took another,"
     to       Blakey admitted miserably. "We won't know till we get
              her up, but it's no more than three days' work with the
    ter,      locals to help."
    hat         I noticed that one of the Federation personnel was a
    tion.     petite woman who'd cropped her brunette hair short. She
    ely,      nervously watched the byplay among her captors, gripping
    etal      her opposite shoulders with her well-formed hands.

    




                  42             David Drake
    
    AIF             I wondered if we'd be on Decades longer than thi
                  days. Although a great deal could happen in three day
                    "Look here, Ricimer! " boomed Hawtry as he stepped
                  the porch in a determination to use bluster where cama
                  derie had failed. "The Molts that have escaped from h(
                  they loot the ships that crash into the swamps. There
                  been hundreds, over the years, and the Molts have
                  the treasure cached in one place. That's the real valu(
                  Decades!"
                    Ricimer turned his head to look at Hawtry. I couli
                  see his eyes, but the six gentlemen stepping from the p(
                  to follow lurched to a halt.
                    "The real value of Decades, Mister Hawtry," Rid
                  said in a tone without overt emotion, "was to be the tj
                  ing it gave our personnel in discipline and obedienc
                  orders."
                    Ricimer turned to the men who'd accompanied him
                  the flagship. "Dole," he said mildly, "find the commu
                  tions center here and inform the Absalom and Kinso
                  to land within the perimeter. Oh-and see if you can
                  Guillermo aboard the Porcelain to tell them that we
                  control of the base."
                    "I'll go with him," I volunteered in a light voic
                  I'm good with electronics."
                    "Yes," Ricimer said. "Do it."
                    Dole didn't move. I started toward the administ
                  building as an obvious place to look for the radios. St
                  Gregg laid a hand on the top of my shoulder A
                  looking away from Ricimer and the gentlemen bi
                  I stopped and swallowed.
                    Ricimer swiveled back to the Mizpah's captain.
                  Blakey," he said. "You'll leave repairs to the Miz
                  the charge of your navigator. You'll proceed imme
                  to the Porcelain, in company with Mister Hawtry
                  other gentlemen adventurers who were aboard the,
                  when you decided to ignore my orders."
                    "Lord take you for a fool, Ricimer!" Hawtry s
                  you think I'm going to rot in a swamp when-"
                    Gregg locked down his helmet visor with a,shar
                  The flashgun's dischar-ge was liable to blind anyoi

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH      43
    
           it without filters to protect his eyes. Dole snicked the
           bolt of his rifle back far enough to check the load, then
           closed it again. Others of Ricimer's longtime crewmen
           stood braced with ready weapons. A cutting bar whined
           as somebody made sure it was in good order.
             "There'll be no blasphemy in a force under my com-
           mand, Mister Hawtry," Ricimer said. Though his voice
           seemed calm, his face was pale with anger. "This time I
           will overlook it; and we'll hope the Lord, Who is our only
           hope for the success of these endeavors, will overlook it
           as well."
             Hawtry stepped backward, chewing on his lower lip.
           He wasn't a coward, but the muzzle of Gregg's,weapon
           was only two meters from his chest. A bolt at that range
           would spray his torso over hectares of swamp.
             Ricimer's posture eased slightly. He reached into his
           belt pouch, handed Blakey the compass from it, and re-
           sumed. "You will find the Porcelain on a reciprocal of
           this course. Tell Mister Salomon that your party will
           guard the vessel until we're ready to depart. The crew will
           be more comfortable here at the base, I'm sure."
             Hawtry let out a long, shuddering breath. "We'll need
           men to deal with the menial work," he said.
             Ricimer nodded. "If you care to pay sailors extra to act
           as servants," he said, "that's between you and them."
             Hawtry glanced over his shoulder at the accompany-
           ing gentlemen. Without speaking further, the group sidled 0
           away in the direction of the Mizpah and the gear they'd
           left aboard her.
             Gregg opened his visor. His face had no expression.
    r        Dole plucked at my sleeve. "Let's get along and find
           the radio room, sir," the bosun said. "You know, I thought
           things were going to get interesting for a moment there."
    e        I tried to smile but couldn't. I supposed I should be
           thankful that I could walk normally.
             1v
             I tr

    




                                DECADES
    
                   Day 8
    
    49":           1 turned at the console to look out the window of the com-
                   mo room. Halfway across the compound, male prisoners
                   from the Decades garrison and the damaged freighter were
                   unloading spoiled stores from the Absalom 231. With my
                   left hand I picked a section from the half orange while my
                   right fingers typed code into the numeric keypad.
                   "That's it!" said Lavonne. She'd been Officer III (Com-
                   munications) Cartier when Decades Station was under,
                   Federation control. "You've got the signal, Jeremy!"
                   "Thanks to you and this wonderful equipment," I added
                   warmly, patting my hand toward Lavonne without quite
                   touching her. I pursed my lips as I looked over the console
                   display. "Now if only the Mizpah's hardware weren't 9
                   generation past the time it should've been scrapped . . ."
                   The console showed the crew emptying the hulk, from
                   the viewpoint of the port-side optical sensors in the Mizpah's J
                   hull. Occasionally some of the Venerians and Molts replac- il
                   ing the Mizpah's damaged thrusters came in sight at the
                   lower edge of the display, oblivious of the fact they were
                   being electronically observed. Because the Mizpah's sen-
                   sors only updated the image six times a second, the picture
                   was grainy and figures moved in jerks.
                                                   - orani,
                   Lavonne stripped the fascia from one of the
                   sections I'd handed her, using her fingers and the tip of a
                   small screwdriver. "Why, we could connect all the tower
                   optics with this!" she said in pleased wonder. "Superm-
                   tendent Burr keeps worrying that one day the Molts on,
                   guard will decide to let in the wild tribes from the swamp.
    
                                     44

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      45
    
             But someone could watch what's going on in the towers
             from here."
               Several people came up the stairs from the lower level
             of the admin building, talking among themselves. I'd left
             the commo room's door ajar, though I'd made sure the
             panel could be locked if matters with Lavonne proceeded
             faster than I expected.
               "Ah-it's Molts that you're afraid of," I said, "and you
             use Molts for guards?"
               "Well, the ones who've been trained to work for humans
             are trustworthy, I suppose," the woman said defensively.
             "Freshly caught ones used to escape from the holding pens
    rs       while the ships carrying them laid over here."   Oil
    re
    iY         She bent past me to tap the screen where a comer of
    iY       the inner compound was visible past the cargo hulk. Elec-
             trified wire surrounded thatch-roofed wooden racks. If it
             hadn't been for the voices in the hallway, I'd have taken
    1-
    tr       up the offer implicit in Lavonne's posture.
               "That was years ago," she added, straightening. "They
    ~d       can't get out of the station now that the perimeter's fenced
             too."
    te         The door opened. Piet Ricimer stepped in, his head
    le
    a        turned to catch Gregg's voice:                who on Duneen's
    11       staff was paid to load us with garbage in place of the
    m        first-quality stores we were charged for."
    Is         I jumped to my feet, knocking my knees on the con-
    c-       sole. Macquerie and Guillermo entered behind Ricimer
             and his aide. I'd learned to recognize Guillermo from the
    ,ie
             yellowish highlights of his chitin and his comparatively          11E
    re
             narrow face. It was odd to think of the aliens as having
    n-
    re       personalities, though.
               "I've, ah, been connecting the squadron's optics through
             the console, here, Ricimer," I said. "Ah-save for the Por-
    ge
             celain; I'd have to be aboard her to set the handshake."
    a
    ,er        I was nervous. What I'd done here had been at my own
     .n-
              whim; and there was the matter of Lavonne, not that things
              there had come to fruition. Birth in a factorial family made
     Dn
              me the social superior of the general commander, but I
     ip.
              hadn't needed Hawtry's humiliation to teach me that the
              reality here was something else again.

    




    46            David Drake
    
     Ricimer glanced at the display. "From the Mizpah?"
    said. "I'm delighted, Moore."
     Gregg offered me a bleak grin over the general cop
    mander's shoulder. Lavonne, who'd moved toward a cc
    ner when the command group entered, eyed the big m:
    speculatively. There were things about women that I wou
    never understand.
     "I was surprised to find you aboard after we lifted of
    Ricimer commented. "Stephen explained, though; an(
    can see that you'd be an asset in any case." ,
     "I, ah, regret the inconvenience I've caused," I sai(
    nodded to the pilot. I'd tried to avoid Macquerie thus
    during the voyage, but a starship was close confinerr
    for all those aboard her. If there was going to be trot
    between us, best it happen under the eyes of Ricimc
    and more particularly Gregg.
     Macquerie smiled wryly. "My own fault not to woi
    why somebody was buying me drinks, Mister Moore,
    said. Unlike the others, Macquerie respected me for
    birth. "Anyway, Captain Ricimer says he'll put me d
    on Os Sertoes with my in-laws."
     A white asterisk pulsed at the upper comer of the s(
    as Macquerie spoke. I noticed it from the comer o
    eye. The icon might have been there for some while
    I didn't have any notion of what it meant.
     I opened my mouth to call a question to Lavonne. B
    I spoke, Guillermo reached an oddly-jointed arm pa
    and touched a sequence of keys. Captain Blakey, his i
    streaked by static, snarled, "Come in, somebody, isn'i
    anybody on watch on this God damned planet?"
     Piet Ricimer put his left hand on my shoulder, g
    me out of the way so that he could take over the cc
    The general commander's grip was like iron. If F(
    tated, he would have flung me across the radio roc
     "I'm here, Captain Blakey," Ricimer said.
     The static thinned visibly with each passing moi
    recognized the pattern. Thrusters expelled plasma,
    stripped of part or all of their electron charge. The (
    radiated across the entire radio frequency spectrui
    harmonics as it reabsorbed electrons from the surr(

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      47
    
              atmosphere. A thruster was firing in the vicinity of the
              Porcelain 
               "Mister Hawtry's taken the cutter!" Blakey said. "He
              and the others, they're sure they know where Molt treasure
              is and they've gone off to get it. They have a map!"
    in         "Do you know where-" Ricimer began.
    Id
               Blakey cut him off. "I don't know where they're going,"
              he blurted. "I wouldn't go, sir, I refused! But they got two
              of the sailors to fly the cutter for them, and now there's
              nobody aboard the ship but me and the other four sailors
              they brought. I tried to stop them, but they wouldn't even
    far       let me to the radio to warn you, sir."
    ent        "We can't call the cutter while its thruster's operating,"
              Gregg said. "Not that the damned fools would listen to
    ble
              us.
               "Outside of the plateau the station's on . . ." Captain
              Macquerie said grimly. "I know, you think it's a swamp,
    der
    'he       but it's the only solid ground on the continent. Five klicks
    MY        in any direction from the station, it's soup. It maybe won't
    )wn       swallow them, but they'll play hell unclogging their noz-
              zles to lift off again."
    Wn         My face grew still as glass; my mind considered the
    MY        capabilities of the console built to the standards of the
    and       chip-rich North American Federation. The cutter's motor
              created RF hash that would smother normal attempts at
              communication, but that meant the thruster itself was a
    ,fore     signal generator.
    t me       "The superintendent got the map years ago from an old
    nage
              drunk in the maintenance section," Lavonne volunteered.
    there
              "He really believes it, Burr does. But even if it was real,
              it'd be suicide to go so far outside the base."
    iding
    isole.     I changed displays to a menu, then changed screens
              again. A jagged line drew itself across a display gridded
    hesi-
              with kilometer squares and compass points. "There's a
              range and vector," I said to the room in general. "I don't
    lent. I   have terrain data to underlay."
    atoms      The track quivered into a tight half-circle and stopped.
              The thruster had been shut off. The terminus was a little
    (haust
              over ten kilometers from the screen's reference point-
    with      the console itself.
    inding
                                                             no

    




    48            David Drake
    
    Ricimer nodded and said crisply to Guillermo, "Alarm?"
    The Molt entered a four-stroke command without both-
    ering to call up a menu. One of Guillermo's ancestors, per-
    haps more than a thousand years before, had been trained
    to use a console of similar design. That experience, geneti-
    cally imbedded, permitted the Molt to use equipment thai
    he himself had never seen before. A four-throated hom h
    the roof of the admin building began to whoop Hoo-Hee
    Hoo-Hee!
     So long as men depended on Molts and pre-Collaps
    factories to provide their electronics, there would be n
    advance on the standards of that distant past. I was or
    of the few people---even on Venus-who believed the
    could be improvement on the designs of those bygoi
    demigods.
     I reached between Ricimer and Guillermo to key a seri
    of commands through the link I had added to the syste
    The Kinsolving's siren and the klaxon on the Mizpah add
    their tones to the Fed hooter. Absalom 231 didn't have
    alarm, or much of anything else.
     Ricimer flashed me a smile of appreciation and amu
    ment. Stephen Gregg's mouth quirked slightly also,
    the big gentleman's face was settling into planes of mu~
    over bone, and his eyes-
     I looked away.
     When Ricimer nodded to Guillermo, the Molt ent
    fresh commands into the console. The hooter and I
    on shut off, and the Kinsolving's siren began to
    down.
     "This is the general commander," Ricimer said,
    voice boomed from the alarm horns; the tannoys c
    three Venerian ships should be repeating the words as
    "All Porcelains report armed to the cargo hulk. C,
    Winter, march your Kinsolvings at once to the flal
    Other personnel, guard the station here and await f
    orders."
     Ricimer rose from the console in a smooth moti(
    swept me with him toward the door. Gregg was in th
    Guillermo and Macquerie bringing up the rear, U
    gaped at us. Her confusion was no greater than m,

    




                      THROUGH THE BREACH      49
    
           "But the Absalom,Captain?" Macquerie said. "Sure
           ly 
           "The Mizpah can't lift, the Kinsolving with the feath
           erboats aboard won't hold but thirty or forty men," said
           Stephen Gregg in a voice as high and thin as a contrail
           in the stratosphere. His boots crashed on the stair treads.
           "The hulk's half empty. This is a job for troops, not can-
           non. If it's a job for anyone at all."
           "We can't abandon them, Stephen," Piet Ricimer said,
           snatching up his breastplate from the array in the build-
           ing's entrance hall.
           The others, all but the Molt, were grabbing their own
           arms and equipment. I supposed my cutting bar was some
           where in the hardware, but I didn ' t have any recollection of
           putting it in a particular place. Guillerino wore a holstered
           pistol on hispink sash, but the weapon was merely a
           symbol.
           "Can't we, Piet?" Gregg said as he settled the visored
           helmet over his head. "Well, it doesn't matter to me."
           I thoughtI understood the implications of Gregg's
           words; and if I did, they were as bleak and terrible as
       J   the big gunman's eyes.
           "Stand by!" Piet Ricimer called from the control bench of
           the Absalom 231.
           "Stand by!" Dole shouted through a bullhorn as he stood
           at the hatch in the cockpit/hold bulkhead. The bosun braced
    d      his boots and his free hand against the hatch coaming. A
           short rifle was slung across his back.
    S      Most of the eighty-odd spacers aboard the hulk were
    e      packed into the hold,standing beside or on the pallets
    1.     of stores that hadn't yet been dumped. At least half the
    n      food we'd loaded at Betaport was moldy or contaminated.
    P.     Fortunately, the warehouses at Decades were stocked in
    er     quantities to supply fleets of the 500-tonne vessels which
           carried the Federation's cargoes.
    nd     I was crowded into the small crew cabin with about a
    d,     dozen other men. I gripped the frame of the bunk folded
    ne     against the bulkhead behind me. I had to hold the cutting
           bar between my knees, because its belt clip was broken.

    




    50            David Drake
    
     The hulk's thrusters lit at half throttle, three nozzles and
    then all four together. The moment of unbalanced thrust
    made the shoddy vessel lurch into a violent yaw whicb
    corrected as Ricimer's fingers moved on the controls.
     "If he hadn't shut off the autopilot," Jeude grumbled tc
    my right, "the jets'd have switched on about quick enougf
    to flip us like a pancake. Which is what we'd all be whet
    this pig hit."
     "If he hadn't shut off the autopilot," said Lightbody t,
    my left, "he wouldn't be our Mister Ricimer. He'll get u
    out of this."
     The tone of the final sentence was more pious th.9
    optimistic.
     The Absalom 231 lifted from its bobbling hover
    become fully airborne. The roar of the motors with
    the single-hulled vessel deafened me, but flight was mui
    smoother than the liftoff had been.
     "Say, sir," Jeude said to me, "wouldn't you like a rif
    sir? Or maybe a flashgun like your friend Mister Gregg
     "I've never fired a gun," I shouted in reply to the soli
    tous spacer. Your friend Mister Gregg. Did Gregg an
    have friends, either one of us?
     "I thought all you gentlemen trained for the milit'
    Lightbody said with a doubtful frown. He held a doul
    barreled shotgun, perhaps the one he'd had when guar~
    access to the Porcelain. Bandoliers of shells in indivi(
    loops crossed his chest.
     "Well, don't worry about it, Mister Moore," Jeude
    cheerfully, "A bar's really better for a close-in du
    anyway."
     Someone in the hold-most of them, it must be t
    heard in the cabin-was singing. is our God, a
    wark never failing."
     Macquerie and Guillermo peered from either side
    Ricimer's shoulders to see the hulk's rudimentary na
    tional display. The Molt had downloaded data fror
    base unit to the Absalom 231 before leaving the cc
    room. I couldn't guess how fast we were traveling
    hulk wallowed around its long axis. No starship was i
    for atmospheric flight, and this flimsy can less than

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH      51
    
    d           Gregg stood behind the general commander, but he
    st          didn't appear interested in the display. He glanced back,
    ch          his face framed by helmet, and noticed me. Gregg bent
               down and touched the sliding switch on the hilt of my
               cutting bar.
    to
                "That's the power switch," Gregg said, speaking with
     gh
               exaggerated lip movements instead of bellowing the words.
     en
               "Click it forward to arm the trigger."
     to         I laid my thumb on the switch. "Thank you," I said.
     us        My mouth was dry.
                Gregg shrugged and straightened again.
                "There it is!" Macquerie shouted. "There it is, a penta-
    than       gon, and there's the cutter!"
       to       "Stand by!" Dole cried, his amplified voice a dim shad-
               ow as thruster noise doubled by reflection from the ground.
    ithin
               The men in the hold couldn't hear the bosun's warning, but
       ch
               the changed exhaust note was as much notice as veteran
    fifle,      spacers needed.
    gg?99                                             The Absalom 231 lurched, wobbled, and swung an
    olici-      unexpected 30' on its vertical axis. Jeude grabbed me
               as centrifugal force threw me forward.
    and I
                The hulk hit with a sucking crash. My shoulders banged
               into the bed frame behind me, but I didn't knock my
    litia,"
               head.
     uble
                More people than me had trouble with the landing. Two
    arding
    vidual     of the sailors in the cockpit lost their footing, and the
               clangor of equipment flying in the hold sounded like some-
    e said     one was flinging garbage cans.
    dustuP          "Move! Move! Move"' Dole shouted. Gregg was at the
               cockpit's external hatch, spinning the manual undogging
     to be     wheel more powerfully than a hydraulic pump could have
    a bul-       done the job.
                 My bar had spun away at the landing. Lightbody
    e over     retrieved the weapon as Jeude hustled me forward with a
               hand on my elbow. "Think that was bad," Jeude remarked,
    naviga-    "you'll appreciate it when you ride in a hulk with anybody
    om the     else piloting."
     commo       Gregg 'umped out the hatch, his shoulders hunched and
    ng. The         J
    s meant    the fl i ashgun cradled in both hands. Piet Ricimer followed,
    an most.   wearing a beret and carrying a repeating carbine. "For God
                                                              HN
    
                                                               ij I
                                                             117

    




    52            David Drake
    
    and Venus!" he cried. Guillermo leaped clumsily next, ha
    pushed by a sailor named Easton who followed him.
     Lightbody cleared the hatchway, his shotgun at hi~
    port. The opening was before me. The ground was mete
    below; I couldn't tell precisely how far. The vegetati(
    was similar to what we'd seen on the trek from the Po
    celain to the Federation base, but it seemed lusher. Hul
    leaves waved in the near distance, hiding the figures w]
    brushed their supporting trunks.
     I jumped with my eyes closed. A leaf slapped my fa
    and tore like wet paper.
     I landed and fell over when my right leg sank to the kn
    in soupy mud. I could see for five meters or so between I
    stems in most directions, though the broad leaves wer(
    low ceiling overhead. The trees rose from pads of surf,
    roots. Between the roots, standing water alternated w
    patches of algae as colorful as an oil slick.
     I struggled upright. My left boot was on firmer grot
    than the right, though I couldn't tell the difference visua
    I saw a group of figures ahead and struggled toward th(
    Jeude hit with a muddy splash and a curse.
     "Easton, what's the line?" Piet Ricimer demanded.
    pudgy sailor bent over an inertial compass the size
    his hand.
     The swamp was alive with chirps and whoopin,-
    hadn't noticed anything like the volume of sound ne
    the base. I sank into a pool hidden by orange weed fl
    ing in a mat on its surface. Lightbody reached back
    grabbed me.
     A lid lifted from the ground at Easton's feet. The un
    side of the lid had a soft, pearly sheen like the ill
    membrane of an egg; the hole beyond was covered
    a similar coating to keep the wet soil from collapsing.
    Molt in the spiderhole rammed a spear up into East
    abdomen.
     The fat Venerian screamed and dropped the com]
    Gregg shot the Molt at point-blank range with his flast
    The alien's plastron disintegrated in a white glare a
    shock wave that jolted me a step backward. Shards oi
    tin stripped surrounding leaves to the bare veins.

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      53
    
    f          Easton lurched three steps forward until the spear
              protruding from his belly tripped him. He fell on his
    h         face, his legs thrashing against the soft dirt.
    S          Jeude turned and fired. I couldn't see his target, if there
    n         was one. Screams and shots came from the direction of
    r-        the hulk's rear loading ramp.
    ge         Piet Ricimer picked up the compass, wiped its face on
    ho        his sleeve, and checked a line.
               Gregg slung his flashgun. He hadn't had time to lower
    e         the filtering visor, so he must have closed his eyes to avoid
              being blinded by his own bolt. Easton carried a rifle. Gregg
    ee        pulled it and the bandolier of ammunition from the body
    the       which still trembled with a semblance of life.
    e a        "Guillermo," Ricimer ordered coolly as he dropped the
    ace       compass in his purse, "go back to the ship and sound
    ith       recall with the bullhorn. The rest of you, follow me to
              the cutter!"
    und        He swung the barrel of his carbine forward, pointing
    Ily -     the way for his rush. Another spiderhole gaped beside
    em.       him. Lightbody and Gregg fired simultaneously, ripping
              the Molt with buckshot and a bullet before the creature
    The      was halfway into its upward lunge.
    e of                                                        Ricimer vanished beyond a veil of dropping leaves. The
              others were following him. I stumbled forward, terrified of
    g. I       being left behind. The only thing I was conscious of was
    earer      Gregg's back, two meters in front of me. Guns fired and
    float-     I heard the whine of a cutting bar, but the foliage baffled
    and       sound into a directionless ambience.
               I burst out of the trees. A swath of bare soil bubbled
    nder-      and stank where the cutter's'motor had cleared it while
    inner      landing.
     with      The boat itself lay at a skew angle five meters away. A
      The     human, one of the sailors who'd accompanied the gentle-
    ston's     men exiled to the Porcelain, lay beside the vessel. A Molt 0
              of olive coloration leaned from the cutter's dorsal hatch,
    pass.     pointing a rifle.
    shgun.     Ricimer shot the Molt and worked the underlever of
    and a     his repeater. Ten more aliens with spears and metal clubs
    of chi-   rushed us from the opposite side of the clearing. I was the
              man closest to them.

    




                    54            David Drake
                     "Watch it!" somebody shouted. A rifle slammed, but
                    none of the Molts went down.
                     I swept my bar around in the desperation of a man trying
                    to bat away a stinging insect. I tugged at the trigger but the
                    blade didn't spin. The ceramic edge clinked on the shaft
                    of a mace hammered from the alloy hull of a starship.
                    Another Molt thrust a metal-tipped spear at my crotch.
                     "The power switch, you whore's cunt!" Stephen Gregg
                    bellowed as he butt-stroked the Molt spearman, then thrust
                    the blunt muzzle of his rifle into the wedge-shaped skull
                    of the alien with the mace. A ruptured cartridge gleamed
                    partway out of the rifle's chamber, jamming Gregg's
                    weapon until there was time to pick the case out with
                    a knifepoint.
                     Lightbody fired. Jeude was reloading his rifle; Ricimer
                    had dropped to one knee, pumping rounds into Molts who
                    were too close to miss.
                     I found the power switch and thumbed it violently. My
                    index finger still tugged on the trigger. The torque of the
                    live blade almost snatched the weapon from my grasp.
                     One of the aliens was twice the size of the others. HeJ
                    shambled forward with an axe in either hand. Bullets
                    smashed two, then three dribbling holes in his chest.
                     Gregg clubbed another spearman. He held his rifle by
                    one hand on the barrel while he tried to untangle the
    et              flashgun's sling with the other. The big Molt lunged close
                    to Gregg and brought an axe down.
                     I stepped forward, focused on what I was doing and
                    suddenly oblivious of the chaos around me. My cutting
                    bar screamed through the steel axe-helve in a shower of
                    sparks.
                     Somebody fired so close that the muzzle flash scorched
                    my sleeve. I ignored it, continuing the stroke. The blade's
                    spin carried it through the Molt's triangular head and into
                    the torso. Brownish ichor sprayed from the wound.
                     Motion, more Molts beyond the toppling body of the
                    giant. I couldn't see out of my left eye. I stepped over the
                    Molt thrashing in front of me and cut at the next withoul
                    letting up on the bar's trigger. The Molt tried to club me.
                    but I was within the stroke. The shaft, not the studded tip,

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     55
    
    t        of the club gashed my forehead.
               The Molt's head and club arm fell to one side while the
    9        remainder of the corpse toppled the other way. I followed
    e        the cutting bar's edge toward another alien, but that one
             was already flailing, its plastron shattered by a charge of
             buckshot.
    P.
               I turned, looking for Molts. They were all down. I
    9        hacked at the alien giant, tearing a wide gouge down
    st       his carapace. Nerve trauma sent the creature into another
             series of convulsions.
    ed         Somebody grabbed me from behind. I twisted to bring
    g 'S       my howling bar back over my head. A hand closed over
    ith      mine. Gregg's thumb switched off the cutting bar.
               "I've got him!" Gregg said. "It's all right, Moore."
    er         Ricimer wiped my face with a swatch torn from the tail
    ho       of his own red plush tunic. I could see again; I'd been
             blinded by fluids from the Molt I'd cut apart.
    MY         Jeude looked all right. Lightbody was breathing hard.
    the      He'd opened the breeches of his shotgun, but he hadn't
             inserted the reloads ready between the fingers of his left
             hand. There was a bloody tear in his tunic.
    He
               "Into the cutter, now!" Ricimer ordered as he jogged
    Ilets
             drunkenly toward the small vessel.
               All personnel return to the ship!" crackled an amplified
    by
    the      voice. Through the bullhorn, Guillermo's mechanically
    ose      precise tones were indistinguishable from the voice of a
             human speaker. "All Porcelains return to the ship!"
    and        "Piet, watch-" Gregg shouted as Ricimer gripped the
             coaming of the cutter's dorsal hatch with his left hand and
    tting
    er of      leaped upward. Ricimer held the repeater like a pistol in
             his right hand, aiming it ahead of him as he swung into
      hed    the hatchway. The wham of the rifleshot within the cabin
    ade's      was duller but hugely amplified compared to the blast it
             made in the open air. Ricimer dropped into the vessel.
    d into
               "Get him!" Gregg ordered as he bent to pick up the
    qf the   rifle dropped by the Molt shot in the cutter.
    er the     I didn't realize I was "him" until Dole and Jeude gripped
    ithout   me by opposite arms and half hoisted, half heaved me into
    b me,    the cutter's roof hatch. I grabbed the coaming as I went
             over so that at least I didn't hit like a sack of grain.
    ed tip,  OW
    e I

    




    56            David Drake
    
     Ricimer was in the seat forward. Two Molts and a
    human lay dead in the cabin. The human had been gutted
    like a trout.
     Jeude, Lightbody, and Dole leaped into the cabin in
    quick succession. Three of the attitude jets snarled, rock-
    ing the cutter to starboard. Lightbody sprawled against the
    side of the cabin. His eyes were open but not animated.
    I wondered if the spacer's wound was more serious than
    the surface gash it appeared to be.
     Ricimer glanced over his shoulder as Gregg boarded,
    his breastplate crashing against the coaming. The cutter's
    single plasma motor lighted with a bang and a spray of
    mud in all directions from the hull.
     The vessel hopped forward from the initial pulse, then
    lifted in true flight as Ricimer relit the thruster. The initial
    cough of plasma had cleared mud from the nozzle so that
    the motor could develop full power without exploding
     Stephen Gregg braced his legs wide, leaning outw~d
    from the dorsal hatch. His rifle's muzzle lifted in a puff
    of white propellant gases. The blast was lost in the roar
    of the thruster.
     Gregg dropped the rifle back into the cabin behind him
    without looking; Dole slapped the grip of his own weapon
    into Gregg's open hand. The big gunman aimed ag~n.
    Jeude reached forward to take Ricimer's repeater and five
    cartridges from a pocket of the bandolier the general com-
    mander wore over his body armor.
     I stood beside Gregg, gripping the coaming with my
    free hand to keep from being flung away by the cutter's
    violent maneuvering. I still held the cutting bar. The ichor
    sliming the blade had dried to a saffron hue.
     Gregg fired. A Molt twisting through shrubbery forty
    meters away toppled on its face.
     The Molt was visible because Ricimer reined the cutter in
    tight circles only five meters above the soggy ground. The
    thruster's plasma exhaust devoured plants directly below
    the nozzle and wilted the foliage of those ten meters to
    either side.
     Ricimer dropped the little vessel almost to the soil. A
    dozen puffs of vapor fountained from the surrounaing

    




                        THROUGH THE BREACH     57
    
        vegetation, some of them forty meters away. The nearer
        plumes were iridescent plasma, the more distant ones
        steam. Piet had set down directly on a spiderhole. The
    n   exhaust blasted through all the passages connected with
        th initial target. Molts anywhere in that portion of the
    tuenne I system were incinerated.
        Gregg shot, using Ricimer's repeater. He shifted as he
    ~n  worked the lever action, never taking the butt from his
    shoulder, and fired again.
    d,  The cutter rotated vertiginously as well as porpoising
    's  up and down. I couldn't see the Molts in the foliage until
    Of  Gregg's bullets slapped them into their death throes, but
    the gunman didn't appear to waste a shot.
    en  A -ray streak splashed itself on the yellowed ceramic
    ial hull near where I stood. I gaped at it for a moment ~before
    ,at I realized a bullet had struck and ricocheted harmlessly.
        The goal that drew Hawtry and his fellows was a stone
    ird platform less than five meters across. Foliage curtained all
    uff but the center of the structure. Macquerie must have been
    Dar looking at a radar image to tell that it was a pentagon.
        Ricimer swept the cutter at a walking pace along the
    lim side away from the Absalom 231, fifty meters distant. He
    pon was avoiding men from the group in the hold who might
    ain.                                         have fought their way toward the target. Searing exhaust
    five                                         wilted enough vegetation to show a doorway in one face
    Dm_ of the building. A Molt flopped in tetanic convulsions
        nearby, its carapace the deep red of a boiled lobster.
       myRicimer set the cutter down on ground which plasma
      w'shad baked on an earlier pass. He jumped up from the
     chorcontrols, shouting, "Dole, radio the hulk and bring the
    men back!"
    fortyRicimer snatched a rifle the bosun had just reloaded.
        Gregg hoisted his buttocks onto the hatch coaming, swung
    ter inhis legs over and dropped, ignoring the steps and hand
    heholds formed into the outer hull.
    eow
    T         I tried to follow and instead tumbled sideways. The
    ~rs to   ground was still spongy enough to cushion my landing.
              Thomas Hawtry stepped out of the stone structure, hold-
    )II. A   ing a rifle. He'd lost his helmet, and a powerful blow had
    ading    crazed -the surface of his breastplate.
    
     ivy
       'o
                nd
                oma
              gr~
    
       A      ing
       Ig     crazed th,

    




    58            David Drake
    
     "We've found the treasure, Ricimer!" Hawtry called
    in attempted triumph. His face was white and his voice
    cracked in mid-sentence. "And an idol that we'll destroy
    in the Lord's name!"
     "You others, keep guard," Ricimer ordered curtly as he
    strode toward the Molt temple. Coos came through the
    doorway behind Hawtry. Ricimer pushed him aside and
    went within.
     Gregg followed Ricimer; I followed Gregg. I walked
    almost without volition, drifting after the leaders as thistle-
    down trails a moving body.
     The temple's floor was set three steps below the ground
    surface. The walls were corbeled inward, enclosing a great-
    er volume than I'd expected from the size of the roof.
     A Venerian battery lamp illuminated the interior. A
    spindle of meteoritic iron, twenty kilos or so in weight,
    rested on a stone pedestal in the center. Microchips-
    sacked, boxed, and loose-were piled in profusion on
    low benches along the walls. A silver starburst marked
    some of the containers, indicating the chips within were
    purpose-built: new production from pre-Collapse factories
    operating under Federation control.
     Six gentlemen stared at us, their saviors. Saha
                                                                     911
    clasped his hands together in prayer; Delray's face was
    as pale as ivory. Four were seriously wounded. The three
    missing men must be dead, unless they'd had sense enoulo
    to stay aboard the Porcelain.
     A Molt in a loose caftan lay face-up on the stone floon~
    I didn't remember having previously seen a Molt wearine
    more than a sash. The alien had been shot at least a dozen
    times. Judging from the smell, someone had then urinated
    on the body.
     Salomon appeared at the door to the temple, holding
    cutting bar. "I left Macquerie in charge aboard the shipj
    he said. "Say, there is a fortune here!"
     "We'll need stretchers," said Piet Ricimer. His voice
    was colorless.
     "I've got blankets coming," the navigator said. "We c
    use rifles for poles. Any Molts left are keeping out of
    way for now."
        




                 DECADES
    
    Day 11
    
    The garrison of Decades Station had mobile floodlights to
    illuminate threatened portions of the perimeter if the wild
    Molts should attack. Two banks of them threw a white
    glare over the Porcelain's gathered crew. I stood at the
    rear of the assembly, feeling dissociated from my body.
     "By the grace of God, we have come this far," Piet
    Ricimer said. He spoke without amplification from the
    flagship's ramp. His clear, vibrant voice carried through
    the soft breeze and the chugging of the prime movers that
    powered the lights. "The coordinates of our next layover
    have been distributed to every captain and navigator. We
    won't have settled facilities there, so be sure to complete
    any maintenance requiring equipment we don't carry."
     The next layover would be Mocha, one of the Breach
    worlds. The Southefns occasionally laid over on Mocha,
    but there was no colony. Mocha's only permanent inhabit-
    ants were a handful of so-called Rabbits: hunter-gatherers
    descended from pre-Collapse settlers. Though remnant
    populations like Mocha's were scattered across the for-
    mer human sphere, none of them had risen to the level of
    barbarism.
     "We've gained a small success," Ricimer said. Stephen
    Gregg was a bulky shadow in the hold behind the general
    commander, out of the light. Dole and other of Ricimer's
    longtime followers stood at the foot of the ramp. Not a
    bodyguard, precisely, but-there.
     "We have also had losses," Ricimer said, "some of them
    unnecessary. Remember that success is with the Lord, but
    
                     60

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH     61
    
             that we owe to Him and to our fellows discipline as well
             as courage."
               Federation prisoners listened to the general comman-
             der's address from beyond the pool of light. We'd left
             them unguarded since the day we landed. When we lifted
             off in the morning, the Feds could carry on as they had
             before.
               I wondered if Lavonne was listening. After the hulk
             returned to the base, she'd been very . . . "understanding"
             would be the wrong word; Lavonne hadn't in the least
    0        understood my desperate need to return to life. But she'd
    d        done what she could, as much as anyone could who hadn't
    te       been there, and I thought it had been enough.
               I prayed it had been enough.
               "There'll be one personnel change on the next stage
    et       of the voyage," Ricimer said. "I'm transferring Mister
    e        Hawtry to the Absalom-"
    gh         "You'll do what, you little clown?" Thomas Hawtry
    at       bellowed as he pushed his way onto the loading ramp.
    er       He'd been standing in the middle of his coterie of gentle-
    e        men. He stepped forward alone.
    ete                                             "Mister Hawtry-" Ricimer said. Behind him, Stephen
             Gregg moved into the light, tall and as straight as a
    ach        knifeblade.
    ha,                                             "If you were a gentleman and not a potter's whelp,"
    it-        Hawtry cried, "I'd call you outl"
    rers                                            I slid forward through the crowd. My hands were
    lant       flexing.
    (or-                                            Gregg stepped in front of the general commander. He
             held a rifle muzzle-down along his right thigh. His face had
    I of
             no expression at all. "I'm a gentleman, Mister Hawtry,"
             he said.
     hen
               Hawtry stopped, his right foot resting on the ramp.
    eral       Greg- pointed his left index finger at Hawtry. "And take
    er's
    ot a     your hat off when you address the general commander,"
             Gregg said. His voice had a fluting lightness, terrible to
    them     hear. "As a mark of respect.,,
     but       "Stephen," Ricimer said. He lifted a hand toward
             Greog's shoulder but didn't touch the bigger man. "I'll
             handle this."
    
                                                              -womb-
                                                              4

    




    62            David Drake
    
     "Mister Hawtry," Gregg said. He didn't shout, but his
    tone pierced the night like an awl. "I won't warn you
    again."
     I reached the front of the assembly. Easy to do, sinceJ
    men were edging back and to either side. Ricimer's vet-
    erans formed a tight block in the center.
     Hawtry wasn't a coward, I knew that. Hawtry stared
    at Gregg, and at Ricimer's tense face beyond that of the
    gunman. Hawtry could obey or die. It was as simple as
    that. As well argue with an avalanche as Gregg in this
    mood.
     Hawtry snatched off his cap, an affair of scarlet a,
    gold lacework. He crushed it in his hands. "Your pardon,
    Mister Ricimer," he said. The words rubbed each other
    like gravel tumbling.
     Gregg stepped aside. He looked bored, but there was a,
    sheen of sweat on his forehead.
     "There will be no duels during this expedition," Piet
    Ricimer said. His tone was fiery, but his eyes were focused
    on the far distance rather than the assembly before hit*
    "We are on the Lord's business, reopening the stars to
    His service. If anyone fights a duel-"
     Ricimer put his hand on Gregg's shoulder and turned
    the bigger man to face him. Gregg was the dull wax of
    a candle, and his friend was a flame.
     "If anyone fights a duel," Ricimer said. "Is that under-
    stood?"
     Gregg dropped to one knee before the general commill
    der. He rotated his right wrist so that the rifle was behind
    him, pointing harmlessly into the flagship's hold. i
     Ricimer lifted him. Gregg stepped back into the shadi
    ows again. "If anyone fights a duel," Ricimer repeated
    but the fierceness was gone from his voice, "then N
    surviving parties will be left at the landfall where 6
    offense against the Lord occurred. There will be no excep
    tions."
     He looked out over us. The assembly gave a collectivi
    sigh.
     Ricimer knelt down. "Let us pray," he said, tenting hi,
    hands before him.
        




                        THROUGH THE BREACH      63
    
             Decades Station had barracks to accommodate more tran-
             sients than the whole of the Venerian force. One of the
             blocks was brightly illuminated. In it, spacers with a flute,
             a tambourine, and some kind of plucked string instrument
             were playing to a crowd.
               I sat on the porch of the administration building across
             the way, wondering if any of the Federation women were
             inside with our men.
    ~s         Lavonne would be waiting for me in her quarters. I'd
             go to her soon. As soon as I calmed down.
    [d         ". . . could stick them all in the hulk," said a voice
    n,       from the darkness. Footsteps crunched along the path. Two
    er       sailors were sauntering toward the party. "None of them
             gentlemen's worth a flying fuck."
    a          "Well, they're not much good for real work," said a
             second voice, which I thought might be Jeude's. "Get into
    ,et        a fight, though, they can be something else again."
    ed         "Gregg?" said the first voice. "I give you that."
    al.                                            "I swear the new fellow, Moore, he's as bad," replied
    to       might-be-Jeude. The pair were past the porch now, con-
             tinuing up the path. "Straight into a dozen Molts, no armor,
    red        nothing but a bar."
    of         "Likes to get close, huh?"
               "He didn't even stop when they were dead!" the sec-
    er-        ond man said, his voice growing fainter with increasing
             distance. "I swear, Dorsey, you never saw anything like
    an-        it in your life."
    ind                                            My eyes were closed and I was shivering. After a time,
             I'm not sure how long, I stood shakily and began to walk
    ad-        toward the station's staff quarters.
    Led,
    t 'he
     the
     ~P_
    b is
    
        A!

    




                  MOCHA
    
    Day 37
    
    The mid-afternoon sun was so wan that stars were already
    out on the western horizon. At night they formed a sky-
    filling haze, too dense to be called constellations. The
    wind that swept across the ankle-high tundra was dank
    and chill.
     "There's one of them," I said. I started to raise my hand
    to point at the Rabbit sidling down the slope a kilometer
    away.
     The native didn't seem to be walking directly toward
    the ships on the shallow valley's floor. His track would
    bring him there nonetheless, as a moth spirals in on a
    flame.
     Piet Ricimer caught my arm before it lifted. "He'll think
    you're trying to shoot him," Ricimer said.
     "Yeah," Macquerie agreed. "No point in putting the
    wind up the little beasts. They can fling stones 6r,'#
    than you'd believe."
     A pump chuffed as it filled the Kinsolving with reaction
    mass from a Southern well we'd reopened the night before.
    The Southerns had also left a score of low shelters whose
    walls were made of the turf lifted when the interior was
    cut into the soil. The dwellings crawled with lice, so today
    some of our people were building similar huts at a distance
    from the originals.
     "There were a dozen Rabbits in the old Southern canV
    when we landed," Gregg muttered. "Where did they
     Macquerie shrugged. "Mostly they sleep in little tre
    without top cover," he said. "Hard to see unless you step
    
                     64

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH     65
    
          in one.Anyway, if they're gone, they aren't pilfering
          from us."
          "They can't take enough to harm us seriously," Ricimer
          said. "They're men like us. I won't have them treated as
          animals.17
          Macquerie sniffed and said, softly enough to be inored,
          "Hard to tell the difference, I'd say."
          Ricimer resumed walking toward the top of the slope.
          Distances were deceptively great on Mocha's treeless land
          scape. The surface rippled in shallow valleys separated by
          low ridges. Rare but violent storms cut raw gullies before
    ly    the torrents drained to impermeable rock layers from which
    Y_    the vegetation would in time lift the water again.
    he    "There's nothing on the other side different from here,
    ak    you know," Macquerie said.He was breathing harshly
          by now.
    nd    "I need the exercise," Ricimer said. He paused again and
    ,er   looked back. "Was this where Landolph landed, then?" he
          asked.
    rd    Macquerie and the general commander were unarmed.
    Jd    Gregg cradled his flashgun; the weight of the weapon and
    a     its satchel of spare batteries wasn't excessive to a man as
          strong as he was.
    ak    I carried a cutting bar. I'd known to pick one with a
          belt clip this time.
    he    "Yes,that's right," Macquerie agreed. "Since then,
      ter nobody touches down on Mocha unless there's a problem
          with the gradients into Os Sertoes. Once or twice a year,
       on that can happen."
      re. The Kinsolving's crew had off-loaded a featherboat and
      )Se were assembling it. Ricimer planned to use the light craft
      7as to probe the Breach without stressing one of the expedi
       -ay                   tion's larger vessels.
      ice "Three more of them," I said. "Rabbits, I mean." I lifted
          my chin in a quick nod toward mid-slope in the direction
      lip of the camp.
      ~T' The four of us must have passed within a few meters
      jes of where the natives had appeared. The Rabbits slouched
      tep along, apparently oblivious of the starships scattered in
          line for half a kilometer across the valley floor. One Rabbit
          ~a
               lin

    




                 66            David Drake
                 wore a belt twisted from the hides of burrowing animals;
                 another carried a throwing stick. Mocha's winds limited
                 the growth of plants above ground, but the vegetation had
                 sizable root systems.
                   "Some of them know Trade English," Macquerie said.
                   "From before the Collapse?" Gregg asked. I noticed that
                 the big man continued to scan the ridgeline above us while
                 we others were focused on the Rabbits.
                   Macquerie shrugged. "I don't have any idea," he said.
                   Piet Ricimer wore a cape of naturally-patterned wool.
                 He threw the wings back over his shoulders. The wind
                 was behind him now, though it was still cold enough for
                 me. "That's why what we're doing is important," Ricimer
                 said. "Those people."
                   "You're risking your life for the Rabbits?" Macquerie
                 said in amazement.
                   "For mankind, Captain," Ricimer said. His voice was
                 rich, his face exalted. "If man is to survive, as I believe
    AW           the Lord means him to, then we have to settle a thousand
                 Earths, a hundred thousand. There'll always be wars and
                 disasters. If we're confined to one star, to one planet real-
                 ly-when the next Collapse comes, it'll be for all mankind,
                 an
                  d forever."
                 "Earth has returned to the stars," I said. "The Feds and
                 the Southerns are out on hundreds of worlds between them.
                 They have no right to bar Venus from space-"
                 "Nor will they," Gregg said. His voice was as gray and
                 hard as an iron casting.
                  "-but they're there," I continued. "Mankind is."
                 "No," said Ricimer, speaking with the certainty of one
                 to whom the truth has been revealed. "What they're doing
                 is mining the stars and the past to feed the present whims of
                 tyrants. None of the settlements founded by the Federation
                 and the Southern Cross is as solid as the colony on Mocha
                 was before the Collapse. The destiny of mankind isn't to
                 scuttle and starve in a ditch on a hillside!"
                 Captain Macquerie cleared his throat doubtfully. "Do
                 you want to go on up the hill?" he asked.
                 Ricimer laughed. "I suppose we've seen what we needed
                 to see here," he said. The power informing his tones Of],

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH      67
    
    ds;        a moment before had vanished, replaced with a light
    ~ed        cheerfulness. "And had our exercise."
    kad          The distance back to the Porcelain looked farther than
               the ridge-still above them-had seemed from the vessel's
               ramp. "We're not here to found colonies," I said.
    hat          "Ah, we're here to bait the whole of mankind out to the
    iile       stars by bringing back treasure," Ricimer said.
                 He strung his laughter across the breeze like quicksilver
    tid.       on a glass table. "To break Earth's monopoly, so that there
    DOI.       won't be another revolt of outworlds against the home
     find      system, another Collapse              And quite incidentally, my
    for        friends, to make ourselves very wealthy indeed."
    mer          The trio of Rabbits glanced around, their attention drawn
    iene       by the chime of distant laughter.
    
    was
    ,ieve
    sand
    and
    real-
    dnd,
    
    and
    hem.
    
     and
    
    if one
    doing
    ms of
    ration
    4ocha
     ,t to
    
     "Do
    
                                      ieeded
                                      nes of
                                     
    
    




    0,;                          MOCHA
    
                   Day 38
    
                   1 lounged at the flagship's main display, watching
                   image of the floodlit featherboat transmitted from tl
                   Kinsolving's optics. A six-man crew had finished fittij
    X'             the featherboat's single thruster. Guillermo was still insi
                   the little vessel, setting up the electronics suite. Ricirr.
                   intended to take the vessel off exploring tomorrow or t
                   next day.
                   Trench-and-wall barracks had sprouted beside each
                   our ships. Plastic sheeting weighted with rocks formed I
                   roofs and sealed walls against the wind. The turf-and-stc
                   dwellings weren't much roomier than the ships, but tf
                   were a change after a long transit.
                   1 was alone aboard the Porcelain. I'd volunteered
                   communications watch, and I hoped to tie the featherboa
                   Ricimer had named it the Nathan-into the remote view
                   net I'd created.. No reason, really. Something to do I
                   only Jeremy Moore could do. The audio link was compt
                   but the Molt was still enabling the featherboat's extei
                   optics.
                   I had one orange left from the bags of citrus fruit m
                   loaded on Decades. It'd taste good now, and oranges d
                   keep forever ...
                   Boots scuffed in the amidships section. Somebod
                   several somebodies, from the sound of it-had ent
                   via the loading ramp to the hold.
                   Crewmen returning for personal items, I supposed. I
                   bored, but I didn't particularly want to chat with spo
                   who'd never read a book or a circuit diagram.
                     The hatch between the midships section and me ii
    
                                     68
     All 11

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     69
    
              bow was closed but not dogged. It opened for Thomas
              Hawtry, followed by Delray and Sahagun. I got up from
              the console.
                "We brought you some cheer, Jeremy," Hawtry said
              as he walked past the 17-cm cannon, locked in traveling
              position on its cradle. He was smiling brightly.
                Sahagun carried a square green bottle without a label.
              Delray held a repeating carbine; uncharacteristic for him
              to be armed, but perhaps they were worried about Rabbits
              in the starlit night.
                Hawtry held out his hand for me to shake. Holding-
    e         not quite seizing-my hand, Hawtry guided me away from
     9        the console. Delray stepped between me and the controls.
    de        The other four surviving gentlemen of Hawtry's coterie
     r
              entered the bow section.
     e
                Hawtry patted the back of my hand with his left finger-
     of       tips' then released me. "Sorry for the little deception,
     e        Jeremy," he said. His tone was full and greasy. "Didn't
    ne        want to have an accident with you bumping the alarm
     ey       button, because then something awkward would happen.
              That's it there, isn't it?"
                Hawtry nodded toward the console.
     for        "Yes," I said. "The red button at the top center."
                Coos wiggled the cage over the large button to make sure
     ing      it was clipped in place. He and Farquhar carried rifles also.
    that      Levenger and Teague wore holstered pistols like Hawtry's
    ete,          4:1
              own, but those could pass simply as items of dress for a
    rnal
              gentleman.
                When I came back to the Porcelain from our hike, I'd
     'd
     e
     on't     returned my cutting bar to the arms locker in the main hold.
              A bar's really betterfor a close-in dustup, Jeude had said
              on Decades, but there were seven of them here 
    dy-
    tered       "We're here to save the expedition, Jeremy," Hawtry
              said. "And our lives as well, I shouldn't wonder. You've
    T was     seen how that potter's whelp Ricimer hates gentlemen?
    acers     You've been spared the worst of the insults, but that will
              change."
                He lowered himself into the seat I'd vacated. Coos and
    in the
              Sahagun stepped to either side so that Hawtry could still
           I
           31~  view me directly.

    




    70            David Drake
    
     "So you're planning to kill the general commander and
    replace him?" I said baldly. I crossed my hands behind
    my back.
     Delray and Teague looked uncomfortable. "Say, now,
    fellow," Hawtry said with a frown. "Nobody spoke of
    killing, not in the least. But if we-the better class of
    men-don't act quickly, Ricimer will abandon us here on
    Mocha. He as good as stated his plans when he put me,
    me, aboard the Absalom. A hulk can't transit the Breach,
    anyone can see that!"
     "Go on, then," I said. My voice was calm. I watched the
    unfolding scene from outside my body, quietly amazed at
    the tableau. "If you're not going to kill General Comman-
    der Ricimer, what?"
     Sabagun glanced at Hawtry and held the bottle forward
    a few centimeters to call attention to it.
     "Say, I'm the real commander of the expedition any-
    way," Hawtry said. He looked away and rubbed the side of
    his nose. "By Councilor Duneen's orders, and I shouldn'i
    wonder the governor's directly. If it should be necessax3
    to take over, and it is."
     "Thomas, what are you going to do?" I said, with gend,
    emphasis on the final word.
     "A drink so that that psychotic bastard Gregg goes t
    sleep," Hawtry said, rubbing his nose. "That-that oni
    he won't listen to reason, that's obvious."
     Sahagun lifted the green bottle again. The liquor sloshe
    The container was full, but the wax seal around the stopp
    had been broken. Delray grimaced and tumed his back
    the proceedings.
     "Ricimer, he's not a problem without Gregg," Haw
    continued. "We'll put them on the Absalom=and a f
    sailors for crew, I suppose. There won't be any probl
    with the men. They'll follow their natural leaders, be g
    to follow real leaders!"
     "But you want me to give Gregg the bottle," I sai
    sounded as though I was checking the cargo manil
    "Because he'd wonder if any of you offered it."
     "Well, drink with him, jolly him along," Hawtry

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH      71
    
    "It won't do you any harm. You'll wake up in the morning
    without even a headache."
     He rubbed his nose again.
     "That Gregg's got a hut of his own," Levenger said in
    a bitter voice. "While the rest of us sleep with common
    sailors!"
     "Gregg doesn't sleep well when he's on the ground,"
    I said. I felt the comers of my mouth lift. Maybe I was
    smiling. "He doesn't want to distress other people. And
    there's the embarrassment, I suppose,"
     Hawtry lifted himself angrily from the seat in which
    he'd been pretending to relax. "Listen, Moore," he said.
    "Either you can do this and things'll go peacefully-or
    I'll personally shoot you outside Gregg's door, and when
    he comes out we'll gun him down. He won't have a chance
    against seven of us."
     Not a proposition I'd -care to bet my life on, Thomas, I
    thought. My lips tingled, but I didn't speak aloud.
     "We'll kill you as a traitor, and him because he's too
    damned dangerous to live!" Hawtry said. "So which way
    will it be?"
     "Well, I wouldn't want anyone to think I was a traitor,"
    I said. "But you'll have to wait-"
     Hawtry raised his arm to slap me, then caught himself
    and lowered his hand again. His face was mottled with
    rage. "There'll be no delays, Moore," he said savagely.
    "Not if you know what's good for you."
     "Gregg knows I'm on watch," I explained in a neu-
    tral voice. "If I appear before I've been relieved, he'll be
    suspicious."
     "Oh," said Hawtry. "Oh. How long are you..."
     I looked at the chronometer on the navigation console
    set to ship's time. "Oh," I said, "I think ten minutes should
    do it."
     The midships hatch banged violently open. "No time at
    all, gentlemen," said Stephen Gregg as he stepped through
    behind the muzzle of his flashgun. His helmet's lowered
    visor muffled his voice, but the words were as clear as the
    threat.
    
                                                   :i PP_
                                                  ,Eli

    




    72            David Drake
    
     Gregg wore body armor. So did Piet Ricimer, who fo
    lowed with a short-barreled shotgun. Dole and Lightbo~
    were behind the commander with cutting bars. Stampfe
    the gunner, carried a heavy single-shot rifle, and Salom(
    had a repeater. There were more sailors as well, shovii
    their way into the bow section.
     Hawtry dived for the compartment's exterior hatch,
    airlock. Perhaps he felt that no one would shoot in a roc
    so crowded.
     "Steady," Ricimer murmured.
     Hawtry tugged the hatch open. No one tried to stop hi
    Jeude waited in the airlock with his cutting bar ready.'
    twitched the blade forward, severing Hawtry's pistol t
    and enough flesh to fling the gentleman back screa
    ing.
     "Take their weapons," Ricimer said calmly.
     "It may interest you gentlemen to know," I said,
    voice rising an octave as my soul flooded back into
    body, "that there was a channel open to Guillermo in
    featherboat all the time we were talking. And if d
    hadn't been, I assure you I would have found ano
    way to stop you traitors!"
     "It wasn't me!" Coos cried. He was a tall man, willi
    and supercilious at normal times. "It wasn't---"
     Lightbody punched Coos in the stomach with the bu
    his cutting bar,'doubling him up on the deck. Coos b(
    to vomit.
     "I'll expect you to have that cleaned up by end of w,
    Lightbody," Ricimer said as he uncaged the alarm
    ton.
     "AyeThe flagship's siren howled a strident summons.I
                                   t~
                                   "Listen, Moore," snarled Hawtry's voice through
                                   speakers mounted to either side of the main hatch. A
                                   light on the Kinsolving two hundred meters awa)
                                   focused on the flagship's hold. "I'll personally shoc
                                   outside Gregg's door, and when he comes out we"
                                   him down."
     Wind sighed across the valley, bearing away the

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH     73
    
               mur of the gathered spacers. Someone called, "Bastard!"
    y          in a tone of loud amazement.
                 "Ricimer, he's not a problem without Gregg," said
    on         Hawtry's voice. Guillermo was working the board, mix-
               ing the gentleman's words for greatest effect from the
    9
               recording the Molt had made in the Nathan.
    an           Hawtry struggled against his bonds in the center of the
    In         hold. Dole had cinched Hawtry's ankles to a staple. The
               gentleman's wrists were tied in front of him and he was
               gagged besides. Hawtry's six followers stood at the base
               of the ramp-disarmed and discreetly guarded by trusted
    He         sailors, but not shackled.
    elt                                              "We'll kill you and him!" said Hawtry's voice. You'd
    In-          have had to hear the original words to realize the speech
               was edited. At that, Guillermo hadn't distorted the thrust
               of the gentleman's harangue.
    my           Piet Ricimer stepped forward. "Thomas Hawtry," he
    MY         said. "You knew that this expedition could succeed only
    the          if we all kept our oaths to strive together in brotherhood.
    ere          Your own words convict you of treason to the state, and
    ther         of sacrilege against God."
                 Stephen Gregg, a statue in half armor, stood at the oppo-
    wy         site side of the hatch from Ricimer. He hadn't moved
               since Dole and Jeude fastened the prisoner in front of the
    tt of        assembly.
    gan                                              A kerchief was tied behind Hawtry's head. Ricirner
               tugged up the knot so that the gentleman could spit out
               the gag.
                 Hawtry shook himself violently. "You have no right to
               try me!" he shouted. "I'm a factor, afactor! I need answer
               to no judge but the Governor's Council."
                 Unlike Ricimer's, Hawtry's voice wasn't amplified. He
               sounded thin and desperate to me.
     oud-        "Under God and Governor Halys," Ricimer said, "I am
    spot-      general commander of this expedition. I and your shipmates
     was       will judge you, Thomas Hawtry. How do you plead?"
    t you        "It was a joke!" cried Hawtry. He turned from side to
    I gun      side in the glare of lights focused on him. "There was no
               plot, just a joke, and that whorechaser Moore knew it!"
     mur-        The crowd buzzed, men talking to their closest com-

    




    74            David Drake
    
    panions. Hawtry's coterie stood silent, with gray faces and
    stiff smiles. Gregg's eyes, the only part of the gunman that
    moved, drifted from them to the prisoner and back.
     Contorting his body, Hawtry rubbed his eyes with his
    shoulder. He caught sight of me at the front of the assembly.
    "There he is!" Hawtry shouted, pointing with his bound
    hands. "There's the Judas Jeremy Moore! He lied me into
    these bonds!"
     I climbed the ramp in three crashing strides. The cutting
    bar batted against my legs, threatening to trip me. Hawtn
    straighten
        ed as he saw me coming; his eyes grew wary.
    A tiny smile played at the comers of Stephen Gregg'
    mouth.
     "Aye, strike a fettered man, Moore," Hawtry sai
    shrilly.
     I pulled the square-faced bottle from the pocket of tt
    insulated vest I wore over my tunic. Hawtry's face w;
    hard and pale in the spotlights.
     "Here you are, Thoma
                   s," I said. A part of my mind noti
    in surprise that a directional microphone picked up r
    voice and boomed my words out thmugh the loudspeak(
    so that everyone in the crowd could hear. "Here's the boi
    that you ordered me to drink with Mister Gregg."
     Hawtry's chin lifted. He shuffled his boots, but D
    had shackled him straitly.
     I twisted out the glass stopper. "Take a good drini
    this, Thomas," I said. "And if it only puts you to sl(
    then I swear I'll defend your life with my own!"
     Hawtry's face suffused with red hatred. He swung
    bound arms and swatted the container away. It clat
    twice on the ramp and skidded the rest of the way d
    without breaking. Snowy gray liquor splashed frorr
    bottle's throat.
     "Yes," I said as I backed away. I was centered xN
    myself again. For a moment I'd been. . . "I rather th(
    that would be your response."
     I'd watched in my mind as the bar howled in the I
    of my own puppet figure below. It swung in an ar
    continued through the spray of blood and the shocke,
    of Thomas Hawtry sa;ling free of his body.

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     75
    
               Piet Ricimer stepped forward. He took Hawtry's joined
              hands in his own and said, "Thomas, in the name of the
              Lord, won't you repent? There's still-"
    s          "No!" said Stephen Gregg thunderously as he strode into
              the center of the hatchway. The ceramic armor added bulk
              to the rangy power of his form. "There's been forgiveness
              aplenty. The next time it'll be your life, Piet, and I'll not
              have that."
    Ig         Gregg laid his great left hand over Hawtry's wrists and
              lifted them away from Ricimer. Gregg raised Hawtry's
              arms, ignoring the prisoner's attempt to pull free, and
    's        shouted to the assembly, "Is this man guilty of treason?
              Shall he be marooned here as a traitor?"
    id         "Yes!" I screamed. Around me I heard, "Aye!" and
              "Guilty!" and "Yes!" A murmur of, "No," a man crying,
    e         "You have no right!" But those latter were the exceptions
    as        to a tide of anger tinged with bloodlust. The sailors were
              Betaport men, and in Betaport Piet Ricimer sat just below
    ted        the throne of God.
    my         "No, you can't do this!" Delray shouted angrily. The
    rs        other gentlemen stood silent, afraid to speak lest Gregg
    ttle       turn the mob on them as well.
               Gregg dropped the prisoner's arms. "You didn't want
    ole        to obey the general commander, Hawtry," he said. "Now
              you can rule a whole planet by yourself."
      of       Officers of the Mizpah and Kinsolving stood in a clump
    ep,        at the back of the assembly, muttering and looking con-
              cerned. They knew better than the common sailors how
    his        niuch trouble could come from punishing a powerful
      ed      noble. Blakey was Councilor Duneen's man, while
      wn      Captain Winter trimmed his behavior to the prevailing
     the      winds.
               "You can't do this!" Delray repeated. The wind toyed
    ithin     with his voice. Perhaps a third of the assembly could make
    ught      out his words, while the rest heard only faint desperation.
              "The Rabbits will kill him!"
    ands       The other gentlemen moved away as though Delray was
    that      thrashing in a pool of his own vomit. A sailor behind
    face      Delray patted a baton of steel tubing against the calluses
              of the opposite palm, but the gentleman took no notice.

    




    L
    
                                             76 David Drake
                                                "They'll flay him with sharp stones!" Delray shoute
                                 F           "You can't do this'
                                                I didn't know Delray well and hadn't liked what I
                                             know: the third son of Delray of Sunrise, a huge hold
                                             the Aphrodisian Hills. Very rich, very haughty, and el
                                             younger than his 19 Earth years.
                                                It struck me that there was a person under Deir,
                                             callow exterior who might have been worth knowing
                                             all.
                                                "He's right," Gregg said abruptly. The amplified b,
                                             of his voice startled me after an interval of straining to
                                             Delray's cries. "Dole, cut his feet loose. Hawtry, we'll
                                             a gully out beyond the ships."
                                                I blinked, shocked by a sudden reality that I'd av(
                                             until that moment. It was one thing to eat meat, ar,
                                 "0          to watch the butcher. Dole stepped up the ramp, h
                                                humming.
                                                "No!" said Ricimer, placing the flat of his ha
                                             Gregg's breastplate. He directed the bigger man
                                             Piet's too good a man for this existence, Gregg h,
                                             the last night on Venus.
                                                "Give me a ship!" Hawtry blurted. His face
                                             white as a bone that dogs were scuffling over. "C
                                             a featherboat, C-cap-commander Ricimer!"
                                                "Mister Hawtry," Ricimer said, "you cannot
                                             starship, and I will not diminish a force devote,
                                             Lord's work for the sake of a traitor. But the ji
                                 HN          on your treason was that of the expedition as
                                             Therefore the expedition will carry out the r
                                             sentence."
                                                Ricimer turned to face the assembly. He didn
                                             though the spotlight was full on his face. He r
                                             the front of the crowd, his arm as straight as a
                                             rel.
                                                "Coos, Levenger, Teague," he said, clipping
                                             bles like cartridges shucked from a repeater's
                                             "Farquhar, Sahagun. And Delray. Under the d
                                             Mister Gregg, you will form a firing party to e.,
                                             tence of death on the traitor Thomas Hawtry.
                                             at dawn. Do you understand?"

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH      77
    
    d.          None of the gentlemen spoke. Farquhar covered his face
              with his hands.
                Hawtry shuddered as though the first bullet had struck
    id        him. He closed his eyes for a moment. When he reopened
              them, his expression was calm.
                "This assembly is dismissed," the general commander
    Is        said in a voice without triumph or pity. "And may God
    ~er       have mercy on our souls."
    
    )m
    ear
    ind
    
    d
    er
    bar
    
     on
    ick.
    sa'Id
    
     as
     m
     e
    
    the
    ot a
    
                                       pent
                                      riole.
                                       sary
                                      juint,
                                      od to
                                       bar-
    
                                      sylla
                                      Vine.
    on of
     sen-
    L)rrOW
    
                                                           Ila

    




                  MOCHA
    
    Day 39
    
    Mocha's sun laid a track of yellow light from the eastem
    horizon. Ricimer and Hawtry stood at the edge of the
    shallow mere, talking in voices too low to carry twenty
    meters to where the nearest of the other men waited.
     The air was still, for the first time that I could remembei
    since we landed here. I shivered anyway.
     A group of sailors commanded by the Porcelain's bosui
    held single-shot rifles. The men were chatting companior,
    ably. Jeude punctuated his comment by raising his le
    hand in the air and wriggling the fingers. He and tf
    others laughed.
     About half the expedition's complement had trekked
    the north end of the valley to watch the execution. T
    remainder stayed with the ships, pretending this ww
    normal day. Occasionally someone might pause and glar
    northward, but there would be nothing to see. The irrej
    larity of the valley's floor seemed slight, but it was enot
    to swallow a man-height figure in half a kilometer.
     I didn't know why I was here. I rubbed my hands togi
    er and wondered if I should have brought gloves.
     The gentlemen of the firing party faced one anothc
    a close circle, shoulders together and their heads boi
    A spacer cried out, "Pretty little chickens got their feat
    plucked, didn't they?"
     The remark didn't have to be a gibe directed again,,
    gentlemen ... but it probably was. Delray spun to ide
    the speaker. The gentleman remembered his present
    and subsided in impotent anger.
    
                     78

    




      7
    
                      THROUGH THE BREACH      79
    
           Stephen Gregg, standing alone as if contemplating the
           sunrise, turned his head. "Roosen?" he called to the spacer
           who'd flung the comment. "I'm glad to know you have
           spirit. I often need a man of spirit to accompany me."
           Roosen shrank into himself. His companions of a
           moment before' edged away from him.
            I chuckled.
           Gregg strolled toward me, holding the flashgun in the
           crook of his left arm. Gregg wore his helmet and a satchel
           of batteries, but he didn't have body armor on for the
           morning's duties.
           The big man nodded toward the mere thirty meters away,
           where Hawtry and the general commander still talked. "So
           you would have protected Mister Hawtry from me if he'd
           been willing to drink from your bottle, Moore?" Gregg
           said in a low, bantering tone.
           Sometimes Ricimer's aide looked like an empty sack.
           Now-there was nothing overtly tense about Gregg, but
           a black power filled his frame and dominated the world
           about him.
           I shrugged. "Thomas isn't the sort for half measures,"
           I said evenly. "Sleep where death would do, for exam-
           ple. Besides ... I rather think he resented my--closeness.
           With Councilor Duneen's sister."
    3L                        My mouth smiled. "Though to listen to him, he wasn't
           aware of that. Closeness."
                              Gregg turned again to face the sunrise. "I was mistaken
    h      in my opinion of the man I brought aboard in Betaport,
           wasn't P Just who are you, Moore?"
                              I shrugged again. "I'm damned if I know," I said. Then
           I said, "I could use a woman right now. The Lord knows
    'n     I could."
    d.     Ricimer and        Hawtry clasped hands, then embraced.
    r's    Ricimer walked back to the company. His face was still.
           The crowd hushed.
    le                        Gregg's visage became cold and remote. "Distribute the
    fy                        rifles," he ordered as he strode toward the gentlemen and
    ce     the sailors waiting to equip them for their task.
                              Dole muttered a command. He gave a single cartridge
                              md a rifle, its action open, to Sahagun. That gentleman
            c
            0
            R
            c
            The
    
            rifle
            the
            I
            and
        




    L
    
                                              80 David Drake
                                              and the other members of the firing party accepted
                                  *17         weapons with grimaces.
                                                 "Take your stand!" Gregg ordered. He placed him
                                              beside and a pace behind the gentlemen. His flashgun
                                              ready but not presented.
                                                 "I'll give the commands if you please, Mister Gre
                                              Thomas Hawtry called in a clear voice. He stood at ar
                                              ent ease, his limbs free.
                                                 Gregg looked at Ricimer. Ricimer nodded agreem
                                                 "May God and you, my fellows, forgive my s
                                              Hawtry said. "Gentlemen, load your pieces."
                                                 The men of the firing party were mostly experit
                                              marksmen, but they fumbled the cartridges. Coos dr(
                                              his. He had to brush grit off the case against his a
                                              leg. Breeches closed with a variety of clicks and shu
                                              sounds.
                                                 Hawtry stood as straight as a sunbeam. His eyes
                                              open. "Aim!" he said.
                                                 The gentlemen lifted their rifles to their shoi
                                              Farquhar jerked his trigger. The shot slammed out I
                                              the horizon. Farquhar shouted in surprise at the acc
                                              discharge.
                                                 "Fire!" Hawtry cried. The rest of the party fire,
                                              bullets punched Hawtry's white tunic, and the br
                                              his nose vanished in a splash of blood.
                                                 Hawtry crumpled to his knees, then flopped
                                              face. There was a hole the size of a fist in the
                                              his skull. The surface of the water behind him &
                                              if with rain.
                                                 Delray opened the bolt of his rifle to extract t
                                              case, then flung the weapon itself toward the m
                                              rifle landed halfway between him and the corpse t
                                              spastically on the ground.
                                                 Delray stalked away. The remainder of the fir
                                              stood numbly as Dole's team collected the rifleE
                                                 Gregg turned and walked back to me. He look
                                              and gray.
    
                                  liq             ~4
                                                   I'm impressed with the way you handled yc
                                                 other night," he said quietly. "And on Decades,

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH      81
    the        but courage in a brawl is more common than the ability to
               stay calm in a crisis."
    self                                             I hugged myself and shivered. A spacer had tossed a
    was        tarp over Hawtry's body. Two other men were digging a
               grave nearby.
               Piet Ricimer knelt in prayer, his back to the dead man.
               Brains and bits of bone, splashing the mere in a wide
               arc.
    ent.                                             "How do you sleep at all, Mister Gregg?" I whispered.
    ins!"                                        Greggsniffed. "You can get used to anything, you
               know," he said.I suppose that's the worst of it. Even
    nced                                  the dreams."
    pped       He put a hand on my shoulder and turned me away from
    user       the past. "Let's go back to the ship," he said. I have a
    cking      bottle. And you may as well call me Stephen, Jeremy."
    were
    Iders.
    ward
    dental
    
                                                                71
    Two
       of
      his
    ack of
    ced as
    spent
    e. The
    itching
    g party
    drawn
    self the
    course;
    gg"
    par
    
    ge
    to

    




    L
    
                                                         MOCHA
    
                                           Day 51
    
                                           When the alert signal throbbed on the upper right corner
                                           of the main screen, I slapped the sidebar control that I'd
                                           preselected for potential alarm situations. Salomon dumped
                                           the transit solutions he'd been running at the navigation
                                           console and echoed all my data on his display.
                                           A grid of dots and numbers replaced the 360' visual
                                           panoram
                                           a I'd been watching for want of anything better
                                           to do, Presumably some of the Rabbits were female but
                                           it hadn't come to that yet.
                                           I didn't understand the new display. A pink highlight
                                           surrounded one of the dots.
                                            I held the siren switch down briefly to rouse the
                                                                          men
                                           sleeping, gambling, or wandering across Mocha's barren
                                           landscape. A few seconds could be important, and even
                                           a false alarm would give the day some life it otherwise
                                           lacked.
                                           "It's the passive optical display," Salomon explained.
                                           "An object just dropped into orbit. If it's not a flaw in
                                           the scanner, something came out of trans-"
                                           "Nathan to squadron," said Piet Ricimer's voice, flat-
                                           tened by the program by which the Porcelain's Al took
                                           the static out of the featherboat's transmission. "Respond,
                                           squadron. Over."
                                           I switched the transceiver to voice operation while my
                                           left hand entered the commands that relayed the conver-.1
                                           sation through the loudspeakers-tannoys I'd taken fr
                                                                             om,
                                           Federation stores on Decades-on poles outside the tem
                                           porary shelters. It'd been something to do, and the disor-'
    
                                                            82

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH      83
    
    ganized communications among the ships scattered here
    had offended my soul.
     "Go ahead, Commander," I said before I remembered
    that Salomon was on watch this morning. "We're on
    voice."
     Handover procedures were cumbersome and basical-
    ly needless between two parties who knew one another.
    Without visuals-the featherboat's commo was rudimen-
    tary-there was a chance that one speaker's transmission
    would step on the other's, but that wasn't a serious con-
    cem.
     "Moore?" Ricimer said. His words blared through the
    external speakers to the men alerted by the siren. "We've
    got to leave immediately. Get essential stores out of the
    Absalom; we're leaving her. We'll be abandoning the
    Nathan here too, so that frees up space on the Kinsolving
    for the Decades loot. We'll be coming in on the next
    orbit-"
     The featherboat couldn't communicate through her
    thruster's discharged ions.
     "-and I want to lift off within an hour of when we
    land. Is that understoodT'
     "We understand, Commander," I said. I rose from the
    console. Officers and senior men would be gathering work
    crews from men more concerned with getting their person-
    al gear back aboard the ships.
     "I'll address the squadron when we reach orbit," Ricimer
    said. The transmission was beginning to break up beyond
    the Al's capacity to restore it. The caret on the main
    screen that was the Nathan had already slipped beneath
    the horizon of the display. "Before we negotiate the
    Breach. . ."
      His words died in a burst of static.
     "I've got takeoff and initial transit programs loaded,"
    Salomon said to me with a wry smile. Perhaps it was a
    comment on the way the gentleman had hijacked commu-
    nications with the general commander.
     Men were already crashing aboard the Porcelain, shout-
    in.2 to one another in a skein of tangled conversations. I
     strode for the midships hatch to get through it before the

    




                   84             David Drake
    
                   crush arrived in the other direction.
                   "I'm going to pull the Al from the hulk," I called back to
                   the navigator. "It's not worth much, but it's something ...
                   and it's the only thing I can do now."
    
    3161

    




    to                  MOCHA ORBIT
    
              Day 51
    
              Because of the adrenaline rush of the hastened liftoff,
              wei-htlessness didn't make me as queasy as it had on
              every previous occasion.
              "Men of Venus," Piet Ricimer said, standing before the
              video pickups of the main console.
              The general commander's tone and pose were conscious-
              ly theatrical, but not phony. An unshakable belief in his
              mission was the core of Ricimer's being. "My fellows.
              While I was on Os Sertoes, a Southern colony three
              days transit from here, six Federation warships landed.
              Their admiral announced that they'd arrived to protect the
              Breach from Venetian pirates under the command of the
              notorious Ricimer."
                He allowed himself a smile.
              The interior of the Porcelain looked as if a mob had torn
              through the vessel. Belongings seemed to expand in the
              course of a voyage. Objects were never repacked as tightly
              as they'd been stowed before initial liftoff. Loot, even
              from a near-wasteland like Mocha, added to the bulk, and
              the crew's hurried reboarding would at best have created
              chaos
               The interior of the Kinsolving, visible on the split screen
               past the set face of Captain Winter, was an even more
               complete image of wreckage. The quality of the Mizpah's
               transmission was so poor that the flagship's Al painted
               the field behind Blakey as a blur of color. On all the
               vessels, items that hadn't been properly stowed before
               liftoff drifted as the ships hung above Mocha.
    
                               85

    




               86            David Drake
    
               "The Feds will be patrolling all the landing sites in
               the region, I have no doubt," Ricimer said. I could hear
               the words echoing from tannoys in the compartments
               sternward. On the Kinsolving, sailors listened in the
               background as tense, dim shapes. "We aren't here to
               fight the Federation. We're here to take the wealth on
               which President Pleyal builds his tyranny and turn that
               wealth to the use of all mankind."
                Another small smile. "Ourselves included."
               Stephen Gregg stood between a pair of stanchions, doing
               isometric exercises with his arms. He was too big to be
               comfortable for any length of time on a featherboat, but
               not even Piet Ricimer had dared suggest Stephen remain
               on Mocha during the exploratory run.
                "I've set an initial course," Ricimer contin e
                                    u d. "The
               Nathan tested the gradients within the throat of the Breach.
               I won't disguise the fact that the stresses are severe; but
               not too severe, I believe, for us to achieve our goal."
               "It was rough as a cob," Jeude muttered, trying to emas-
               culate his fear by articulating it. "The boat nigh shook
               herself apart. Mister Ricimer, he kept pushing the gradi-
               ents an
                   d she couldn't take it."
               I put a hand on the eyebolt which Jeude held. I didn't
               quite touch the young sailor's hand, but I hoped the near-
               contact would provide comfort.
               Part of my mind was amused that I was trying to reassure
               someone who understood far better than I did the risks we
               were about. to undergo. There were times that the risks i
               couldn't be allowed to matter. At those times, it was a
               gentleman's duty to be an example.
               "There is one further matter to attend before we pro-
               ceed," Ricimer continued. "Our flagship has been named
               the Porcelain. I am taking this moment, as we enter a
               new phase of our endeavors, to rechristen her Oriflamme.
               May she symbolize the banner of the Lord which we are
    j          carrying through the Breach!"
               He swept off his cap and cried, "In the name of God,
               gentlemen, let us.do our duty!"
               "Hurrah!" Salomon cried, so smoothly that I reipem-
               bered Ricimer's whispered conversation with his navigator

    




                     THROUGH THE BREACH      87
    
          before he began his address. Throughout the flagship-
          the Oriflamme-and aboard the other vessels, men were
          souti
           hi I ing, "Hurrah!"
          I shouted as well, buoyed by hope and the splendor of
          the moment. For the first time in my memory, Jeremy
          Moore was part of a group.
          Ricimer shut off the transmission and slipped into his
          couch to prepare for transit. Guillermo and Salomon
          watched from the flanking consoles.
          I let go my grip and thrust myself across the com-
          partment toward Stephen. My control in weightlessness
           was getting better-at least I didn't push off with all my it
           strength anymore-but it was short of perfect. Stephen
           caught me by the hand and pulled me down to share a
           stanchion.
            "You may think you dislike transit now," Stephen said,
           "but you'll know you do shortly."
            "Yes, well, I was going to suggest that I'd get out and
           walk instead," I said. "Ah-it occurs to me, Stephen, that
           the oriflamme is the charge of Councilor Duneen's arms."
            Stephen nodded. "Yeah," he said. "Piet thinks it may
           take the Councilor's mind off the fact that we've executed
           one of his chief clients. Not that Hawtry was any loss, not
           really; but the Councilor might feel that he needed to 
           react."
            "Ali," I said. "It was the general commander's idea?"
            "Prepare for transit!" Salomon warned over the PA sys-
    S      tem.
            440h, yes," Stephen agreed. "Piet thinks ahead."
            I followed Stephen's glance toward the general com-
           mander. It struck me that Ricimer was, in his way, just
    d      as ruthless as Stephen Gregg.
    
                                                            kc

    




                IN TRANSIT
    
    Day 64
    
    The leg of the attitude-control console nearest me began
    to quiver with a harmonic as the Oriflamme's thrusters;
    strained. The vessel flip-flopped in and out of transit
    again, again. The surface of the leg dulled as tiny crack,
    spread across the surface, metastasizing with each success
    sive vibration.
     Life was a gray lump that crushed Jeremy Moore again
    the decking. My vision was monochrome. Images shift(
    from positive to negative as the Oriflamme left ai
    reentered the sidereal universe, but I was no longer st
    which state was which,
     The sequence ended. Bits of ceramic crazed from
    leg lay on the deck beneath the attitude controls.
     Salomon got up from his console. His face looked
    a skin of latex stretched over an armature of thin wi
    "The charts are wrong!" he shouted. "Landolph lied al
    coming here, or if he did, it's closed since then. The
    no Breach!"
     Pink light careted a dot on the starscape a
    Guillermo's console. Either the Kinsolving or the M
    was still in company with the flagship. I didn't cart
    that mattered now was the realization that if I was
    the nausea would be over.
     "I'm going to add one transit to the sequence A
    changing the constants," Piet Ricimer said from the (
    couch. Above him, the main screen was a mass of s
    lines. "From the tendency of the gradients, I believ(
    very close to a gap."
    
                     88

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH     89
    
              Guillermo's three-fingered hands clicked across his key-
            board, transmitting the solution to the accompanying ves-
             sel.
              Stephen Gregg was curled into a ball on the deck. He'd
             started out leaning against the attitude-control console, but
             lateral acceleration during a previous series of transits had     J
             toppled him over. He either hadn't wished or hadn't been
             able to sit up again.
              The sailors without immediate duties during transit were
             comatose or praying under their breath. Perhaps I should
             have been pleased that experienced spacers were affected
             as badly as I was.
              "The gradients are rising too fast!" Salomon shouted.
             "The levels are already higher than I've ever seen them,
             and-"
              Lightbody came off his seat at the attitude-control con-
             sole. The sailor didn't have a weapon, but his long arms
    t
    I       were spread like the claws of an assassin bug. Salomon
            started to turn, shocked from his panic by the palpable
    e       destruction lunging toward his throat.
             Stephen caught Lightbody's ankle and jerked the sailor
    ,e       to the deck. I leaped onto the man's shoulders.
             Lightbody's face was blank. The wild light went out of
    ,e       his eyes, leaving the sailor with a confused expression.
    S.       "What?" he said. "Wha. .
    Ut                                                      "SorTy, sir," Salomon muttered. He sat down on his
    is       couch again.
             I rolled away. I had to use both hands to lever myself
    ,,e      back to a squat and then rise. The jolting action had settled
    711
      1     my mind, but my limbs were terribly weak. I could stand
    01       upright, so long as I gripped a stanchion as though the
            Oriflannne was in free fall rather than proceeding under
            1-g acceleration.
    ~ut
             Lightbody stood, then helped Stephen up as well.
    ral
    ,ed     Lightbody returned to his seat. I held out a hand to bring
    Ire     Stephen to his stanchion.
             "Prepare for transit," Piet Ricimer said. He hadn't risen    T
             ftorn his couch or looked back during the altercation.
             Light and color. Blankness, blackness, body ripped
             L
             r
              g
             I
    
             L
              J
       MEW
    
       ~Steg
    
             on
             L

    




    90            David Drake
    
    inside out, soul scraped in a million separate Hells.
     Light and color again.
     "There," said Piet Ricimer. "As I thought, a sta~ t,
    and she has a planet. We will name the planet Respi e.

    




    Day 68
    
    The plateau on which the Oriflamme and Mizpah rested
    above the jungle was basalt. The fresh ceramic with which
    teams resealed the vessels' stress-cracked hulls was black,
    and the sound of grinders processing the dense rock into
    raw material for the glazing kilns was nerve-wracking and
    omnipresent.
     Stephen checked the weld which belayed the glass-fiber
    line around a vertical toe of basalt near the plateau's rim.
    He nodded. I let myself drop over the edge.
     The mass of the plateau dulled the bone-jarring sound.
    My chest muscles relaxed for the first time in the three
    days since the grinders had started work.
     The basalt had formed hexagonal pillars as it cooled
    from magma in the depths of the earth. Cycles of upthrust
    and weathering left this mass as a tower hundreds of meters
    above the surrounding jungle. As the outermost columns
    crumbled, they created a giant staircase down into the
    green canopy.
     Forty meters below the top of the plateau, my boots
    touched the layer of dirt covering the sloping top of a
    broken pillar. I released my harness from the line and
    stepped away, waving Stephen down in turn.
     A pair of arm-long flying creatures paused curiously
    near Stephen, hovering in the updraft along the plateau's
    flank. The "birds" were hard-shelled, with four wings and
    sideways-hung jaws. They were harmless to anything the
    size of a man and hadn't learned to be wary.
     The forest far below was a choir of varied calls. Mist
    
                     91

    




                          92             David Drake
    
                          trailed among the treetops, and a plume hectares in area
                          rose a few kilometers away like a stationary cloud. I won-,
                          dered if a hot spring or a lake of boiling mud broke surface
                          there in the jungle.
                          Respite's atmosphere had a golden hue. I found I actual-
                          ly liked being under an open sky, unlike most men raised
                          in the tunnels and impervious domes of Venus. It made me
                          tingle with uncertainty, much the way I felt when making
                          my initial approaches to a woman.
                          The feeling of peace below the rim was relative. The
                          rock vibrated from the teeth of the grinders, felt if not
                          heard. The terrace was a nesting site for a colony of the
                          flying creatures. Hundreds of them stood at the mouths of
                          buffows excavated in the soil, goggling at us with octuple
                          eyes. They clacked the edges of their front and rear pairs
                          of wings together querulously.
                            Opinions of the flyers' taste among our crew ranged
          ~'Pi6 I         from adequate to delicious: Salomon swore he'd never
                          before eaten anything as good as the sausage of smoked
                          I ung tissue and organ meat he'd made from the creatures.
                          In any event, the expedition would leave Respite w
                          stocked with food.
                          Stephen landed with a grunt. His fingers massaged
                          opposite shoulders. For this excursion he'd slung a short
                          rifle across his back, rather than the flashgun he favored.
                          "I don't know about you," he said, "but I'm not looking
                          forward to the climb back, ascenders or no. I'm not in
                          shape for this."
                          "I'm not looking forward to going back to the noise,"
                          I said. I felt the strain in my arms and thigh muscles also,
                          but I thought I'd be physically ready before I was mentally
                          ready to return. "I suppose it's better than falling apart
                          transit, though."
                            Stephen sniffed. "Worried about the Kinsolving?"
              it          said. "Don't be. Winter just didn't have the stomach for
                          this. He's headed back to Venus with the rest of Hawtry's
                          node of vipers. That lot'd make me ashamed to be a gentle-
                          man-if I gave a damn myself"
 The hexagonal terrace sloped at 30', enough to turn-
                                                       tin
                          ble a man over the edge if he lost his foo g. Eacfi
    
    1P,

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH      93
    
    r, a                                            the basalt columns was about ten meters wide across the
        flats. I stepped forward carefully. "With the Decades loot
    cc besides," I noted.
        As I passed close to nesting sites, the creatures drew
    al- themselves down as far as they could into their burrows.
        Because the soil was so shallow, their heads remained
    'ne above the surface but the clicking of the wings was muted.
        "Commander Ricimer," I went on, "thinks they've just
    ng
        missed this landfall and gone on through the Breach. The
    'h Kinsolving."
    e
    '10 "Piet likes to think the best of people," Stephen said.
    't
    the He walked over to me without apparent caution. The wind
    of  frorn the forest ruffled our cuffs and tunics upward and
    bathed us in earthy, alien odors.
    pie
    airs                                            "And you?" I asked without looking at my companion.
        Something moved across the distant forest, perhaps a shad
    ged ow. If the motion had been made by a living creature, it
    wer was a huge one.
    'ked                                            "Oh, I'd like to, sure," Stephen said, adjusting his rifle's
    .res. sling.
    'Vell                                           "The loot's the reason I'm not angry," Stephen added.
        "There's enough value aboard the Kinsolving to arouse
    I his                                           attention, but not nearly enough to buy Winter's way out
    hort                                            o f trouble for attacking the colony of a state with whom
        Venus is at peace. That lot has punished themselves."
    wed.
    king                                            I looked at my companion. "Technically at peace," I
    A In said.
        "Politicians are very technical, Jeremy," Stephen said.
    ise","Until it's worth the time of somebody in court to cut
    also,corners. And the Decades loot won't interest the likes
    [tallyof Councilor Duneen, which is what it'd take to square
    irt in this one."
        I peered over the edge of the terrace. The next step down
       hewas within five meters of the outer lip of the one we were
    h foron, A pattern of parallel semicircular waves marked the
    Itry, ssurface of the step, springing out like ripples in a frozen
    -,ntle-pond from the side of the column on which we stood.
        Pits weathered into the rock offered toeholds. I turned
      Will-     and swung my legs over.
     ch of       "It's a long way down," Stephen warned. "And it's

    




                   94            David Drake
    
                   likely to be a longer way back up."
                  "I want to check something," I said. "You don't have
                  to come."
                  I clambered my own height down the rock face, then
                  pushed off and landed with my knees flexed. Perhaps
                  Stephen could pull me up with our belts paired into a
                  rope, or-
                  Stephen slammed down beside me. He'd jumped with
                  the rifle held out so that it didn't batter him in the side
                  when he hit the ground. He grinned at me.
                  I shrugged. "It's the pattern here," I said, walking toward
                  the ripples in stone.
                    Conical nests built up from the surface indicated that
    IF"            flyers of a different species had colonized this step. These
                   were hand-sized and bright yellow in contrast to the dull
                   colors of the larger creatures. Hundreds of them lifted into
                   the air simultaneously, screeching and emitting sprays of
                   mauve feces over the two of us.
                  I ducked and swore. Stephen began to laugh rackingly.
                  The cloud of flyers sailed away from the plateau, then
                  dived abruptly toward the jungle.
                  Stephen untied his kerchief, checked for a clean portior
                  of the f abric, and used that to wipe down the rifle's receiv.
                  er. "I was the smdrt-ass who decided if you thought ~ai
                  could make it back, I sure could," he explained. "Nobody'
                  choice but mme-which is why I let Piet make the dec
                  sions, mostly."
                   I stepped to the point from which ripples spread fro
                   the rock face. As I'd expected, the basalt had be(
                   melted away. Because the rock was already fully o)
                   dized, it splashed into waves like those of metal weld
                   in a vacuum.
                   The cavity so formed was circular and nearly two met,
                   in diameter. It was sealed by a substance as transparent
                   air-not glass, for it responded with a soft thock whe
                   tapped it with my signet ring. -
                   The creature mummified within was the height and sh
                   of a man, but it was covered with fine scales, and its lb
                   were jointed in the wrong places. At one time the mun
                   had been clothed, but only shreds of fabric and fitt

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH      95
    
    remained in a litter around the four-toed feet.
     "Piet said it looked from the way the rocks were glazed
    that ships had landed on the plateau in the past," Stephen
    remarked. "Landolph, he thought. But after he looked clos-
    er at the weather cracking, he decided that it must have
    been millennia ago."
     "What does it mean?" I asked.
     "To us?" said Stephen. "Nothing. Because our business
    is with the Federation; and whoever this fellow was, he
    wasn't from the Federation."
    
                                                   r

    




    AS'                        IN TRANSIT
    
                  Day 92
    
                   The Oriflamme came out of transit-out of a universe
                   which had no place for man or even for what man thought
                   were natural laws. This series had been of eighteen inser-
                   tions. The energy differential, the gradient, between the
                   sidereal universe and the bubbles of variant space-time had
                   risen each time.
                   I stood with one hand on the attitude-control console,
                   the other poised to steady Dole if the bosun slipped out of
                   his seat again. I hadn't eaten in ... days, I wasn't sure how
                   long. I hadn't kept anything down for longer yet. Every
                   time the Oriflamme switched universes, pain as dull as
                   the back of an axe crushed through my skull and nausea
                   tried to empty my stomach.
                   Dole had nothing to do unless Piet Ricimer ordered
                   him to override the Al-which would be suicide, given
                   the stresses wracking the Oriflamme now. Helping the
                   bosun hold his station, however pointless, gave me reason
                   to live.
                   Stephen Gregg stood with a hand on Lightbody's:shoul-
                   der and the other on Jeude's. Stephen was smiling, in a
                   manner of speaking. His face was as gray and lifeless
                   as a bust chipped out of concrete, but he was standing
                   nonetheless.
                   During insertions, the Oriflamme's thrusters roared at
                   very nearly their maximum output. Winger, the chief of the
                   motor crew, bent over Guillermo's couch. He spoke about
                   the condition of the sternmost nozzles in tones clipped Just
                   this side of panic.
    
                                    96

    




                             THROUGH THE BREACH     97
    
                  A few festoons of meat cured on Respite still hung from
                 wires stretched across the vessel's open areas. We'd
                 been eating the "birds" in preference to stores loaded on
             i   Decades, for fear that the flesh-smoked, for the most
                 part-would spoil. There was no assurance we'd reach
                 another food source any time soon.
                  Salomon's screen was a mass of numbers, Ricimer's
                 a tapestry of shaded colors occasionally spiking into a
                 saturated primary. The two consoles displayed the same
                 data in different forms, digital and analogue: craft and art
                 side by side, and only God to know if either showed a
    iverse        way out of the morass of crushing energies.
    pught
                  The Mizpah in close-up filled Guillermo's screen. The
    iinser-       gradients themselves threw our two vessels onto congruent
    -n the
                 courses: the navigational Als both attempted with electron-
    ie had        ic desperation to find solutions that would not exceed the
                 starships' moduli of rupture. The range of possibilities was
    insole,       an increasingly narrow one.
    out of        "Stand by for transit," Piet Ricimer croaked. "There
    -e how        will be a sequence of ff-four insertions."
    Every         He paused, breathing hard with the exertion. Guillermo
    lull as
                 compiled the data in a packet and transferred it to the
    iausea
                 Mizpah by laser.
                  Winger swore and stumbled aft again to his station.
    rdered        He would have walked into the Long Tom in the center
     given
                 of the compartment if I hadn't tugged him into a safer
    .ig the       trajectory.
    reason        The Mizpah's hull was zebra-striped. The reglazing done
                 on Respite had flaked from the old ship's hull along the
     shoul-      lines of maximum stress, leaving streaks of creamy original
      in a       hull material alternated with broader patches of the black,
    ifeless      basalt-based sealant. Leakage of air from the Mizpah must
    anding       be even worse than it was for us, and it was very serious
                 for us.
    wed at        More pain would come. More pain than anything human
    fofthe       could survive and remain human. Oh God our help in ages
     about
                 past, our hope in years to come 
    ,ed just      "We need to get into suits," Salomon said. He lay at
                 the side console like a cadaver on a slab. "They're in suits
                 already on the Mizpah." The navigator's eyes were on the

    




                   98            David Drake
    
                   screen before him, but he didn't appear to be strong enough
                   to touch the keypad at his fingertips.
                   A sailor sobbed uncontrollably in his hammock. Steph-
                   en's eyes turned toward the sound, only his eyes.
                   "This sequence will commence in one minute forty sec-
                   onds," Ricimer said. His words clacked as if spoken by
                   a wood-jawed marionette. "The gradients have ceased to
                   rise. We're. We're.
                   Stephen didn't turn his head to look at Ricimer, but he
                   said, "You're supposed to tell us that we've seen worse,
                   and we'll come through this too, Piet."
                    Watching Stephen was like watching a corpse speak.
                   Ricimer coughed. After a moment, I realized that he was
                   laughing. "If we do come through this, Stephen," Ricimer
                   said, "be assured that I will say that the next time."
                   "Prepare for t-trans--2' Salomon said. He couldn't get
                   the final word out before the fact made it redundant.
                   My head split in bright skyrockets curving to either side.
                   Guillermo's screen, fed by the external optics, became
                   hash as the Oriflamme entered a region alien to the very
    4k-
                   concept of light as the sidereal universe knew it.
          v~,
                   Back a heartbeat later, another blow crushing me into
                   a boneless jelly which throbbed with pain. The gasp that
                   started with the initial insertion was tightening my throat
                   and ribs, or I might have tried to scream.
                   Half the Mizpah hung on the right-hand display. A streak
                   of centimeter-thick black ceramic ringed the stem. Where
                   the bow should have been, I saw only a mass as confused
                   as gravel pouring from a hopper.
                   Transit. There was a God and He hated mankind with
                   a fury as dense as the heart of a Black Hole. The mills of
                   His wrath ground Jeremy Moore like-
                   Back, only gravel on Guillermo's screen, dancing with
                   light, and then nothing because the Oriflamme had cycled
                   into another bubble universe and I wished that I'd been
                   aboard the Mizpah because-
                   The Oriflamme crashed into the sidereal universe again
                   and stayed there while I swayed at Dole's station and
                   Stephen Gregg held Jeude's slumping form against the
                   back of his seat. There must have been a fourth insertion

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     99
    
              and return, but I hadn't felt it. Perhaps I'd blacked out,
              but I was still standing 
                "The gradients have dropped to levels normal for
              intrasystem transits," Ricimer said. He sounded as though
              he had just been awakened from centuries of sleep. The
    Y         muscles operating his vocal cords were stiff. "We'll make
    0         a further series of seven insertions, and I believe we'll
              find Landolph's landfall of Pesaltra at the end of them.
    ie        Gentlemen, we have transited the Breach."
    r"          I tried to cheer. I could only manage a gabbling sound.
              Dole put up a hand to steady me; we clutched one another
              for a moment.
                "We made it," Jeude whispered.
                Guillermo's display showed a blank starscape, and there'
              was no pulsing highlight on the main screen to indicate the
    ret
              Mizpah.
    le.
    ne
    ,ry
    ato
    hat
    oat
    -ak
    ~ere
    sed
    Mit
    cled
    )een
    gain
     and
     the
    rtion

    




      lei
    
                             PESALTRA
    
                Day 94
    
                The ramp lowered with squealing hesitation, further sig
                that the stress of transiting the Breach had warped 0
                Oriflamme's sturdy hull. Air with the consistency of h
                gelatin surged into the hold. I was the only man in t
                front rank who wasn't wearing body armor. Sweat slict
                my palm on the grip of the cutting bar.
                "Welcome to the asshole of the universe," muttere
                spacer. He spoke for all of us in the assault party.
                "Well," said Piet Ricimer as he raised the visor of
                helmet. "At least nobody's shooting at us."
                  Steam still rose from the mudflat that served Pe&
    Mill"       as a landing field. Nine of the local humans were pic
                their way toward the Oriflamme. Molts-several scort
                perhaps a hundred of them-stood near the low buil(
                and the boats drawn up on the shore of the surroui
                lagoons. The aliens formed small groups which stal
                but didn't approach the vessel.
                There were no weapons in sight among the Feds o
                slaves.
                Finger-length creatures with many legs and no ol
                eyes feasted on a blob of protoplasm at the foot
                ramp. They must have risen from burrows deep
                mud, or the thruster exhaust would have broiled
                The creatures were the only example of local anit
                that I could see.
                "No shooting unless I do," Stephen Gregg sai
                don't expect that. Let's go."
                  He cradled his flashgun and strode forwa~d. S,
    
    ik
                                 100

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     101
    
    boots squelched to the ankles when he stepped off the
    end of the ramp. I sank almost as deep, even though I
    didn't have the weight of armor and equipment Stephen
    carried.
     The front rank, ten abreast, stamped and sloshed forward.
    The second rank spread out behind us. The locals wore
    thigh-length waders of waterproofed fabric. In this heat
    and saturated humidity, their garments must have been
    nearly as uncomfortable as our back-and-breast armor.
     There were mountains in the western distance, but the
    Pesaltran terrain here and for kilometers in every direction
    was of shallow lagoons and mud banks with ribbons and
    spikes of vegetation. None of the plants were as much as
    a meter high; many of them sprawled like brush strokes of
    bright green across the mud.
     A bubble burst flatulently in the middle of the nearest
    channel. I guessed it was the result of bacterial decay, not
    a larger life7form.
     I felt silly holding a cutting bar as a threat against people
    so obviously crushed by life as the Fed personnel here.
    How the rest of the assault party must feel with their guns,
    armor, and bandoliers of ammunition!
     Though Stephen Gregg wouldn't care ... and maybe
    not the others either. Overwhelming force meant you were
    ready to overwhelm your enemy. What could possibly be
    embarrassing about that?
     "Ah, sirs?" said one of the locals, a white-haired man
    with a false eye. "You'd be from the Superintendency of
    the Outer Ways, I guess?"
     He stared at the Oriflamme and its heavily-armed crew
    as if we were monsters belched forth from the quavering
    earth.
     It wasn't practical to carry building materials between
    stars. The colony's structures were nickel steel processed
    from local asteroids or concrete fixed with shell lime.
    Three large barracks housed the Molt labor force; a fourth
    similar building was subdivided internally for the human
    staff.
     A middle-aged woman stood on the porch with the aid
    of crutches and leg braces. The door to the room behind
        




    _7
    
                 102            David Drake
    
                 her was open. Its furnishings were shoddy extrusions of
                 light metal, neither attractive nor comfortable-looking.
                 The same could be said for the woman, I thought with
                 a sigh.
     Sheet-metal sheds held tools and equipment in obvious
     disorder. A windowless concrete building looked like a
     blockhouse', but the sliding door was open, showing the
     1T
                 interior to be empty except for a few shimmering bales.
                 Garbage, including Molt and human excrement, stank
                 in the lagoon at the back of the barracks. The hulls of
                 at least two crashed spaceships and other larger junk had
                 been dragged to the opposite side of the landing site.
                 Ricimer halted us with a wave of his band and took
                 another step to make his primacy clear. "I'm Captain
                 Ricimer of the Free State of Venus," he said to the
                 one-eyed man. "We've come through the Breach. We'll
                 expect the full cooperation of everyone here. If we get it,
                 then there'll*be no difficulties for yourselves."
                 The Fed official looked puzzled. The men approaching
                 with him had halted a few paces behind. "No, really," the
                 man said. "I'm Assistant Treasurer Taenia; I'm in charge
                 here. If anyone is. Who are you?"
                 Dole stepped forward. The butt of his rifle prodded
                 Taenia hard in the stomach. "When Captain Ricimer's
                 present," he said loudly, "nobody else is in charge-and
                 especially not some dog of a Fed! Take your hats off,
                 you lot!"
                 Only two of the locals wore headgear, a cloth cap on
                 a red-haired man and another fellow with a checked ban-
                 danna tied over his scalp. Dole pointed his rifle in the face
                 of the latter. The Fed snatched off the bandanna. He was
                 bald as an egg.
                 Dole shifted his aim. "No, put that up!" Piet Ricimer
                 snapped, but the second Fed was removing his cap and
                 a third man knelt in the mud with a look of terror on
                 his face.
                 Taenia straightened up slowly. He blinked, though the
                 lid covering his false eye closed only halfway. "I don't. .
                 he said. "I don't. .
                   Ricimer stepped up to the man and took his right hand.
    VIR

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     103
    
              "You won't be hurt so long as you and your fellows
              cooperate fully with us. Are you willing to do that?"
    h                                               "We'll do anything you say," Taenia said. "Anything
              at all, of course we will, your excellency!"
                Ricimer looked over his shoulder. "Mister Moore," he
    is
    a           said. "When we lift off, I'll want to put a transponder in
    te          orbit to infon-n Captains Winter and Blakey of our course
              should they pass this way. Can you build such a device
              with what we have on hand?"
    lk
                I nodded, flushing with silent pleasure. Ricimer had
              noticed my facility with electronics and was willing to
              use it. "Yes, yes, of course," I said. "But I suspect I can
              use local hardware."
    in          Ricimer smiled at me. "I can understand a man being
              interested in a challenge," he said. "Though I'm surprised
    he
              at a man who doesn't find this voyage enough of a chal-
              lenge already."
    it ,        Ricimer's face set again; grim, though not angry. There
    . 119     was no headquarters building, so he indicated the human
    te        barracks with a nod of his carbine's muzzle. "Let's pro-
    rge       ceed to the shelter," he said.
                "But why in God's name would you want to come
              here?" blurted the Fed wringing his bandanna between
    led
     9        his hands.
    Ir s        "That," remarked Stephen Gregg as we twenty Ven-
    ind       erians swept past the flabbergasted locals, "is a fair ques-
              tion."
     on       "Well, we don't have anybody to communicate with,"
    mn-       Schatz, Pesaltra's radio operator, said defensively to me.
    ,ace      "They were supposed to send a new set from Osomi with
    was       the last ferry, but they must've forgot it. Besides, the ferry
              comes every six months or a year, and nobody else comes
    mer
              at all. It's not like we've got a lot of landing traffic to
     and
              control."
                Across the double-sized room that served the station's
     the      administrative needs, Salomon rose from a desk covered
              with unfiled invoices. "What do you mean you don't have
              any charts?" he snarled at Taenia. "You've got to have
              some charts!"
     [and.

    




    104           David Drake
    
     The floor was covered with tracked-in mud so thick
    that a half-liter liquor bottle was almost submerged in a
    comer. Paper and general trash were mixed with the dirt,
    creating a surface similar to wattle-and-daub. I'd dropped
    a spring fastener when I pulled the back from the non-
    functioning radio. I'd searched the floor vainly for al-
    most a minute, before I realized that the task was vain
    as well as pointless.
     "We're not going anywhere," Taenia said in near echo
    of Schatz's words a moment before. "What do we need
    navigational data for?"
     "If we were going anyplace," Schatz added with a
    variation of meaning, "they wouldn't have stuck us on
    Pesaltra."
     "We'll search the files," Piet Ricimer said calmly. He
    9estured his navigator to the chair at the desk and dragged
    another over to the opposite side. "Sometimes a routing
    slip will give coordinates."
     "But not values," Salomon moaned. He organized a
    thatch of hard copy to begin checking nonetheless.
     "But how do you communicate across the planet?" I said
    to Schatz. The sealed board was still warm when I pulled it
    from the radio, though the Fed claimed it had failed three
    months before. Schatz hadn't bothered to unplug the set-
    which had a dead short in its microcircuitry.
     Venerians stood in the shade of buildings, staring at a
    landscape that seemed only marginally more interesting
    than hard vacuum. The low haze the sun burned off the
    water
       blurred the horizon. The glimpse I'd gotten through
    the Oriflamme's optics during the landing approach con-
    vinced me that better viewing conditions wouldn't mean
    a better view.
     "There's nobody . . ." Schatz said. "I mean, there's just
    us here and the collecting boats, and nobody goes out in
    the boats but the bugs. So we don't need a radio, I'm
    telling you."
     Three Venerians had boarded one of the light-alloy boats
    on the lagoon. It was a broad-beamed craft, blunt-ended and
    about four meters long. A pole rather than oars or a motor.
    propelled the craft. From the raucous struggle the men were

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH     105
    
    ~k         having, the water was less than knee-deep.
                 "Bugs?" I repeated in puzzlement.
    a
    rt,                                                "He means the Molts, Jeremy," Stephen Gregg said
    ~d         dryly. "It's a term many of the folk on outworld stations
               use, so that they can pretend they're better than somebody.
               Which these scuts obviously are not."
    an           I unhooked my cutting bar. The tool's length made it
               clumsy for delicate work, but it would open the module.
    ho           "There's no call to be insulting," Schatz muttered. He
    ed         was afraid to look at Stephen. His hand rose reflexively
               to shield his mouth halfway through the comment.
       a         "Is he helping you, Jeremy?" Stephen asked.
      Dn         I looked up from the incipient operation with a scowl.
               "What?" I snapped, then remembered I owed Stephen 
     -.le      Well, owed him the chance to be whatever it was I'd
      ed       become. "Sorry, Stephen. No, he's useless to me."
      ng         "Get a shovel and a broom," Stephen ordered Schatz
               crisply, "and get to work. I expect to see the entire floor
               of this room in one standard hour."
                 I triggered my bar and let it settle after the start-up
      dd       torque. I held the electronics module against the blade
    I it       with my left hand, rotating the work piece while holding
     ,ee        the cutting bar steady.
                  B t there's bugs-" Schatz said, raising his voice over
        u
      the keen of the bar's ceramic teeth.
      a
                 Stephen's face went as blank as a concrete wall. His
     ng         eyes seemed to sink a little deeper into his skull, and his
     he         lips parted minusculely.
      gh                                              Schatz backed a step, backed another-hit the door-
      )n-        jamb, and ducked out into the open air.
      an                                              I shut off the power switch for safety's sake before I
                hung the bar back on my belt. I parted the sawn casing
      ~st        with a quick twist.
       in        "Useless," Stephen said in a hoarse voice. "But he will
        m       clean this room."
                 "And so's this," I said. "Useless, I mean-fried like
      ats       an egg.
      .nd        I dropped the pieces of module back onto the radio's
      tor       chassis and shook my head. "I'm going out to check the
      %,re      wrecked ships," I said. "Could be something there will
                                                            1EN I
                                                            0 1~ A
                                                            k
    
       or       C,
                W,
      -re

    




    106           David Drake
    
    help. I doubt this lot is any better at salvage than at any-
    thing else."
     Stephen's eyes focused again. "Yes, well," he said. "I'll
    come with you, Jeremy."
     He gestured me out the door ahead of him. Schatz stood
    halfway along the porch, holding a mattock in one hand
    and arguing with the woman on crutches.
     "To keep from doing something you'll regret, you
    mean," I said over my shoulder to Stephen.
     "Not quite," Stephen said. "But I don't want to do some-
    thing that Piet would regret."
    
    The high scream of my cutting bar ground down into a
    moan as the battery reached the limits of its charge. I
    backed away from the twisted nickel-steel pedestal I'd
    sawn most of the way through. Federation salvagers at
    the time of the crash had removed the navigational Al
    from the pedestal's top.
     I gasped for breath. My gray tunic and the thighs of my
    trousers were black with ~weat.
     Stephen looked down into the freighter's cockpit. The
    wreck lay on its side, so a rope ladder now dangled from
    the hatch in the ceiling. The force of the crash had twisted
    the hatchway into a lozenge shape.
     "I repeat," Stephen said. "I could take a shift."
     "I know what I'm doing," I snarled, "and you bloody
    well wouldn't! I haven't put in this much work to have
    somebody saw through the middle of the board."
     I was trembling with fatigue and the heat. I hadn't recov-
    ered from the strains my mind had transmitted to my body
    during the weeks of brutal transit. Maybe I'd never recov-
    er. Maybe-
     "Come on up and have some water," Stephen said mild-
    ly, reaching a hand out to me. "The distillation plant here
    works, at least."
     Stephen's touch settled my flailing mind so that I could
    climb the ladder. As Stephen lifted, the muscles of my
    right forearm twisted in a cramp and pulled my hand into
    a hook. I flopped onto the crumpled hull, cursing undcr
    my breath in frustration.

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH     107
    
         Salomon trudged toward us across the seared mud of
         the landing field, holding a curved plate of shimmering
         gray. The object was as large as his chest. Hydraulic fluid
         from the infrequent ships had painted swatches of ground
         with a hard iridescence.
         Stephen's flashgun was equipped with a folding solar
         panel to recharge the weapon when time permitted. He
         had spread the panel as a parasol while I worked in the
         cabin below.
         Stephen had brought a I 0-liter waist jug from the Ori
         flamme when I got my tool kit. The curved glass container
         was cast with a carrying handle and four broad loops for
         harness attachment. I lifted it with care, letting my left
         hand support most of the weight.
         Stephen took my cutting bar and opened the battery
         compartment in its grip. He swapped the discharged bat
         tery for the one in the flashgun's butt. The charging mecha
         nism whined like a peevish mosquito when the flashgun's
         prongs made contact.
         The jug'scontents were flavored with lemon juice,
         enough to cut the deadness of distilled water. Micropores
         in the glass lifted water by osmosis to the outer surface,
         cooling the remaining contents by convection. The drink
         was startlingly refreshing.
         "Thought I'd join you,"Salomon said. He lifted the
         object he held, the headshield of some large creature, to
    e    Stephen to free his hands.
         The Federation freighter was a flimsy construction built
         0",mostly of light alloys on this side of the Miffor. It had
         touched down too hard, ramming a thruster nozzle deep
         into the mud as the motors were shutting down. The final
         pulse of plasma blew the vessel into a cartwheel and ripped
         its belly open.
    re   The crew may have survived with no worse than bruises,
         but the ship itself was a total loss. The hull had crumpled
    Id   into a useful series of steps, though you had to watch the
    ly   places where metal bent beyond its strength had ripped
    ,to  jaggedly.
    [er  "There'sno information at all," the navigator com
         plained bitterly. I offered him the heavy jug, but he
    ~d
    y
            p
    
            b
            j
            p
            n
            u
            t
             s
             0
             's
             b
             T
             ut t
             nto
               e
               e
    
               h
               a
      MW
    
             laces
    to      jag~ e(
    r
    
    1~e        I
             plame

    




                    . ...........
    
                  108            David Drake
                  waved it away. "We'll have to coast the gradients
                  looking for the next landfall, and there's no guarante
                  that'll have navigational control either. Osomi sounds lik
                  another cesspool, sure, maybe a bit shallower."
                    "If Landolph could do it, Piet can," Stephen,said caln-fl
                  He tapped the plate of chitin. "What's this?"
                    "The values aren't even the same on this side of t
                  Mirror!" Salomon said. "The people here live like animE
                  drinking piss they brew for a couple months after the fe
                  from Osomi drops off supplies. Then they run out of dr
                  fruit and don't even have that!"
                    "It's from a local animal, not a Molt, I suppose'
    MIN           asked. By helping Stephen break the navigator's n
                  out of its tail-chasing cycle of frustration, I found I
                  calming myself. I smiled internally.
                    Salomon shrugged. "It's a sea scorpion," he said.
                  live in the lagoons. The head armor fluoresces, 0 it's
                  for jewelry this side of the Mirror. That's the only r(
                  anybody lives here-if you call this living!"
                    Stephen looked at his arm through the chitin. The,
                  was nearly transparent, but sunlight gave it a rich
                  that was more than a color.
                    "Pretty," I said. I liked it. "How big is the who
                  mal?"
                    "Three, four meters," Salomon said. He reached
     'NI)
                  jug, then grimaced and withdrew his hand. "I'v(
                  bottle back on the ship," he said. "I was going to c(
    fill          when we transited the Breach, but when the time
                  didn't feel much like it."
                  He glared at the surrounding terrain. "We'N
                  through the Breach, we've lost most of the squa(
                  His head snapped toward Stephen and me. "Y
                  that the Kinsolving and Mizpah aren't going to
                  don't you?" Salomon demanded.
                  "Yes," said Stephen evenly. "But we're goinj
                  a transponder here anyway."
                  Salomon shuddered. "And what we've got for
                  bank-and a bale of crab shells that wouldn't
                  a three-day voyage, much less what we've gone
                    "They'll be trading material," Stephen said.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     109
    
    food as we go on, and sticking a gun in somebody's face
    isn't always the best way to bargain."
     I grinned at him. "Though it works," I said.
     It's not a magic wand, Jeremy," Stephen said. "It
    depends on the people at either end of the gun, you
    see."
     Stephen's voice dropped and he rasped the last few
    syllables quietly. I felt sobered by the results of my quip.
    I put my hand over his and drew the gunman back to the
    present.
     "You know," Stephen resumed with a dreamy softness,
    "Pesaltra is actually a pretty place in its way. Water and
    land stitched together by the plants, and the mist to soften
    the lines."
     Salomon knew Stephen well enough to fear him in a
    killing mood. He nodded with approval that we'd stepped
    back from an unexpected precipice. "They catch the scor-
    pions in traps, Tacnia says," he said. "It's dangerous. Every
    year they lose a few boats and half a dozen Molts running
    the trapline."
     "We're not doing it for the shell," Stephen said. He
    wasn't angry, any more than a storm is angry, but his tone
    brooked as little argument as a thunderbolt does. "We're
    not doing it for the wealth, either, though we'll have that
    by and by."
     In a way, it wasn't Stephen Gregg speaking, but rather
    Piet Ricimer wearing Stephen's hollow soul. There was
    fiery power in the words, but they were spoken by some-
    one who knew he had nothing of his own except the Hell
    of his dreams. "We're doing it for all men, on Venus and
    Earth and the Rabbits, bringing them a universe they can
    be men in!"
     Stephen's big frame shuddered. After a moment, in a
    changed voice, he added, "Not that we'll live to see it.
    But we'll have the wealth."
     I flexed my hands and found they worked again, though
    my right arm had twinges. "I'm going to finish down
    below," I said.
     "Let me take a look," Stephen said. He furled the
    charging panel and collapsed its support wand so that
    
122     David Drake

and his face wore a dazed expression. Jeude's buckshot had hit him squarely at the top of the breastbone, but he was still-for the moment-alive.
Which is all any of us can say, I thought as I jumped his legs. My boots skidded on the remains of the man Stephen's bolt had eviscerated. I caught the counter with my free hand and swung myself through the gate. I'd left my cutting bar behind. There was more shootin outside 9
the building.
The room stank worse than a slaughterhouse. Ozone, powder smoke, and cooked meat added their distinctive smells to the pong of fresh-ripped human guts. The woman Ricimer shot was huddled beside the outer door. She'd smeared a trail of blood across the floor to where she lay.
Heimond's car pulled a hard turn as I ran out the front door. Ricimer was driving again. Stephen stood on the passenger seat. He'd slung the flashgun and instead held Piet's repeating carbine.
The man on the roof now lay full length on his back. P
I don't know if he'd been killed or had passed out from drink.
1 jumped into the back with Lightbody and Jeude. The car hadn't slowed, and I'm not sure anybody realized I wasn't already on board. Jeude fired again. The flash from the shotgun's muzzle was red and bottle-shaped.
"Shut that popgun down until there's a target in range, you whore's turd!" Stephen snarled in a voice with more hatred than you'd find in a regiment of Inquisitors.
Stephen swayed as the car jounced. I grabbed his belt so that if he fell he wouldn't be thrown out. He poised the butt of the carbine to crush my skull, but his conscious mind overrode reflex at the last moment.
I sucked breaths through my mouth. I was dizzy, and nothing around me seemed real.
The car had a quartet of headlights above the hood, but only the pair in the center worked. They threw a long shadow past a bareheaded man in blue running down the track a hundred meters ahead of us.
Stephen fired once. The man pitched forward with one arm flung out and the other covering his eyes. We joited
MW

THROUGH THE BREACH  123

    past the body at the car's best speed, 50 kph or so. There
    was no sign of the other Feds who'd escaped from port
    control with that one.
        "Stephen, sit down!" Piet Ricimer ordered. Gregg
    ignored him.
        The boarding ramps of the ship that landed after ours
    were down, and the vessel was lighted like a Christmas
    star. Molts and humans in blue uniforms stood on the
    ramps and at a distance from the vessel: the ground directly
    underneath would still be at close to 100'C from the ship's
    exhaust.
        A man on the vessel's forward ramp pointed toward
d   our swaying vehicle and shouted orders through a bull
    horn. "The fucking Parliament!" Jeude snarled. "The real
t   fucking escort, and why she couldn't have showed up
e   tomor-"
Id      A uniformed woman ran into our path, waving her arms
    over her head. Piet swerved violently. Stephen fired, a
k.  quick stab of yellow flame. The Fed toppled under our
in  right front wheel.
        We lurched but the wheels were mounted on half-axles
he  and had a wide track. Stephen flailed, completely off bal
I   ance. The car didn't go over. By bracing my leg against
in  the side of the compartment I kept Stephen from falling
    out as well.
(TC,        Lightbody cried, "Lord God of hosts!" as he fired toward
ore the Parliament, and Jeude's shotgun boomed again despite
    the fact that I was sprawled half across him as I clung
elt desperately to Stephen. The car's frame swayed upward
the as the heavy front wheel slammed down. The rear wheel
ous hit the woman's body, and Stephen shot the blue-sashed
    Molt who tried to leap over the hood at Ricimer.
and     A ship down the line lit her thrusters. A bubble of rain
    bow fire lifted and cooled to a ghostly skeleton of itself
but before vanishing entirely. The Parliament was a dedicated
ong warship. I'd seen three rectangular gunports gape open in
the succession in my last glimpse of her, but now we were
    past.
one     Stephen got his legs straight and sat down. His carbine's
Ited    bolt was open. He opened a pocket of Piet's bandolier
124     David Drake

and took out a handful of cartridges. The Parliament's siren howled and a bell on the Molt barracks clanged a twice-a-second tocsin.
A ship tested her thrusters again. This time the vessel
4,  lifted slightly from her berth and settled again ten meters
out in the roadway. She was the Oriflamme. The 20-cm
hoses with which she'd been drawing reaction mass dan
gled from her open holds.
Glowing exhaust backlit us. I stared stupidly at the spray of dust ahead of our right front wheel. "There's a truck following-" Jeude shouted.
Maybe he meant to say more, but three violent hammer blows shook our vehicle. Stephen pitched forward, the severed tags of his flashgun's sling flapping. A palm-sized asterisk of lead smeared his backplate; the ceramic was cracked in a pattern of radial lines. My face stung, my hands bl
ed where bits of bullet jacket had splashed them, and I still didn't realize the Feds were shooting at us.
I twisted to look back the way we'd come. A slopefronted truck bounced down the road in a huge plume of dust. It was moving twice as fast as we could. Red flame winked from the framework on top of the vehicle. The Feds had welded dozens of rifle barrels together like an array of organ pipes.
Bits of rubber flew off our left rear tire, though it didn't go flat. Because of Rabbit attacks, the garrison of Templeton had a mobile reaction force. It was too mobile for us.
Stephen leaned across the back of his seat and rested his left elbow on my shoulder. It was like having a building fall on me. I had just enough awareness of what was happening to close my eyes. The flashgun drove its dazzling light through the tight-clenched eyelids, shocking the retinas into multiple afterimages when I looked up again.
The laser mechanism keened as it cooled beside my ear. Stephen tilted the weapon and slapped a fresh battery into the butt compartment. The flashgun wasn't going to do any good; even I could see that.
The truck was armored. The metal shutter over the wiqdshield glowed white, but the driver behind it was unharmed.
THROUGH THE BREACH  125

Flashgun bolts delivered enormous amounts of energy, but a monopulse laser has virtually no penetration. Even a hit on the driver's periscope might be useless, since properly designed optics would shatter instead of transmitting a dangerous amount of energy.
"Bail out!" I shouted. I squirmed to the side of the compartment. Jeude wasn't moving; Lightbody thumbed a cartridge into the breech of his rifle.
"Jump!" I shouted, but as I poised Lightbody fired again and Stephen leaned forward against the butt of his squat laser.
A bullet hit our right rear wheel and this time the tire did blow. The car fislitailed, flinging me against the seats. The sky ripped in a star-hot flare. Concussion pushed the car's suspension down to the stops, then lifted us off the ground when the pressure wave passed.
The Oriflamme had fired one of her 15-cm broadside guns. The truck was a geyser of flame. Fuel, ammunition, and the metal armor burned when the slug of ions hit the vehicle.
Ricimer crossed his wrists on the yoke, countersteering to bring us straight. The wheel rim dragged a trail of sparks across the gravel.
-Salomon shouldn't have risked running out-" Ricimer cried.
Another of the Oriflamme's cannon recoiled into its gunport behind a raging hell of stripped atomic nuclei.
The facade of the Molt barracks caved in. The interior of the three-story building erupted into flame as everything that could bum ignited simultaneously.
Wreckage spewed outward like the evanescent fabric of a bubble popping. Shattered concrete and viscous flame wrapped port control and the maintenance shop on the barracks' other side.
Ricimer stood on the car's brakes. Because of the blown tire we spun 180' and nearly hopped broadside into the lip of the Oriflamme's stem ramp. Stephen rose in his seat and poised like a statue aiming the flashgun. I tried to raise Jeude one-handed-I'd clung to my electronics kit since the moment I slammed it over the data we'd come
126     David Drake

to get. Lightbody bent to help me.
Stephen fired. A secondary explosion erupted with red
;UA flame.
        Piet grabbed Jeude's legs. He and I and Lightbody lifted
    Jeude out. The smooth surface of Jeude's body armor
    slipped out of my hand, but Lightbody's arms were spread
    beneath the wounded man's torso.
        Beneath the torso of the dead man. A bullet had struck
    Jeude under the right eye socket and exited through the
    back of his neck. Strands of his blond hair were plastered
    to the wounds, but his heart no longer pumped blood.
        A thumping shock wave followed several seconds after
    Stephen fired. He'd managed to do effective damage with
    the flashgun instead of leaving the fight to the thunderous
    clamor of plasma cannon.
        We ran up the ramp, carrying Jeude among us. The air
    shimmered from the hop that had lifted the Oriflamme
    into firing position. Salomon poured full power through
    the thrusters. Heat battered me from all sides. I would
    have screamed but my lips and eyelids were squeezed
    tight against the ions that flayed them like an acid bath.
        I fell down, feeling the shock as the third of our big
    guns fired. Acceleration squeezed me to the deck as the
    jets hammered at maximum output. I was blind and suf_
    focating and at last I did scream but the fire didn't scour
    my lungs.
        I thrashed upright. The crewman spraying me with a
    hose shut it off when he saw I was choking for breath.
    I was wrapped in a soaking blanket. So were the others
    who'd staggered aboard with me.
        Dole knelt and held Piet's hands with a look of fear
    for his commander on his face. Stephen checked the bore
    of his flashgun and Lightbody was trying to unlatch his
    body armor. The fifth blanket must cover Jeude, because
    it didn't move.
        Our ramp was still rising. Through the crack I could
    see waves on the lake fifty meters below, quivering in the
    icteric light of a laser aimed at us from the Templeton
    defenses. Something hit the hull with a sound more like
    a scream than a crash. Our last broadside gun slammed
THROUGH THE BREACH  127

        as the ramp closed against its jamb.
    red     Piet got to his feet. Dole tried to hold him. Piet pushed
        past and staggered toward the companionway to the Ori
    ~fted   flamme's working deck. His face was fiery red under the
    ~mor    lights of the hold. Stephen walked behind Piet like a giant
    iread   shadow.
            I stood up. Pain stabbed from my knuckles when I tried
    suck    to push off with my free hand. My face was swelling, so
    ,,i the that I seemed to be looking through tubes of flesh. Soon
    tered   I wouldn't be able to see at all.
d.          I stumbled to the companionway, swinging my arm to
    after   clear startled crewmen from my path.
    with        I had to get to the bridge. My partner held the course
    r1rous  we would follow until we won free or died.

[ie air ~mme 'rough xould eezed bath.
ar big
as the
d suf
scour

with a
wath.
iothers

bf fear
ie bore
tch his
iecause

could in the
4pleton
Sre like
animed
INTERSTELLAR SPACE

Day 102

"Sir, please leave the dressing in place," begged Rakoscy, the ship's surgeon. "I can't answer for what will happen to your eyes if you don't keep them covered for the next twenty-four hours at least."
"It's under control, Piet," Stephen said, taking Piet's hands in his own. He pulled them down from Piet's eye bandage with as much gentle force as was necessary. "There's nothing to see anyway. Salomon'll tell us when the data's been analyzed."
Dressings muffled both men's hands into mittens. The visored helmet Stephen wore because of the flashgun's
I-V glare had protected his face.
Ughtbody moaned in a hammock against the crossbulkhead, drugged comatose but not at peace. He'd come through the night better than the rest of us physically, but I was worried about his state of mind.
I hadn't thought of Lightbody and Jeude as being close friends. I don't suppose they were friends in the usual sense, a deeply religious man and an irreverent fellow who talked of little but the women and brawls he'd been involved with between voyages. But they'd been together for many years and much danger.
I could see again. Shots had shrunk the tissues of my face enough for me to look out of my eye sockets, and Rakoscy had left openings in the swaths of medicated dressings that
Mill,   covered the skin exposed to the plasma exhaust. I felt as
though a crew had been pounding on my body with mauls,
but Rakoscy assured me there'd be no permanent injury.

128
A

    THROUGH THE BREACH  129
        It was good to worry about Lightbody's state of mind,
    because then I didn't have to consider my own.
        Salomon turned his couch and said, "Sir, Guillermo and
    I have a course to propose."
        Rakoscy led Piet by the hands to the center console. I
    suppose it would have made better sense for Salomon to
    use Piet's couch under these circumstances. The same Al
    drove all three consoles, but the main screen was capable
    of more discriminating display because it had four times
    the area of the others.
        Salomon hadn't suggested he take over, much less make
    the decision without asking. Logic wasn't the governing
,n
    factor here. It rarely is in human affairs.
xt      Stephen moved nearer to me and hesitated. I'm not sure
    whether or not he knew I could see.
s       "That seemed close," I said quietly. "Or is it something
Ve  I'll get used to after the fiftieth time?"
Y.      Stephen gave a minuscule smile. "No," he said, "that
,n  was pretty near-run, all right. If it hadn't been for Salomon
    taking the initiative, it would've been a lot too close."
he  He coughed. "You're all right?"
I's     "Yeah," I said. "I don't have much color vision at the
    moment, that's all."
;s-     He looked hard at me, but he didn't push for answers
ne  to the real questions. Why had God saved me and taken
wut Jeude beside me?
    If there was a God.
)Se     Piet settled onto his couch and sighed audibly. Fans,
ial thrusters, and the noise of the ship herself working filled
)w  the Oriflamme with a constant rumble.   With time, that
~en drifted below the consciousness.
ier     There were no human sounds aboard now. The crew
        in the forward section had fallen tensely and completely
ice
    silent.
,cy     Piet switched on the public address system by feel. "Go
hat ahead," he said.
as      "Trehinga is about six days transit from Templeton,"
Ils,
        Salomon said. "Seven, according to Federation charts, but
ry- I'm sure we can do it in six."
        The navigator had shown himself to be able and quick
130     David Drake

thinking. As Stephen said, he'd saved us on Templeton. Salomon ran out the big guns against orders when he heard the landed Parliament identify herself as a presidential vessel-a dedicated warship--over the radio. The Feds
iL
party sent by the Parliament's captain to
we met were a
F
    port control when nobody replied to the radio.
Despite his proven ability, Salomon licked his lips from nervousness as he proposed a solution based on information that the general commander couldn't see. Alone of us aboard the Oriflamme, Salomon was afraid that his responsibilities were beyond him.
"It has dock facilities," he continued. "We've lost two attitude jets, and the upper stem quarter of the hull was crazed by laser fire as we escaped. But there shouldn't be much traffic."
"Trehinga grows grain for the region," Guillermo put in from the opposite console. "There are no pre-Collapse vestiges, and therefore little traffic or defenses."
Salomon nodded, gaining animation as he spoke. "The port's supposed to have a company of human soldiers," he IF,
T1  said, "but Mister Gregg says he doubts that." He looked
up at Stephen.
Piet nodded agreement. "A few dozen militia, counting Molts with spears and cutting bars," he said. "Unless the Back Worlds are much better staffed than the Reaches in general."
"Of course, Templeton was no joke," Stephen said. The 'I lack of concern in his voice wasn't as reassuring as it might
have been if a less fatalistic man were speaking.
"Templeton was a treasure port," Piet said briskly. "Go on, Mister Salomon. What about the risk of pursuit from Templeton?"
"The bloody Parliament isn't pursuing anybody till they build her a new bow, sir," Stampfer said. "Since me and the boys on Gun Three blew the old one fucking off as we lifted."
U; J        The satisfaction in the master gunner's voice was as
    obvious as it was deserved.
    Piet nodded again in approval. "And there wasn't any
    thing docked on Templeton when we arrived that would be
THROUGH THE BREACH  131

    a threat," he said. "Nevertheless, we'll need to take some
    precautions if we're going to do extensive repairs."
        Piet turned his head-"looked," but of course he couldn't
    see-from Salomon to Guillermo and back. "Are we ready
    to go, then?" he asked. The infectious enthusiasm of his
    tone helped me forget how much I hurt. Piet had been
    burned at least as badly.
        "The first sequence of the course is loaded," Guillermo
f   said. Salomon glanced up in surprise, but the Molt knew
    Piet Ricimer.
        "Then let's go," Piet said. "Gentlemen, prepare for
    transit!"
11 ~ 117
TREHINGA

Day 109

The cutter touched bow-high. Piet cut the motor and we skipped forward on momentum, crashing down on the skids about the boat's own length ahead of its thruster's final pulse. It was a jolting landing compared to Piet's usual, but I understood why he wouldn't take chances with plasma for a while.
Lightbody and Kiley had undogged the dorsal hatch when we dropped below three thousand meters. They and the four other sailors packed beneath the hatch slid it open, but Stephen was first out of the vessel and I managed not to be far behind. I was more mobile than the men in half armor and bandoliers of ammunition.
A featherboat with room for twenty men and a small plasma cannon would have been better for this assault, but that option had gone missing with the Kinsolving. Twelve of us were squeezed into the cutter. Four spacers would cover the pair of grain freighters on the landing field, while we others "captured" the settlement of New Troy: a two-story Commandatura with bay windows and a copper-sheathed front door, and fifty squalid commercial and residential buildings.
The landing field was adobe clay, flat and featureless. Dust puffed under my boots. The sun was near zenith, but the air felt pleasantly cool,
The Oriflamme roared down from orbit above
    us,
Salomon would be on the ground in three minutes, bu
it would be at least five minutes more before anyone left
the ship safely except wearing a full hard suit. The flagship

132
THROUGH THE BREACH  133

    could dominate the community by her presence and the
    threat of her heavy guns, but a quick assault required a
    lighter vessel.
        The Commandatura was fifty meters from where we'd
    landed. People watched us from its windows and the door
    ways of other buildings.
        According to the database I'd copied on Templeton,
    Trehinga was fairly well populated, but most of that popu
    lation lived on latifundia placed along the great river sys
    tems of the north continent. New Troy was the planet's
    administrative capital and starport, but it was in no sense
    a cultural center.
        Still, some of the people watching were women.
        A pair of men in white tunics, one of them wearing a
    saucer hat with gold braid on the brim, walked out of the
    Commandatura. Stephen and I started toward them. Dole
    was beside me, carrying a rifle as well as a cutting bar, and
    the other sailors fanned out to the sides. Piet ran to join us,
    last out of the cutter because he'd been piloting it.
        The Fed officials paused at the base of the three steps
    to the Commandatura's front door. They stared at us, all
    armed and most of us wearing body armor.
        "Raiders!" the older man shouted.
        Stephen pointed his flashgun.
        "Don't anyone shoot!" Piet cried as he aimed his own
    carbine toward the Feds. "And you, wait where you are!"
        "Raiders!" the Fed repeated. He turned and took the
    four steps in two strides. His companion raised his hands
    and closed his eyes. The onlookers of a moment before
    vanished, though eyes still peeked from the comers of
    windows.
        I ran toward the Commandatura, holding my cutting bar
    in both hands to keep it from flailing. The others followed
    me as quickly as their equipment allowed.
        "You won't be harmed!" Piet said.
        The Fed official grabbed the long vertical handhold and
    started to pull the door open. Piet fired. His bullet whacked
t   the door near the transom, jolting the panel out of the Fed's
    hand. The Fed ran into the edge of the door instead of
    slipping between it and the jamb. The impact knocked

4A
    134 David Drake
    him back down the steps, scattering blood from a pressure
    cut over his right eye.
        I ran past the man. He moaned and squeezed his fore
    head with his palms stacked one on the other. I tugged
L   at the door with my left hand. Piet's bullet had split the
    wood of the heavy panel, wedging it tighter against the
50
    jamb. Stephen jerked the door open but I eeled into the
    reception area ahead of him.
        There were offices to right and left behind latticework
    partitions. Either half held a dozen Molts and a few humans
    among the counters and desks. A man in his fifties had
    crawled under his desk. The opening faced the front door,
    so he was perfectly visible.
        Two rifles lay on the wooden floor of the anteroom. Men
    in white Federation military tunics stood in the office to
    the left, with the lattice between them and their weapons.
    Their hands were raised, but from the looks on their faces
    they expected to be killed anyway.
        I started up the central staircase to the second story,
    taking the steps two at a time. Behind me Piet ordered,
    "Get them all in the left room. Loomis and Baer to guard
    them!"
        Heavier boots crashed on the stairs behind me. Stephen
    breathed in gasps. Dole whuffed, "Christ's blood!" as his
    boot slipped. Armor and equipment slammed down loudly
    on the hardwood treads. I could be shot from behind by
    accident, I realized, but the thought didn't touch the part
    of me that was in control.
        As fast as we'd arrived, the personnel of New Troy had
    found time to respond. The folk downstairs reacted by
    hiding and dissociating themselves from their weapons,
    but that might not be everyone's choice
        To the right of the stair head was an openwork gate of
    cast bronze. The workmanship was excellent. The pattern
    was based on pentacles, like that of the Molts' own archi
    tecture. The gate was locked. Somebody inside had tried
    to draw a curtain for visual privacy, but he/she had torn
    the fabric in panic. The room beyond had thick rugs and
    a good deal of plush furniture, though I couldn't see any,
    people in the glance I spared it.
- ---------

m6ig
1016m

THROUGH THE BREACH  135

The door to the left was thick, ajar, and carried the legend in letters cut from copper sheet-stock GUARDS OF THE REPUBLIC. I rammed it fully open with my shoulder.
The interior was dim because the space was partitioned into smaller rectangular chambers. A man stood at the end of the central hallway, trying to step into his trousers onehanded. He saw me and straightened, aiming his rifle.
I lunged toward him. He flung away the rifle and screamed, "No, don't shoot!" He crossed his arms in front of his face.
"Watch the other doors!" Stephen ordered behind me, the fat muzzle of his flashgun pointed at the Fed soldier. The partition walls didn't reach the high ceiling. Dole, Lightbody, and I kicked open doors.
Two men came out with their hands raised. One of them snarled, "Traitor!" He must have thought we were mutineers from a Back Worlds garrison. Dole knocked the man down with his rifle butt, then gave him a boot in the stomach.
There were ten cubicles in all, each with a bunk, a table, and a freestanding wardrobe. Others had been occupied recently, but the three men who'd surrendered were the only ones present now.
Maher, take them down with the rest," said Piet. He'd waited at the stair head until he was sure there'd been no trouble in the guards' Jormitory.
Stephen said.
Piet turned and smashed the gate open with the heel of his right boot. He strode into the room beyond with his carbine slanted across his body-ready for trouble but not expecting it. I was the last man to follow him.
Four Molt servants huddled at the rear comer of the room, out of sight from the doorway. French windows opened onto a balcony overlooking the walled garden behind the Commandatura. A narrow staircase led from the balcony to the garden.
A Molt was pruning Terran roses, apparently oblivious of the commotion going on around him. There was a shed against the back wall, and a small but ornate residential outbuilding at the end of the pathway through the center of
136     David Drake

the garden. The outbuilding's door closed as I watched.
"Where's the commander?" Piet said, pointing his left hand imperiously at the cowering Molts. Piet held his carbine muzzle-up in his right hand; the butt rested in the crook of his elbow.
One of the Molts gestured toward a heap of large, embroidered pillows along the sidewall. "Masters," the Molt said, "none of us know where Secretary Duquesne might be."
Dole groped in the pile of pillows, found something, and jerked a fat man in loose trousers and an open-throated shirt into view. "Wakey, wakey," the bosun said, laying the muzzle of his rifle on the bridge of Secretary Duquesne's nose.
"Please!" Duquesne squealed. "Please!"
"Let him up," Piet said, obviously relaxing. "I don't think he'll be any difficulty."
"Piet, there's somebody in the building behind this," I said, nodding toward the French windows.
The Oriflamme touched down. While the thrusters' roar reflected from the ground, the doubled noise rattling the
Ir I Rl~    window casements made further speech impossible. Piet
gestured first to me, then to Lightbody, and last toward
the outside. stairway. Stephen nodded the ceramic barrel
of his flashgun and stepped to a window from which he
could command the whole back of the garden.
I'd reached the midway landing when Salomon shut off the Oriflamme's motors. The sudden silence released a vise the noise had clamped around my chest. I wasn't aware of the pressure until it stopped.
"Sir?" said Lightbody. I glanced over my shoulder. "Will there be treasure in there?" He nodded down the path ahead of us.
"In a manner of speaking," I said, because I had a notion as to just who might be housed in the cottage. "Not that'll mak
e us rich, though."
I wondered if Piet had the same suspicions I did
    and
if so, what he'd meant by sending me to investigate.
    The gardener continued spraying his roses with a cau
P,
designed for a Molt's three-fingered hands. He crooned
THROUGH THE BREACH  137

    d.  in a grating voice as we passed, but it wasn't us he was
    left    speaking to,
    his     The Oriflamme's ramp began to lower with a loud
J in    squeal. The ship was going to need a lot of work. I didn't
        believe she could ever be reconditioned to the point she
xge,    could pass the Breach a second time.
    the     The curtain on the window to the left of the door flut
,,sne   tered as we approached. I paused to hang the cutting bar
from my belt .. though of course, she could be guard-
iing,       ed, probably would be guarded. The place had blue trim
,ated       and white stucco walls, though both were flaking to a
lay-        degree.
,tary           "Open in the name of the Free State of Venus," I said,
        pitching my voice to command rather than threaten.
            Nothing happened. I tried the latch. It was locked.
lon't           "This is absurd,` I muttered.
            Lightbody stuck the muzzle of his shotgun into the six
s", I       pane window casement and swept the barrel sideways,
        shattering half the glass and snatching the curtain aside.
roar        There were two women within. I'd expected only one,
    the and these were both tough-looking. They wore the white
Piet        jackets of the Federation military.
ward            "Open the door, then!" Lightbody said. His face grew
,arrel      red and his voice sank into a growl. "You whores!"
:h he           "We're not armed!" snarled the 40-year-old woman with
        light brown hair. The name tag over her left pocket read
    shut    VANTINE. She might have been handsome at one time, but
,ased       not since the scar drew up the left side of her mouth.
    asn't       Lightbody kicked the center panel out of the bottom of
        the doorframe. He was furious. "Easy. . ." I warned, but
ilder.      his bootheel smashed the central crossbrace from the door,
    .1 the  flinging jagged fragments into the room. Vantine jumped
        back from the latch when she realized that we were in no
    otion   mood to play games.
    hat'll      "Lightbody!" I said, but I might as well have been in
        Betaport for the effect I had. He half turned, then lunged
    and against the remnants of the door. The back of his armored
        shoulder hit the top panel. It splintered also as Lightbody
    a can   spun into the small living room. The furniture-a couch,
    ~oned   two chairs, and an end table-was of local wood with
_1441

138     David Drake

lacework coverings. The oval area rug was patterned in small pentagons of gray, pink, and white thread.
The two women backed toward the couch, keeping their hands plainly in sight.
I stepped between them and Lightbody. "Where's the person who lives here?" I asked. The cottage had two more rooms, a kitchen and-through a bead curtain-a bedroom.
"We live here," said the second woman, whose black hair was shot with gray. Her name tag read PATTEN and her face was less attractive than Dole's. "We?re not billeted with the other soldiers because we're women, can't you see?"
"You're whores!" Lightbody shouted. "Soldiers of Hell, most like! Prancing about as if you was men!"
He swung his shotgun toward Patten. I grabbed it with both hands. He was bigger than me and stronger for his size. He forced me back.
I snatched the cutting bar from my belt. "Lightbody!" I shouted. I thumbed on the power and triggered the bar. "If you won't obey me, then by God you'll obey this!"
I don't think it was the threat that brought Lightbody to his senses so much as having my face pressed into his above the crossways shotgun. He slumped back.
"Sorry, sir," he muttered. He turned his face aside and wiped it with his callused right palm. "It's against God and nature to see women pretending to be men."
I let go of him. I was trembling.- The bar shook as much with my finger off the trigger as it had the moment before. "We're not here for that," I said. My voice shivered too.
I turned. The women watched with a mixture of anger and loathing. Patten wore a crucifix around her neck. I jerked it with my left hand, breaking the thin silver chain. "We're not mutineers," I said, "we're from Venus. And we're Christians."
I'd spent more time in the Governor's Palace than I had in a church, and I'd only been to the palace twice.
I slapped the crucifix into Patten's hand. "Keep your idols out of sight, or I won't answer for the consequences."
THROUGH THE BREACH  139

The bead curtain rattled as I walked into the bedroom. The chance that either Patten or Vantine was the secretary's mistress was less than that of Piet swearing allegiance to President Pleyal.
I opened the large freestanding wardrobe beside the door. The clothes within were gauzy and many-layered, decorated with lace and ribbons. Shades of blue predominated. The bottom of the wardrobe held shoes in ranks; no one was hiding there.
The wood above me thumped. I backed a step and looked up. A flaring cornice ornamented the wardrobe's top. The hollow behind the cornice was about twenty centimeters deep. A blonde woman, gagged and with furious blue eyes, peered over the edge at me.
I tossed my cutting bar onto the bed to free both hands. "Lightbody, watch that pair of yours!" I warned.
I got extra height by hopping onto the wardrobe's bottom shelf, scattering delicate shoes. The woman squirmed completely over the cornice, trusting me to take her. Her weight was no problem.
Her wrists were tied, first behind her back, then to her ankles. Patten and Vantine had been busy in the minutes they'd had since we landed. They'd used filmy stockings for the bonds; not Terran silk, but something at least -as strong. I ripped my bar's ceramic teeth across the fabric with the power off.
The captive pulled the gag out of her mouth when I'd freed her hands. She was in her mid-twenties and far, far too supple and beautiful to be wasted on a pig like Secretary Duquesne ...
Well, that was true of a lot of women, and no few men.
"Thank you, sir," she said as she got to her feet in a motion as smooth as that of smoke rising. "My name is Alicia."
She walked into the living room without looking back at me. I suppose she was used to having men follow her without question.
Alicia's dress was pale orange. The soft fabric fit looseIv and had no particular shape of its own. She moved like a puff of flame.
i IN
140     David Drake

Lightbody faced the two soldiers, holding his shotgun at low port. His eyelids flicked in surprise when he saw Alicia. Patten and Vantine glared at her with molten hatred. My thumb slid the bar's power switch forward.
"Sergeant Vantine here..." Alicia said coldly. She stepped to the soldier's side without coming between Vantine and Lightbody's shotgun, then reached under the tail of Vantine's tunic.
has a gun," Alicia continued. Vantine moved minusculely. I reached over Alicia's shoulder and touched the tip of the bar to Vantine's right ear.
Alicia pulled a small revolver from Vantine's waistband. "I know about it," she went on in the same distant voice, "because the sergeant-"
Her face suddenly broke into planes like those of an ice carving, inhuman and terrible though still beautiful. Alicia backhanded Vantine across the jaw with the butt of the revolver. Vantine staggered.
Alicia hit her again, this time on the forehead. Vantine's head jerked back. There was an oval red splotch above her left eye.
I closed my left hand over Alicia's on the gun. She relaxed with a great shudder, leaning against me and closing her eyes. "Because the sergeant put it into me," Alicia said softly. "And shetold me to be a good girl and stay quiet like Ducky wanted, or she'd shovel hot coals there instead."
I dropped the revolver into my pocket. It was surprisingly heavy for something so small. Patten held Vantine by the shoulder and elbow, helping her stay uprighthAlicia I
e
straightened and stepped to the side. She watche( t e proceedings regally.
"Strip," I said to the soldiers. Lightbody looked at m oddly, Patten with fear.
"Oh, don't worry about your virtue, ladies, not from me," I said. "You'll strip to make sure you've no more toys hidden. We'll tie your hands with our belts, and then Lightbody'll march you to the Molt pen where you and I your friends will stay until we lift."
THROUGH THE BREACH  141

My voice caught repeatedly on images my mind threw up; Vantine and Patten, and the bound girl between them. Secretary Duquesne had acted quickly to keep his mistress safe when raiders landed. Safe in his terms, safe from other men.
The Fed soldiers only stared at me. I touched Vantine's tunic with the tip of my cutting bar, then triggered it. White fluff spun up from the whine.
"Don't worry about your virtue, ladies," I repeated. My voice quivered like the cutting bar's blade. "But your lives, now, that could very easily be a different matter."

4
TREHINGA

Day 111

The Federation freighter C*, renamed the Iola after Salomon's mother and for the next few days a Venerian warship, lifted thunderously from New Troy. The freshlycut gunports in her hold gaped like tooth cavities when the rest of the bare metal hull reflected sunlight. The Iola was 15' nose-down; she rotated slowly around her vertical axis because the thrusters weren't aligned squarely.
"I thought you said automated ships were safer on liftoff than landing?" I said to Piet, moderating my voice as the Iola climbed high enough to muffle her exhaust roar.
Piet quirked a smile at me. "The concept of automation isn't a problem," he said. "Just the cheap execution. Besides, it's safe enough."
"Or you'd be taking her up yourself," Stephen said in a tone of mild reproof. Alicia heard enough in the gunman's voice to look sharply at him. She'd known a lot of men in her 25 standard years, but none like Piet or Stephen Gregg.
She'd known men like me. I didn't doubt that.
The Iola had risen to a dot of brilliant light in the stratosphere. The sound of saws and the rock crusher became loudly audible again, now that the thrusters were gone.
The Federation laser battery that hit us as we escaped from Templeton had crazed several hull laminations as well as taking out two attitude jets. The shock of repeated transits flaked the damaged sheathing off in a five-meter gouge.
The crew was sandblasting the fractured edges just as

142
THROUGH THE BREACH  143

    a surgeon would debride a wound in flesh before closing
    it. When they finished the prep, they'd flux the bounda
    ries and layer on ceramic again. I suspected Piet would
    oversee that final process himself Hawtry was right when
    he claimed Piet's father was a craftsman rather than a
gentleman.
    Another team removed attitude jets from the second
    Federation freighter, the Penobscot. We carried spare jets
    in the Oriflamme, but all the original nozzles were badly
    worn from the long voyage. Jets from the ships and stores
IT here would replace our spares.
    Dole had muttered to me that he'd rather use burnt
    out ceramic than trust Fed metalwork, but Piet seemed   lid
e   to think the tungsten nozzles would be adequate. Sailors
    as a class were conservative: "unfarniliar" was too often
Is
is  a synonym for "lethal." The general commander of an
    expedition through the Breach had to be able to assess
Iff options on the basis of fact, though, not tradition.
~e  licia raised a slim hand toward where the Iola had van
    ished. "But where are you sending the ship?" she asked.
    It didn't seem to occur to her that anybody might think
,a
    she was asking out of more than curiosity. Stephen and I
    exchanged glances: mine concerned, his clearly amused.
    Piet, with an innocence as complete as I'm sure Alicia's
~a  was, answered, "We're just putting her in orbit with two
I s guns, Mistress Leeman. The Oriflamme can't lift while
en  we're working on her hull, and there's the risk that a
en  Federation warship will arrive while we're disabled."
    As he spoke, Piet began walking down Water Street.
to- New Troy stretched along a broad estuary. It had a sur
    faced road along the water and a parallel road separating
.ne the buildings from the field where starships landed. A
~ed dozen barges were moored to quays behind the grain ele
vators.
as  "Warships here?" Alicia said. "Don't worry about that.
ted I haven't seen one in . . ." She shivered. "Nine months,
Ier I've been here. Earth months. I was born in Montreal."
    There was more to the last statement than information.
as  I wasn't sure whether she meant it as a challenge or an
adrnission, though.
144     David Drake

"Still, it's better not to run a risk," Piet said mildly. "We'll reship the guns to the Oriflamme in orbit, I think. Since, as Jeremy points out, the C* is worse maintained than I'd thought from viewing her."
He tipped me a nod.
"Dole takes a crew up in the cutter to replace Salomon tomorrow?" Stephen asked.
Piet shook his head. "Guillermo tomorrow, Dole the following day. Stampfer asked for a watch, but I don't trust his shiphandling, even with automated systems."
He glanced at me. "I wouldn't put it so bluntly to Stampfer, you know, Jeremy," he said.
I shrugged. "He's a gunner," I said. "One man can't do everything."
Though maybe Piet could. Being around him gave you
q1 i    the feeling that he walked on water when nobody was
watching.
The pen for Molts being transshipped was adjacent to the Commandatura. There'd been a dozen aliens behind the strands of electrified razor ribbon when we landed. Neither the C* nor the Penobscot was a dedicated slaver, but both vessels carried a handful of Molts as part of their general cargo.
We'd turned the Molts loose. Half of them still wandered about New Troy, looking bewildered and clustering when we distributed rations from the Fed warehouse. Secretary Duquesne, his seven soldiers, and three of the officials who'd been cheeky enough to sound dangerous had replaced the slaves in the pen.
'oil lil
-residents as well as tran.
For the most part, the humans
sients from the barges and two starships-seemed willinj to do business on normal terms and otherwise keep ou of our way. The local Molts were no problem withou human leaders. Stephen, Piet, and a sailor who'd bee. to the Reaches with them had separately warned me th, Molts would fight for human masters, even masters wb treated them as badly as the Feds generally did. It was
mj  matter of clan identification among the aliens.
Duquesne trembled with anger as he watched the fo, of us saunter by the pen. He touched the razor ribi
THROUGH THE BREACH  145

    forgetting that the metal was charged. A blue spark popped
    and threw him back. Patten and a male soldier heard the
    secretary bellow and ran to help.
        "Run toward the wire," I ordered Alicia in a low voice.
        "Duckyl" she cried.
        I let her' go two steps and grabbed her roughly around
    the neck. "Get back here or you'll be in there with him!"
    I shouted as I swung her between me and Piet.
        Stephen faced the pen and raised the flashgun's butt
    toward-not quite to-his shoulder in warning. Duquesne
    and his henchmen scurried out of sight within the wooden
    shed meant to shelter slaves.
        We walked on. "That was a good thought, Jeremy,"
    Piet said.
        I shrugged. "Maybe it'll help," I said. I didn't suggest
    we hang Duquesne and the two women who'd been so
    enthusiastic to carry out his orders. Piet wouldn't go along
    with the idea, and I've got better things to do than waste
    my breath.
        We passed one of the hotels/boardinghouses for human
    transients. Men watched from chairs on the lower-level
r   stoop. Stephen eyed them, shifting slightly the way he
    carried the flashgun. The captain of the Penobscot banged
    his chair's front legs back down on the deck and threw us
    a salute.
        Piet had addressed the population of New Troy the night
    we arrived, promising that we would deal fairly with them
d   as individuals, paying for whatever merchandise or ser
    vices we required. Our quarTel was with President Pleyal
i-  and his attempt to dictate to all mankind.
9       When Piet was done, Stephen added a few words: if
it  there was trouble, the colony would pay for it. If one of
it  our men was killed, there would be no colony when we
~n  left. The next visitors would find the bones of the present
at  inhabitants in the ashes of their buildings.
        There was a line of men--our men-reaching out the
ra  door of the next building, a brothel. There were three girls,
    though Dole said the fiftyish madame had turned tricks
.ir as well during the crush the night before.
n,      The waiting spacers grew silent and looked away. Piet
146     David Drake

turned his head in the direction of the river and said to Alicia, "Do the landowners have guards on their estates, Mistress Leeman?"
Alicia sniffed. "They arm trusties to track Molts who run away," she said. "None of the landowners are going to risk their life or property to help the secretary, though."
We were past the brothel. Piet didn't approve of whoring or drunkenness, but he didn't order his crew to remain chaste and sober while on leave. A cynic would say Piet was too smart to give orders he knew would be ignored ... but I'm not sure most of this crew would ignore an order of his, even an order that went so clearly against their view of
'1113 ~i    nature.
Sunset painted clouds in the eastern sky, while veils of heat lightning shimmered behind them. We might have a storm before morning. I doubted the shed in the Molt pen was waterproof.
The combination saloon and general merchandise store next to the brothel was owned by Federation AssociatesPresident Pleyal himself, in his private capacity. The facade sagged, and I could see through the grime of the display windows that the roof leaked badly. The store had twenty meters of frontage, but the shelves within were dingy and almost empty. A Molt clerk stared back at us, as motionless as a display mannequin.
Boards filled the lower three-quarters of the saloon's window frames, leaving only a single row of glass panes for illumination. A drunk lay in the street. Two men arguing in front of the door stepped inside when they saw who we were.
"This is why we have to bring Venus to the stars," Piet said. "New Troy, a thousand New Troys-this can't be allowed to continue as man's face to the universe." i
"Commander," I said, "it's a frontier. You can't expect polish on a frontier."
Piet stood arms akimbo in the middle of the street. Tracked-on clay covered the plasticized surface. The adobe would be slick as grease in a rainstorm.
Three grain elevators marked the boundary of the human, community of New Troy. Beyond were pentagonal tow
THROUGH THE BREACH  147

        ers the Molt labor force had built for itself Their upper
to
        floors were served by outside staircases. Though construc
'S,
        ted from scrap material by slaves, the towers had a neat
10 unity that the human buildings lacked.
        "Let's go back," Piet said. He turned up the broad pas
io
        sage beside the saloon and the nearest elevator. After a
        moment, he went on, "It's not a frontier, Jeremy. It's a
9       dumping ground, a midden. Pleyal is mining the universe
in
et for his personal benefit, not mankind's."
        His voice was rising. The louvered shutters of most of
        the windows on this side of the saloon were swung back
of
of      from unglazed casements. A barge crewman at a table
        followed us with his eyes as we passed.
of      "The only kind of men who'll come to the stars to serve
a       a tyrant are the trash, or men as grasping and shortsighted
ell     as their master is," Piet said. "The few of a better sort
        sink into the mire because they're almost alone. This isn't
ire     a frontier where hardship makes men hard, it's a cesspool
        where filth makes men filthy! And it will not change until
de      the claim of Pleyal to own the universe beyond Pluto is
ay      disproved. At the point of a gun if necessary!"
Ity     The fronts of commercial buildings on the starport side
    nd  duplicated those on Water Street. The saloon's facade had
    Iss one fully-glazed sash window. The bartender was a Molt.
        A dozen men sat inside, drinking from 100-ml metal tum
    i's blers.
    ies None of the clientele was from the Oriflamme. Our
    ru- tnen had taken over a saloon at the other end of town by
    ho  arrangement between Dole and local businessmen. Nobody
        wanted the sort of trouble that could explode when violent
    'iet enemies got drunk together.
    be  "One ship won't bring down the North American Feder
        ation," Alicia said. This evening she wore a frock of trans
    ect lucent layers. The undermost was patterned with Terran
        roses which seemed to climb through a dense fog of over
    ,et. lying fabric.
        "Our success will bring other ships, Mistress Leeman,"
    )be
        Piet said. "Raids on the Federation Reaches have already
    ian increased twentyfold in the two years since, since we--2'
    )w- He gripped Stephen's right hand, though he continued
148     David Drake

to look toward Alicia on his other side.
"-carne back with more microchips than had been seen on Venus since the Collapse."
"It's not just the wealth for Venus," Stephen said. "It's the wealth that doesn't go to Earth to help President Pleyal strangle everyone but Pleyal."
There was no line on the starport side of the brothel. A lone Federation spacer glanced at us from the doorway. A pink-shaded lamp inside was lighted. I stepped into a pothole that the sky's afterglow hadn't shown me.
Alicia lifted her chin in a taut nod. "So you'll replace bums with'pirates? That's your plan?" She paused. "Bums and whores!"
"We'll break the present system, mistress," Piet said, "because it can't be reformed. With the help of God we'll do that. Then there'll be room for men-from Earth, from Venus, from the Moon colony and Mars, perhaps-to expand in however many ways they find. Rather than as a tyrant demands, in a fashion that will come crashing down when the tyranny does-as it must!-in a second Collapse that would be forever."
The last words were a trumpet call, not a shout. Another man would have blazed them out with anger, but Piet's transfiguring vision was a joyous thing. Though even I'd seen how harsh the execution would be.
"I went to the Reaches to trade," Stephen said in the thin, lilting voice I'd heard him use before. "I wonder what would have happened if we'd been left to trade in peace, hey?"
He laughed. Alicia shut her eyes and missed a step. She squeezed against me instinctively.
"Maybe I'd sleep at night, do you think?" Stephen went
on in the same terrible voice. Piet took his friend's hand
again.  I
The slave pen was unlighted. Figures moved around a lantern at the Water Street end. It was about time for the prisoners to get their rations.
Floodlights gleamed on the Oriflamme. Half a dozen crewmen continued to work on the hull. "If I thought,we had time," Piet said, "I'd grind off the repairs we made
THROUGH THE BREACH  149

        on Respite and reglaze from the original. I don't think the
ten     basalt bonded well, despite the surface crazing."
        "There'll   be time for that after we've taken the
It, s       Montreal," Stephen said. "Or it won't matter."
~al         Piet gave a nonchalant shrug. "We'll take her," he said.
        "And return home, with the help of God."
iel.            He looked at Alicia, smiled, and bowed slightly. "I think
lay.        I'll go aboard and see how the repairs are coming," he said.
, p a       Mistress Leeman, I've appreciated your company."
        "I'll go along with you, Piet," Stephen said.   "Maybe
,ace        I'll bunk in the ship tonight."
Ims         He gave me a wan smile. The two of them walked in
        step toward the Oriflanune, though I'm sure neither was
aid,        attempting to match strides. They were as different as an
'e"ll       oyster and its shell; and as much akin.
rom         I opened the wicket into the Commandatura garden for
-to     Alicia.
han         "Captain Ricimer really believes in what you're doing,"
iing        she said softly. Roses perfumed the air. There were lights
~ond        in the far wing of the building, but the garden seemed to
        be empty. "But Mister Gregg doesn't."
ither           "I think Stephen believes the same things as Piet does,"
iet's       I said. "I just don't think he cares very much."
    I'd "He frightens me," she said.
            Stephen would never kill anyone by accident, I thought;
    the but Alicia understood too much for that to sound reassur
    rider   ing to her. "He's a good friend to Commander Ricimer,"
    le in   I said, "Not a very good friend to himself, though."
            I paused to twist off a rose. Its deep pink glowed like
    She     a diamond's heart with the last of the sunset. I broke the
            thorns Off sideways with the tip of my thumb, then handed
    went    the flower to Alicia.
    hand        She giggled and put the stem behind her ear. Flying
            creatures as big as gulls swooped and climbed over the
    md. a   river. Their calls were surprisingly musical.
    ,r the  Alicia turned at her cottage's new door-a panel of
        raw wood that Molt workmen had fitted the evening
    [ozen       before. "You're a very gentlemanly pirate, aren't you?"
    it we       she said. "You could easily have forced me to-whatever
        Vou chose."
    made
150     David Drake

I shrugged. My skin was tingling. I respect you too much for that," I said. I respect myself too much. Again, though I don't lie when I can avoid it, one chooses the particular truth he speaks aloud.
"A girl doesn't always want to be respected quite so much," Alicia said. My arms were around her by the middle of the sentence, and my lips muffled the final word.

Near morning, as I was starting to dress to be gone before dawn, Alicia told me about Secretary Duquesne's personal cache of chips in a pit beneath the floor of the garden shed.

Al

T

JV
WEI
00  TREHINGA
in,
he
so
id-

Dre     Day 114
nal
Jen I   "Here's the whores you wanted, Mister Moore," Lightbody
        said in a tone that could have been forged on an anvil. He  A
        gestured Patten and Vantine into the walled office I'd taken
        for this interview. Baer stood behind the women with a
        cutting bar.
            Because the Federation soldiers wore trousers and had
        hired on to fight, Lightbody called them whores, thought of
        them as whores. He treated Alicia with the deference due a
        lady; and she was a lady, as surely as I was a gentleman,
        but the twists of Lightbody's mind disturbed me at a basic
        level nonetheless.
            The Oriflamme fired a matched pair of attitude jets in
        the field outside. The hull repairs were complete. Piet
        and Guillermo were doing the final workup. We'd lift by
        evening, so it was time for me to act.
            "You can take their hands loose, Lightbody," I said. The
        women were filthy. Facilities in the slave pen were limited
        to a trough, buckets, and mud. Twice so far we'd had rain
        before dawn, and the yellow adobe clay was everything
        I'd expected it to be.
            Were conditions reversed, Secretary Duquesne would
        have us hanged out of hand-unless he directed Patten and
        Vantine to torture us to death instead. I didn't think of this
        pair as whores. More like vicious dogs, to be trusted only
        in their malice.
            Lightbody looked doubtful, but he opened the knots
        on the women's wrists with the spike of his clasp knife.
        He held his shotgun out to the side where the prisoners
                151
    152 David Drake
    couldn't easily grab it. "You'll want us to stay in here
    with you then, sir?" he suggested.
        I shook my head. "No," I said, "I want to have a friendly
    talk in private. Close the door and wait outside."
        The two sailors obeyed, but I could tell they didn't think
    much of the idea. To reassure them, I laid my cutting bar
    on top of the desk I was using, with its grip ready for
    my hand.
        I'd chosen the office of the Clerk of Customs because
    the, room was private and it had a large window. I wanted
    the light behind me for this interview. The clerk-the older
    of the pair who'd come out to the cutter initially-had
    decorated the walls with wood carvings. Molt workman
    ship, I supposed. The pieces were intricate, but I didn't
    find them attractive.
        The women glared at me with caged fury. Their white
    tunics were sallow with dried mud, and their faces weren't
VIR much cleaner.
        I waited for the next pair of jets to finish their screaming
    test, then said, "You can sit down." I gestured to the chairs
    against the wall behind the women.
        "What do you want from us?" Vantine demanded in a
    voice which broke with anger.
        "Help," I said. "For which I'm willing to pay.99
        They were making it easy for me, though I'd have car
    ried through in any case. I'd seen this pair in action the
    morning we arrived. No amount of feigned contrition now
    would have changed the decision I'd made.
        "And if we don't agree, you9re going to threaten us with
    that toy?" Patten said, nodding toward my cutting bar. "I
    ought to feed it to you!"
        "No threat," I said. I picked up the bar and waited a
    moment. If Lightbody and Baer heard the blade whine,
    they'd burst in on us.
        The Oriflamme fired two more attitude jets. I triggered
    the bar and shaved the comer off the desk. I laid the
    weapon down again.
                take of attacking
        "This is so that you won't make the mis
    me," I said. "If you did, I'd-"
        Another part of my mind started to fog my conscious
THROUGH THE BREACH  153

intelligence. My voice was husky and very soft.
    11
        -cut you into so many pieces that they'd have to fill
        your coffins by weight." I swallowed. "And I don't want
        that, I want a friendly conversation, that's all."
        The part of me that hid behind the red fog, the part that
        had been in control at the Molt temple and was almost in
        control just a moment before-that part very much wanted
    another chance to kill.
        The women had straightened as I spoke. Their faces
        were expressionless, and the earlier bluster was gone.
        "What do you want?" Vantine repeated quietly.
        "We'll be lifting for Quincy soon," I said. I was all right
        again, though my hands still trembled. "We're hoping to
        meet Our Lady of Montreal there." I smiled. "If not there,
        then we'll catch her farther on. It depends on how long she
        lays over on Fleur de Lys. But before we leave Trehinga,
t   I'd like to find the treasure stored here."
        The women looked at one another cautiously, then back
        to me. Patten massaged her right thigh through her dirty
    trousers.
    "There's    no chips, no artifacts here," Vantine said.
a   She was more afraid of keeping silent than of speaking.
    "Trehinga   wasn't settled before the Collapse. There's
    nothing but wheat."
        "I can't imagine that a man like Secretary Duquesne
        doesn't have a private hoard," I said. "I don't know what
    sort of favors he's tradin  to the ships' captains who land
        9
        here, but there'll be something. He'll be building up a store
        so that when he retires to Earth he has something better
        than a Federation pension to support him. Chips are the
        most likely, but maybe pre-Collapse artifacts smuggled
    a from other planets, sure."
        "We don't," Vantine said very carefully, "know anything
        about that." She watched me the way a rabbit watches a
    -d
    snake.
    ie  Attitude jets-the last pair of the morning, unless Piet
        saw a need to retest-fired. The sound wasn't so loud that
    ig  1 couldn't have talked over it, but the three-second pause
    was useful.
    as  "I'd pay you each a hundred Mapleleafs if you showed
154     David Drake

me where the cache was," I said. I held up a pair of twelve-sided coins bearing President Pleyal's face toward the women.
The paymaster's safe on the opposite side of the Commandatura contained a fair amount of currency. As Piet had promised, we weren't robbing the businessfolk of Trehin a, but the Federation government was another 9
matter.
The women stared at me. Patten began to laugh. "Are you crazy?" she said. She regained her composure. "Do you think we're crazy? We lead you to Duquesne's personal stash, and then you go off and leave us here? Do you have any idea what he'd do to us then?"
I shrugged. "I've got a notion, yeah," I said. "Open the door, would you please?"
Vantine obeyed. Her companion's laughter was half bravado, but Vantine was clearly terrified. She'd sensed.
not, I think, what was about to happen, but that something was about to happen.
Lightbody raised his shotgun's muzzles when he saw everything was calm. "Baer," I said, "go out and gather as many of our off-duty people as you can in five minutes. Into the garden. And tell the locals to come, too. There'll be some entertainment."
"What are you doing, sir?" Lightbody said as Baer ran down the corridor shouting.
"For the moment," I said, "you and I wait here with the ladies. Then we'll go out to the garden too."
I put my hand on the cutting bar. I was shaking so badly that the blade rattled on the desk and I had to put it down. Patten was silent, and Vantine was as gray as if someone 1 was nailing her wrists to a cross.

There were easily a hundred people in the garden when we came out-me in front, the prisoners behind, and last of all Lightbody with the shotgun. I'd had him tie Patten's right wrist to Vantine's left while we waited. They couldn't escape, but it was important that they not be seen to try.
"Hey, Mister Moore!" Kiley called from the crowd. "Do they take their clothes off now?"
MIR
THROUGH THE BREACH  155

        I waved with a grin; but the joke made me think of
    Jeude, and the grin congealed.
        The Molt gardener stood on one leg, rasping the other
    one nervously against his carapace as he watched people
    brush his precious roses. Because of the thorns, the bushes
    weren't likely to be trampled; but sure, some sailor might
    clear more room with his cutting bar.
        Funny to think of a Molt worrying about Terran roses
    on one of the Back Worlds. In those ternis, most of life
    seemed pretty silly, though. I suppose that's where religion
    comes in, for those who can believe in a god.
        I waved my bar ahead of me to make a path. A lot
    of those present were locals, as I'd hoped, but they kept
    to the edges of the courtyard. The central walkway and
    an arc facing the back of the Commandatura were filled
    with Venerians. More spectators streamed in through the
    wickets beside the building and the larger gate onto Water
    Street.
        Baer had done a good job, though I wasn't quite sure
    how he'd managed it so quickly. I'd wanted a big enough
    gathering that word would spread at once throughout the T
    community, but this was ideal.
        Alicia's jalousies were lowered; she would be watching
    from behind them. I'd told her she should at all costs stay
    hidden this morning.
        "What are we doing?" Vantine asked over the chatter
te  of the crowd.
        "Keep moving, whore!" Lightbody snapped. I suspected
    he prodded Vantine with the gun as he spoke.
        "None of that!" I ordered. "The ladies are helping us."
ke      As I turned my head to speak, I saw that Piet and Stephen
    had come out the back of the Commandatura. They were
    following us.
,e  The storage shed was padlocked. I sheared the hasp
I       off in twinkling sparks. A bit remained hanging from the
ht  staple. I flicked it away with the tip of the cutting bar: the
    steel would be just below red heat from friction.
        Stephen reached past and slid the door open. He grinned
)o      in a way that was becoming familiar, but he didn't ask any
    questions.
156     David Drake

The shed's floor was wooden and raised a few centimeters from the ground. Tools optimized for Molt hands, crates, a coil of fencing, and other impedimenta were
nd the walls, but the two square meters in stacked arou
the center of the shed were clear.
There'd be a catch hidden somewhere, but I wasn't going to hunt for it. I swept my bar in an arc through the flooring. Nails pinged bitterly within the cloud of sawdust; the head of one bounced from my shin.
I stepped forward, turned, and drew the reverse arc. The crowd outside was pushing for a better view, but Stephen planted himself in the doorway to keep people out of my blade's way. Patten and Vantine watched in dawning awareness.
Stringers gave. The rough circle of floor fell with a crackle under my weight. I kicked the fragments of lumber aside.
A rectangular steel door measuring a meter by eighty centimeters was set in concrete where there should have been bare soil. I gripped my bar with both hands.
"Jeremy?" Piet Ricimer called.
I looked up. Piet handed Stephen the white silk kerchief he'd worn around his neck. "Cover Jeremy's eyes,71 he said.
Stephen knotted the silk behind my head. I saw through a white haze. The doorplate had no keyhole, but the hinges were external.
"We didn't-" Patten shouted at the top of her voice, but the scream of my bar cutting metal drowned her out.
A rooster tail of white sparks cascaded to either side of the bar's tip, pricking my bare hands and charring trails of smoke from the wood they landed on. A chip of steel flicked my forehead. Momentary pain, gone almost as soon as I jerked my head.
"Step back, Jeremy," Stephen ordered. His arm kept me from stumbling on the wood floor that I'd forgotten.
I was shaking with effort and my tunic was soaked. I'd been holding the cutting bar as though it supported me over a chasm. I pulled the kerchief off so that I could breathe
31i freely, then mopped my face with it.
amp ~:

I !~ ll
THROUGH THE BREACH  157

    There were three black-edged holes in the silk. I
wouldn't have thought of covering my eyes.
    Stephen kicked the door with his bootheel, aiming for
    the concealed lock. The plate rang. This wasn't a real safe,
    just a protected hiding place. The second time Stephen  0
    stamped down, the back of the lid where I'd sheared the
hinges sprang up.
    The lid was more than two centimeters thick. Stephen
    lifted it by the edges with his fingertips. He tossed it past
me into a comer of the shed.
    "We didn't have anything to do with this!" Patten cried.
Vantine hugged herself, shaking as if in a cold wind.
    Stephen reached into the opened stash. He came up with
    a mesh bag of microchips in one hand and what looked
like the core of a navigational Al in the other.
    He walked out into the sunlight. "There's fifty kilos of
    chips here!" he shouted to the crowd. There were shouts
    of awe and surprise, some of them from the local specta
tors.
    I came out with Stephen. "Lightbody," I called loudly,
"release these women at once."
    Patten tried to hit me. I stepped close and embraced
    her. I caught a handful of her short hair to keep her from
    biting my ear in the moment before I backed clear again.
    Lightbody still didn't understand, but Piet held both wom
    en"s free elbows from behind so that they couldn't move.
    I waved the hundred-Mapleleaf coins so that they caught
    the sunlight. Vantine was numb. Patten spat at me, but
    nobody at any distance could see that. Certainly not the
locals at the back of the crowd.
    "And here's your pay," I said, dropping both coins into
Vantine's breast pocket.
    There was sick horror in Vantine's eyes. I didn't much
like myself, but I'd done what I'd needed to.
    At least the pay was fair. The Sanhedrin had only paid
thirty pieces of silver to finger a victim for crucifixion.
    Everybody's aboard, sir," Dole called over the clamor
    of men claiming bits of shipboard territory after days of
        Wk
    freedom to move around. "Smetana was sleeping it off
158     David Drake

behind Gun One so I didn't see him."
Piet nodded to me. I ran two seconds of feedback through the tannoys as an attention signal, then announced, "Five minutes to liftoff."
I'd told Stephen he should take the right-hand couch since Guillermo was in the Iola, but he'd insisted I sit there instead. At least I could work the commo as well as the Molt could, and it wasn't as though the process of lifting to orbit required a third astrogator.
Piet's screen echoed the settings that Salomon had programmed. Salomon flipped to an alternate value, then flopped back to the original, all the time watching Piet.
"Either," Piet said with a smile. "But yes, the first, I think, given the Iola's present orbit."
The Oriflamme's displays were razor-sharp, though the lower third. of my screen was offset a pixel from the remainder ever since we'd come through the Breach. The population of New Troy watched from buildings and the road.
I could have expanded any individual face to fill the entire screen. That probably wouldn't be a good idea. -
Stephen knelt beside my couch. "Have they let Duquesne out of his cage yet?" he asked.
I shook my head. "I don't see any of that lot," I said. I stewed and expanded the slave pen in the field. The prisoners were still there behind razor ribbon. "Maybe the locals are afraid that he'll start shooting and we'll flatten the town."
"Maybe they just don't like the bastard," Stephen replied.' He laced his fingers and forced them against the backs of his hands. His face was empty; that of a man you saw sprawled in a gutter. "Lightbody says the pair of women
~N~li   you released stole a boat and headed upriver."
He raised an eyebrow. I shrugged.
    Piet leaned toward me. "We've made a preliminary
    examination of the database you found, Jeremy," li~j
said.   JJ
I turned away from Stephen. "Was it valuable?" I asked. "I don't see why it was part of Duquesne's stash."
"Valuable, though perhaps not in market terms," Piet
EC
THROUGH THE BREACH  159

said. "It's a courier chart. It has full navigational data for the Back Worlds and the longer route to the Solar System. The value to us is . .
He smiled like an angel. "Perhaps our lives."
"Shall I initiate, sir?" Salomon asked sharply.
Piet's attention returned to the business of planning liftoff. "One minute!" I warned over the PA system.
I swung the magnified view on my screen sideways a touch, focusing on the. woman at the wicket beside the Commandatura.
"We couldn't bring her along, you know," Stephen said in a low voice. "Anyone female."
"She didn't ask, did she?" I said. I didn't realize how angry I was until I heard my tone. I started to blank the
,e  display, then instead expanded it further. The discontinuity
le  fell just at the point of Alicia's chin.
"It wasn't a clever plan, Stephen," I said softly. "I didn't
    id  ask her about anything. She volunteered     She volun
        teered everything that she gave me."
I ~e        Stephen put his hand on my arm. ".Best I get to my
I . hammock," he said as he rose.
,Re     Salomon engaged the Al. Our roaring thrusters drew a
t
I   curtain of rainbow fire across the face of a woman I would
Id. i-      1   0
he  never see again.

~e en

-d. of

ien T'lif 0

lry he

)iet
f
ABOVE QUINCY

10~q

Day 127

Men in hard suits were around us in the forward hold, though our cutter's optics were so grainy they suggested rather than showed the figures. Clanks against our hull were probably restraints closing; chances were the ramr had locked shut since I didn't feel the vibration of th( closing mechanism anymore.
"All right, you lot," Lightbody ordered as he lifted hiM self from the pilot's couch. "Open her up! Ah-"
He remembered I was alone in the back of the cutter "Ah-sir!"
Baer rose from the attitude controls. I'd already freei the undogging wheel by bracing my boots against thwart and slamming a spoke with the shoulder of my hard sui I spun the wheel fully open, then let Baer help me slid the hatch back over the dorsal hull.
The two sailors Piet gave me to crew the cutter wei solid men, either of them capable of piloting the vessi alone in a pinch. Lightbody wasn't used to thinking of landing party as two sailors and a gentleman, though.
The crew of the Oriflamme was at action stations. f been sent down to the settlement on Quincy to - gath information. I could be spared if Our Lady of Montre appeared while the cutter was on the surface.
I floated out of the cutter's bay. Maher, one of the sailc who'd locked us into the hold, grabbed me with one ha as he hinged up his visor with the other.
"Captain Ricimer's waiting on you forward, sir," said. He aimed me toward the companionway, then shov

160
THROUGH THE BREACH  161

        me off like a medicine ball. A sailor waiting there absorbed
        my momentum and redirected me up the tube.
            Dole hugged me to him as I drifted into the forward
        compartment. He kicked off, carrying us both to the
        navigation consoles-skirting the 17-cm plasma cannon
        with a neat carom from the ceiling gunport, still for the
        moment closed.
            I didn't know whether the men were obeying Piet's
        orders or if they'd simply decided oft their own that Mister
        Moore in free fall was clumsy as a hog on ice. Maybe
        the process was demeaning, but it'd halved the time I
        would've taken to negotiate the distance on my own.
~d          I gripped Piet's couch to stay in place. I'd expected to
A       see Stephen, but I realized he would be with the assault
lp      party in the after hold.
            Piet's screen and that of Salomon to his left were
        filled with navigational data in schematic and digital
        fo2 Guillermo's display showed the world we were
        orbiting Quincy was ninety percent water, with strings
r.      of small volcanic islands and one modest continent
        for the moment on the opposite hemisphere. Ivestown,
~d      the planet's sole settlement, was on the continent's north
ts      coast. Farms nearby provided garden truck and fruit for
X.      starships which stopped over to load reaction mass, but
le      there was no large-scale agriculture and nothing of interest
        in Ivestown save the pair of brothels.
    .e      Piet turned the PA system on to echo my words. He
    -,I lifted himself on his left arm to face me directly, since the
    a   hard suit prevented him from twisting his torso in normal
        fashion. We'd radioed from Ivestown before lifting off to
    d   return, but face-to-face communication was far better than
    ,r  depending on RF transmissions through Quincy's active
        ionosphere.
                The Montreal hasn't arrived yet," I explained. "Nobody
        down there is even expecting her."
    .d      I shook my head in renewed wonder. "It's like talking
        to a herd of sheep. There's eighteen, twenty humans in
    ie  Ivestown, and about all they're interested in is scraping
    ,,d local algae off the rocks and eating it. It turns their teeth
        brown. I suppose there's a drug in it."
David Drake
162

"They could be lying," Salomon said. "To keep us here instead of following the Montreal."
"No," I said. "No. Lightbody checked the field. He says there hasn't been a ship landed at Ivestown in weeks. Sure, the Montreal could land anywhere on the planet, but they wouldn't have. And-you'd have to see the people down there. They don't care."
I suppose all four of the colony's women worked in the brothels when a ship was in; maybe some of the men did too. I'd have found coring, a watermelon a more satisfying alternative. Piet couldn't have asked a better proof of Fed colonies being garbage dumps rather than frontiers.
Salomon sighed and relaxed his grip on the arm of his couch. Because the navigator had unlatched his restraints to look at me, his armored body began to rise. "It might be weeks before the Montreal arrives," he said. "We might have to wait for months. Months."
Piet looked toward the screen before him. I don't know
'whether he was actually viewing the course equations dis-
played there or letting his mind expand through a range of
ossibilities as vast as the universes themselves.
"We've waited months already," Piet replied. His voice
was soft, but the PA system's software corrected to boom the words at full audible level from the tannoys in all the compartments.
Salomon looked at me for support. I wanted desperately to be back in a gravity well. My hard suit's rigid presence constricted my mind. We hadn't stayed long enough on the ground for me to take the armor off. I said nothing.
"If we land . . ." Salomon said. The prospect of an indefinite stay in weightless conditions was horrifying to veteran spacers as well as to me, but Salomon still wasn't willing to complete the suggestion. He knew it was a bad one, knew that landing would jeopardize the whole expedition.
"If we land," Piet said with his usual quiet certainty, "then we have to hope that the Montreal sets down without first determining who we are. If instead she transits immediately, we won't be able----2'
"The Feds are too sloppy to worry about a ship on the ground," Salomon said. His voice didn't have enough

A
THROUGH THE BREACH  163

energy to be argumentative. "Especially on the Back Worlds."
"We've risked a great deal," Piet replied. "Many of our friends have died. Many others as well, and they're also human beings. We aren't oing to cut comers now."
9
He tapped his armored fingertip twice on the audio pickup as a formal attention signal. "Gentlemen," he said,
you may stand down for the moment. Don't take off your hard suits. I regret this, but we have to be ready to open the gunports at a moment's notice."
I nodded within the tight confines of the helmet sealed to my torso armor by a lobster-tail gorget. My eyes were closed. I'd like to have been able to pray for mercy.
"Men," Piet said. "Comrades, friends. With the Lord's help, we'll prevail. But it's up to us to endure."
The tannoys chirped as Piet switched off the PA system.
We would endure.
'I Ij
ABOVE QUINCY

Day 129

I unlatched the waste cassette-the shit pan--of Stephen's hard suit. You can change your own, but you're likely to slosh the contents when you reach beneath your fanny with arms encased in rigid armor.
This cassette leaked anyway. Stephen made a quick snatch with a rag. A few droplets of urine escaped despite that. Because we were in free fall, the drops would spread themselves across the first surface they touched, probably a bulkhead.'
That wouldn't make much difference, because the Oriflamme already stank like a sewer from similar accidents. What bothered me worse was the way my body itched from constant contact with my suit's interior.
"If I ever have a chance to bathe again," I said softly, "all that's left of me is going to melt and run down the drain like the rest of the dirt."
Ild
The Oriflamme's crew hung in various postures within the compartment. The only comfortable part of free fall was that any of the surfaces within the vessel could serve as a "floor." Piet lay on his couch, apparently drowsing. Dole was on lookout at the left console. Guillermo's usual position was empty. The Molt had gone into suspended animation and was bundled against the forward bulkhead in a cargo net.
    The displays were set for blink comparison. Images
    of the stars surrounding the Oriflamme flashed against
MIMI
    images taken at the same point in the previous orbit. The
AI corrected for the vessel's frictional slippage and high-

164
7 MW
, lim
THROUGH THE BREACH  165

lighted anomalies for human examination. In two days of waiting, we had the start of a catalog of comets circling Quincy's sun.
Kiley held open the clear bag so that I could add my cassette to the dozen already there. A detail of sailors would open the after hold and steam the day's accumulation, but there were limits to the cleaning you could do in free fall and vacuum.
Stephen slapped an empty cassette into the well of his suit. "You've never been on a slaving voyage, with Molts packed into the holds and all the air cycled through them before it gets to you," he said. "Though we didn't have to stay suited up that time, that's true."
I looked at him. "I didn't know that you'd been a slaver," I said.
Stephen turned his palms up in the equivalent of a shrug. "Back when we were trying to trade with Fed colonies," he said. "The only merchandise they wanted were Molt slaves. Piet wasn't in charge."
He smiled, "Neither was 1, for that matter, but it didn't bother me a lot." There would have been as much humor in the snick of a rifle's breech opening. "And that was back when some things did bother me, you know."
"Hey?" said Dole. Piet, who I'd thought was dozingand maybe he was-snapped upright and expanded by three orders of magnitude a portion of the starfield blinking on his display. Dole was still reaching for the keypad.
The magnified object was a globular starship. We had no way of *udging size without scale, but I'd never heard of J
anything under 300 tonnes burden being built on a spherical design. Plasma wreathed the vessel. Her thrusters were firing to bring her into orbit around Quincy.
Piet wound the siren for two seconds. The impellers couldn't reach anything like full volume in that time, but the moan rising toward a howl was clearly different from all the normal sounds of the Oriflamme in free fall.
"General quarters," Piet ordered crisply. "Assault party, remain in the main hull for the moment."
He paused, his armored fingers dancing across his console with tiny clicks. "My friends," Piet added, "I believe
    166 David Drake
    this is the moment we've prepared and suffered for."
        Stephen checked the satchel which held charged bat
    teries to reload his flashgun. I bent and held him steady
    with both hands to get a close look at his waste cassette.
    It was latched properly.
        When the Oriflamme's gunports opened, we'd be in
    hard vacuum. That was the wrong time to have the pressure
    within somebody's suit blow his waste cassette across the
    compartment, leaving a two-by-ten-centimeter hole to void
    the rest of his air.
        Lightbody unbound Guillermo and pumped his arms
J   to break him out of his trance. The Molt was a doubly
    grotesque figure in the ceramic armor built for his inhu
    man limbs.
        Salomon slid into his console as Dole propelled himself
    clear. The bosun could land the vessel manually and run
    the Al during normal operations, but he lacked the spe
    cialized training to match courses with a ship trying to run
    from us. With a competent navigator like Salomon backing
    Piet Ricimer at the controls, the Federation vessel didn't
    have a prayer of escaping either in the sidereal universe
    or through transit.
        I'd hung a cutting bar from one of my hard suit's waist
    level equipment studs. I unclipped it. There was no need
    to, but it gave me something to do with my hands. Catch
    ing our quarry was only the first part of the business.
        "Prepare for power!" Salomon warned. Veteran sailors
    had already made sure their boots were anchored on the
    deck, "down" as soon as the thrusters fired.
        A I -g thrust simulated gravity. I was at an angle, because
    my right foot bounced from the deck. Stephen kept me from
    falling.
        The Fed vessel's image filled the main screen. That
    was another jump in magnification, though I supposed
    we were closing with them in real terms. Some of her
    plating had been replaced, speckling the spherical hull
    with bright squares. Her lower hemisphere was crinkly
    with punishment from atmospheric friction and the bath
    of plasma exhaust during braking.
        Everyone in our forward compartment stared at the
THROUGH THE BREACH  167

screen. The men amidships and in the stem cabin could only guess at what was happening, since the navigation staff was too busy to offer a commentary.
Our quarry's hatches would lower like sections of orange peel. There was an inlay of contrasting metal set beside one of them. I couldn't read the lettering, but I made out the figure of a woman with her hand outstretched.
"See the Virgin?" I said to Stephen. "I think she's the Montreal.
"Half the Feds' shipping is our lady of this or that," Stephen said. His voice was that of a machine again. "But if not this time, then another. And we'll be ready."
As Stephen spoke, his hands moved as delicately as butterfly wings across the stock and receiver of his flashgun. He'd folded the trigger guard forward so that he could use the weapon with gauntlets on.
"Unidentified vessel," crackled the tannoys. Piet had set them to repeat outside signals. This must have been from a communications laser since our thrusters and those of our quarry were snarling across the RF spectrum. "Sheer off at once. This is the Presidential vessel Montreal. If you endanger us you'll all be sent to some mud hole for the rest of your life!"
"Gentlemen," Piet ordered, "seal your suits."
He snapped his visor closed. I tried to obey. The cutting bar clacked against my helmet. I'd forgotten I was holding it. I couldn't feel it in my hand because of the gauntlets.
Our commo system switched to vacuum mode instead of depending on atmospheric transmission. Piet's voice, blurred almost beyond understanding, growled through the deckplates and the structure of my hard suit. "Run out the guns."
We dipped lower into orbit around Quincy, losing velocity from atmospheric friction as well as from our main motors. The Oriflamme began to vibrate fiercely. The Montreal's image trailed a shroud of excited atoms.
The gunport in the starboard bulkhead swung inward, U,
glowing with plasma from our own exhaust. The Ori-
flamme's outrushing atmosphere buffeted us and carried

- ------------
168     David Drake

small objects-a glove, a sheet of paper, even a knifewith it.
Ambient light vanished because there were no longer en
ough molecules of gas to scatter it. All illumination became direct, turning armored men into outlines lit by the gunport. When hydraulic rams advanced the muzzle of the Long Tom through the opening, we became a ship of ghosts and softly gleaming highlights.
The image of the Montreal on our main screen took on a slickness that no working starship could have in reality. The tornado of exhaust and roaring atmosphere degraded the data from our optical pickups. The screen's Al enhanced the image in keeping with an electronic ideal, substituting one falsehood for another.
Three gunports slid open along the midline of the Montreal's hull.
Our hard suits didn't have individual laser commo units, though a few of the helmets could be hardwired into the navigational consoles. Radio was useless while the main engines were firing anyway. I touched my helmet to Stephen's and shouted, "Why don't we shoot?"
The muzzles of plasma cannon emerged from the Montreal's gunports, setting up violent eddies in the flow of exhaust back over the globular hull. The guns looked very small, but the lack of scale could be deceiving me. Unlike us, the Federation crew wouldn't have been waiting in hard suits. A handful of gunners must have suited up hastily while the bulk of the personnel aboard prayed the gun compartments would remain sealed from the remainder of the vessel.
"If we disabled them now"-Stephen's voice rang through the clamor shaking our hull-Ahey'd crash and we'd have only a crater for our pains. Of course, they aren't under the same con-2'
The Montreal's guns recoiled into the hull behind streaks of plasma. The Oriflamme grunted, shoved by atmosphere heated from a near miss.
:'-straints," Stephen concluded.
'Assault party to the aft hold," a voice buzzed. The order could have been a figment of my imagination. Dole
7

THROUGH THE BREACH  169

and Stephen were moving, as well as other figures anonymous in their armor.
I'm going to die in this damned hard suit, and I can't even scratch. I started to laugh, glad no one could hear me.
Our four 15-cm cannon amidships were trained to starboard like the Long Tom. Wisps of our thrusters' plasma exhaust wreathed the weapons through the gap between the ports and the guntubes.
Stampfer sat at a flip-down console against the opposite bulkhead. The 15-cm magazines to either side of him
Wer(e locked shut for safety. I wondered how long that
c
J)r
eaution would be followed during the stress of combat. If a bolt hit an open magazine, the Oriflamme's hull might survive. I doubted that any of the crew would, hard suits or no.
I glanced over the gunner's shoulder as we passed. Our Lady of Montreal was centered on the director screen, but several phantoms overlaid the main image. The console was cal ulating the effect of atmospheric. turbulence, our exhaust, and the target's own exhaust. Because a plasma bolt is by definition a charged mass, contrasting charges could affect it more than they would a bullet or other kinetic-energy projectile.
I was halfway down the companionway when a shock jotted my grip loose from the ladder. I fell the rest of the way into the after hold, landing like a ton of old iron on Stephen's shoulders.
I managed to keep a grip on my cutting bar. I had only an instant to feel foolish before the next man fell on top of me.
Stephen helped me up. Armored men staggered into line like trolls. Stephen and I took our places in the front rank, facing the bulkhead that would pivot down into a boarding ramp.
The Oriflamme had dived deep enough into the atmosphere that the interior lighting appeared normal again. I took a chance and raised my visor. Stephen did the same. The air was hot and tasted burned because of traces of thruster exhaust.

............
, ~ pi~w

1, V1,
170     David Drake

"The Montreal doesn't mount heavy guns," Stephe
n
said. "They won't be able to do us serious damage in
the time they'll have before we land."
His face was quietly composed, and his eyes still looked human. There was nothing to do until the ramp opened, so Stephen's mind hadn't yet reentered the place that it went when he killed.
The man beside us bobbed his face forward to look through his open faceshield. It was Dole. There were twelve of us in the front rank this time, packed so tight that the bosun couldn't turn to face us he normally would while suited up. "Bastards did good to hit us the
0nce," he shouted. "Don't worry about them getting home again, sir."
"Don't discount the Fed gunners," Stephen said calmly. "They may have somebody as good as Stampfer. It only takes one if they have director control."
"I'm not worried," I said. I stood in the body of a man about to charge through a haze of sun-hot plasma toward a ship weighing hundreds of tonnes and crewed by anything up to a thousand enemy personnel. I wasn't a part of that suicidal mission, I was just observing.
The siren sounded, warning that we were about to touch down. Stephen and I linked arms and braced one boot each against the ramp. I felt a sailor in the second rank clasp my shoulder. There were no individual gripping points within the hold, but if we locked ourselves together, I figured the whole assault party would be able to stay upright.
Our rate of descent was much higher than Piet's normal gentle landings because we had to remain parallel with Our Lady of Montreal. She was dropping like a brick, either from panic, general incompetence, or as a calculated attempt by the Fed captain to get an angle from which he could send a bolt into the thruster nozzles on our underside.
Braked momentum slammed down on me at 6 g's. I though we'd hit the surface, but Piet had instead opened the throttles at the last instant. The ground effect of our
:j,!, i~    rebounding exhaust rocked the Oriflanune violently from
akl,'   side to side. Then our extended skids hit the surface.
    A
AWN
THROUGH THE BREACH  171

Everybody in the hold fell down like pieces of a matchstick house. I was under at least two men. Somebody's gauntlet was across my visor. I supposed I should be thankful that he'd forced the visor shut instead of ramming his armored fingers directly into my eyes.
I'd thought we could remain standing no matter how hard we hit. Man proposes, God disposes ...
The men on top of me got up. One of them was Stephen, identifiable because he carried both his flashgun and a rifle. Somebody else tried to step across my body. I pushed him back as I lurched to a squat. I found my cutting bar beside me and stood up with it. I clipped the weapon to an equipment stud again. I should have left it there until it was time to use the blade.
The hatch unsealed. Air charged by our exhaust swirled around the edges of the ramp in a radiant veil. As the lip lowered, I saw Our Lady of Montreal looming like a vast curved wall before us. She was at least fifty meters tall through her vertical axis, and no farther than that from us. The hatches that could open out from the great sphere's base were closed, but I saw unshuttered gun ports on the lower curve.
A 15-cm plasma cannon fired directly overhead. Its brilliance was so dazzling that it rocked me back against the men behind. My faceshield reacted instantly, saving my vision by filtering black everything except the ionized track itself Even combed by the filter, the bolt was bright enough to turn the massive shock wave five milliseconds later into anticlimax.
A fireball shrouded Our Lady of Montreal. Her own vaporized hull metal had exploded into white flame.
The bubble of light lifted away on the gases expanding it. Our bolt had punched a hole a meter in diameter in the Montreal's lower quarter. The edges of the gap glowed for a moment; then the Oriflamme's second gun blew a similar blazing hole beside the first.
Stampfer was firing our battery with a two-second pause between bolts-time to dissipate the ionized haze which would lessen the effect of an instantly following round.
e Oriflamme rocked at each discharge. The recoil of a
va
P'
T' 't ' 0 Mon f( ,
)r , sjmi be S1 tM ou e
            172 David Drake
            few grams of ions accelerated to light speed was enough
            to shake even a starship's hundred tonnes.
                The Long Tom fired. Its discharge was heavier than
N       the midships guns' by an order of magnitude. The Ori
            flamme's bow shifted a centimeter on the landing out
            riggers.
                The lower quarter of the Federation vessel was a fiery
            cavity. The hatch had been blown completely away, but the
            mist of burning metal beyond was as palpable as marble.
                The end of our ramp was still a meter and a half in the
            air. The blast of the main guns had deafened me. I couldn't
            even hear my own voice shouting, "God and Venus!" as I
            leaped to the ground.
                I crashed down on my face. The plasma cannon firing
            from the Montreal hit the sailor behind me instead and
            blew him to vapor. Bits of his ceramic armor scattered
            like grenade fragments.
                I got to my feet. Stephen aimed his flashgun up at a
            45' angle. His laser bolt, so bright under most conditions,
            was lost in the greater brilliance of the plasma weapons
    0       moments before.
                I stumbled toward the cavity Stampfer's guns had blast
            ed for our entry. It roiled with ionized residues of the
            cannonfire and the ordinary conflagrations which the bolts
            had ignited in the compartments beyond. With my visor
    I k     down, I was breathing from the suit's oxygen bottle.
    .4 1h,          An explosion above us almost knocked me down again.
            Stephen's bolt had punched into the cannon's 5-cm bore,
            damaging the nearly spherical array of lasers within the
            chambered round. The lasers were meant to implode a
        UP  deuterium pellet at the shell's heart and direct the resulting
            plasma down a pinhole pathway aligned with the axis of
            the gun barrel.
                Instead, the cannon's breech ruptured. The blast was
            more violent than the one which killed the man behind
            me, and I doubted whether Federation armor was as good
            as our Venerian ceramic.
                The rocky soil beneath the Montreal was glazed by
            exhaust and our heavy cannon. The hatch had been
wrenched away, but the lintel was square and a eter
In,
t

THROUGH THE BREACH  173

and a half above ground level. Stalactites of nickel-steel plating hung from the lower edge of the wound.
The white glare of the vessel's interior had dulled to a deep red. Fluid dribbling from the ruptured hydraulic lines burned with dark, smoky flames.
I gripped the lower lip of the opening and kicked myself upward. To my amazement, I wobbled into the hold despite thirty kilos of hard suit and weakness from the days we'd spent in free fall.
The vessel's cylindrical core held tanks of reaction mass and liquefied air behind plating as thick as that of the external hull. Shock waves had started a few of the seams, but the structure in general was still solid. Dual cornpanionways to the higher decks were built into the core structure.
The horizontal deck was I -cm steel. Blasts generated by our plasma bolts had hammered the surface downward as much as twenty centimeters between frames. The hold's internal bulkheads were flattened, and the hatches that should have closed the companionways had been blown askew.
Five Federation crewmen in the lower hold were in netal hard suits when our first 15-cm bolt penetrated the hull. The suits remained, crushed and disarticulated. From the top of a thigh guard stuck the remains of a femur burned to charcoal. That bone was the only sign of the people who'd been wearing the suits.
I looked behind me. Several men in armor were trying to clamber up with one hand hampered by weapons. I clasped the nearest man under the right shoulder and heaved. His face was down, so I don't know who he was. He skidded aboard, got to his feet, and clumped toward a companionway.
Half the assault party still straggled between the Oriflamme and the Federation vessel. We'd landed on an Apanse of stony desert, well inland of Ivestown. I doubt the Montreal's captain had chosen the site deliberately, but at least we weren't going to fry the colonists and their hundred or so Molt slaves as a byproduct of the fighting.
174     David Drake

Stephen, his flashgun slung over the rifle on his left shoulder, heaved himself upward. I grabbed him and brought him the rest of the way. Other sailors were pairing, one to form a stirrup for the foot of the second.
fired. I saw
    A plasma cannon, too light to be one of ours
    the reflected flash but not the point of impact.
        A bullet whanged down a companionway and ricocheted
    from the deck. I reached the helical stairs ahead of Stephen.
    He grabbed my shoulder to stop me, then stuck his flashgun
    up the vertical passage. I unclipped my cutting bar and
    switched it on.
        Stephen fired. Sparks of metal clipped by the laser pulse
    spat down the shaft in reply. The bolt wasn't likely to have
    hit anybody, but it might clear the companionway for a
    few seconds. Stephen clapped me forward. His gauntlet
    cracked like gunfire on my backplate. I started up the
    steps.
        The hatch to the next deck upward had either been
    open or blown open by gouts of plasma belching up the
    companionway every time our cannon hammered the hold.
17 7    The compartment beyond, once an accommodation area,
    was a smoky inferno.
        Plastic and fabrics of all sorts burned in the air the fire
    sucked from the companionway. The atmosphere of the
    sealed deck must have been exhausted within a few min
    utes o  -ignited everything
            f the moment our cannon flash
    flammable.
        I could have charged into the blaze, protected by my
    hard suit, but there was nothing there for us. The fires
    would destroy all life and objects of value before they
    burned themselves out. If the Montreal's decks were
    pierced by too many conduits and water lines, the blaze
    here was likely to involve the whole ship.
        The hatch to the third level was closed. I passed it by
    and continued climbing. The gunports were higher on the
    hull. We had to silence the Montreal's plasma cannon.
        A bare-chested man with a short rifle stuck his head
    from the next hatchway, saw me three rungs below him,
    and ducked back. A Molt with a cutting bar lunged otit
    instead. I slashed through his legs between the upper and
THROUGH THE BREAcH  175

lower knee joints. He fell backward in a spray of brown ichor. I crushed his weapon hand against the flooring, then stepped over him into the cargo deck beyond.
The Montreal's fourth deck was stacked with bales and crated goods within woven-wire restraint cages. There were no internal bulkheads. At the end of an aisle between ranks of cargo were three Molts wearing oxygen masks and padded garments of asbestos or glass fiber. They were trying to pivot a light plasma cannon away from the gunport so that it could bear on me.
The man with the rifle leaned over a row of crates and fired. His bullet hit me in the center of the chest and
plashed upward, staggering me. I recovered and charged the Molts at a shambling run.
One of them swung at me with the kind of long forceps the Feds use to load their solid-breech plasma cannon. My bar screamed through the levers in a shower of sparks.
The alien scrambled away. I chopped the back of a Molt's head, then reversed my stroke through the right arm and into the chest of his fellow who was tugging on the gun's tiller.
The surviving Molt flung the handles of his forceps at me. They bounced off my helmet. I cut him in half. My bar's vibration slowed momentarily, then spun up again through a spray of body fluids.
The human stepped around a row of cargo and aimed at me. The butt of Stephen's flashgun crushed his skull from behind.
The cannon that'd exploded was ten meters farther along the curve of the hull. The blast had crushed the stacks of cargo outward in a wide circle. The feet of three Molts and another human were carbonized onto the deck near the gun's swivel, but nothing above the ankles remained of the crewmen.
I couldn't see any other Feds in the jumble of cargo. My whole body was on fire. I lifted my faceshield to take an unconstricted breath.
Stephen slammed my visor back down. He reached past me to tilt the plasma cannon toward the ceiling a meter above our heads.
176     David Drake

I turned away. The world went white with a blast that
    spreadeagled me on the deck. Stephen was still standing,
Z I     I don't know how.
I pushed myself to a crouch, then stood in a fog of swirling metal vapors. The point-blank charge of plasma had blown a two-meter hole into the level above. Fires burned there and among the cargo around us.
Stephen restacked one crate on another beneath the hole. A Molt fell through from the deck above. A bubble of vaporized metal had seared the creature's thorax white.
I wasn't sure I could lift Stephen, so I hopped onto the crates and raised my right foot. Stephen made a step of his hands. His powerful thrust popped me through onto the deck above.
The large compartment was Molt accommodations. I
guessed the aliens were crew rather than cargo. Though
the facilities were spartan, there were hammock hooks and
cages for the Molts' personal belongings.   J
The plasma bolt had blown out half the lights. I co
uldn't
see more than twenty Molts huddled in space meant to
quarter a hundred.
I reached for Stephen with my left hand. I had to jab
the
tip of my bar down like a cane to keep from overbalancing.
Every heartbeat swelled me tighter against the oven of my
armor.
Stephen crashed upward. I staggered toward the single hatch out of the compartment. My vision was so focused that I didn't know whether Stephen was behind or beside me. Molts had squeezed against the internal bulkhead when the deck burst in a fireball near the curve of the hull. They scattered to either side of my advance like chickens running from the axe.
I pushed at the hatch. It didn't move. I raised my bar to cut through. Stephen reached past me and pulled the handle open.
I lurched into a corridor ten meters long. It was full of Fed personnel, human and Molt. A four-barreled cannon on a wheeled carriage faced one companionway; a tripodmounted laser whose separate power pack must weigh fifty kilos was aimed at the open hatch of the other.
n

th
e e
e n
y g

of on

)d~
THROUGH THE BREACH  177

An officer wearing gold-chased body armor turned and pointed his gun at me. The weapon had a thick barrel with only a tiny hole in the middle of it, and the stock fitted into a special rest on the breastplate.
I swung my bar at the Fed. He was too far away for me to reach before he fired. A starship hit and spun me around. I bounced onto the floor on my back. My faceshield was unlatched, but the helmet had rotated sideways 20' to cut off part of my vision.
Stephen stepped across my body with his flashgun raised. I threw my left arm across my eyes. Side-scatter from Stephen's bolt glared off the corridor's dingy white walls. A crate of shells for the cannon blew up like so many grenades. Stephen fell over me.
I twisted out from under his legs. The blast had knocked down the nearest Feds as well, though the crew of the laser five meters away at the opposite end of the corridor was trying to swing its weapon onto us. The cable to the power pack wasn't flexible enough for them to change front without repositioning all their equipment.
I jerked off my helmet and flung it at the Feds. The four Molts gripping the power pack's carrying handles continued stolidly to walk it around.
I could see again and I could breathe. The officer's projectile had hit the top of my breastplate at a flat angle. It shattered the plate and tore loose the clamps holding plastron, gorget, and helmet together.
Half my breastplate flopped from the waist latches. Ceramic continued to crumble away in bits from the broken edge, because the shock had completely shattered the plate's internal structure. Breath was a sharp pain. I didn't know whether the chest muscles were bruised or if cracked ribs were ripping my lungs every time I moved.
I walked toward the laser. I would have run, but my backplate clanked behind me like a ceramic cape and caught my heels.
A human sailor with a full mustache and sideburns that swept up to bright chestnut hair gaped at me. He was wearing padded protective gear like that of the gunners on the deck below. He dropped his side of the laser and

--------------------------
Aim,
178     David Drake

sprang toward the companionway batch.
His human officer shot him in the back with her doublebarreled pistol. She aimed at me past the power supply. Her head jerked back, and she fired the pistol into the ceiling as her nerves spasmed.
Her body toppled forward. There was a bullet hole over her right eye, and her brains splashed the bulkhead behind her.
I hacked at a Molt. He staggered back, bleeding from the stump of an arm and the deep cut in his carapace.
The nearest Molt wrapped his hard-surfaced arms around me while the others scrambled toward the cross-corridor at the end of the main one. They kept the power pack between me and them. Stephen fired his rifle again, but not in my direction. I cut awkwardly at the Molt's back. My limbs were still in their jointed ceramic cylinders, and the damned backplate dragged at me like an anchor.
The Molt moaned through the breathing holes along his lateral lines. My bar wouldn't bite-the battery was wl
drained. I screamed in frustration, pounding the Molt ith the pommel. He slipped down under the impacts, but his arms wouldn't release. His skull was a mush of fluids and broken chitin, but he wouldn't let go.
Stephen grabbed the Molt's shoulder with his left
red.
gauntlet and flung the corpse away from me. I stagge against the jamb of the hatchway. I wanted to get rid of the backplate, but I couldn't turn the studs behind me. I stripped off my right gauntlet instead as Stephen closed the firing contacts of the Federation laser and hosed its throbbing light across the other gun crew.
Stephen's flashgun was a monopulse weapon. This tripod-mounted unit had two separate tubes. It sequenced its output through them in turn to avoid the downrange vapor attenuation that reduced continuous-beam lasers'
Eli
effectiveness.
The Fed officer who'd shot me was loading another fat cartridge into the breech of his weapon. The beam glanced from his polished breastplate in dazzling highlights, then hit him in the neck and decapitated him.
I flung away my left gauntlet. My hands curled with

AW
THROUGH THE BREACH  179

pleasure at being free. The backplate latches turned easily.
Two Molts were starting to rise. Their thoraces burst soggily as the beam vaporized soft parts within the chitin shell.
A man in Venerian armor with his chest burned out lay just within the companionway hatch. He was probably the fellow who'd gone on while I helped Stephen into the hold. He held a rifle, and a cutting bar was clipped to his armor.
Exploding ammunition had knocked the multibarrel cannon sideways in the corridor. Stephen concentrated his flux on the breechblocks. The laser's feedline was beginning to smoke. The unit should have been allowed to cool every few seconds between bursts. Stephen was deliberately destroying both the weapons that could endanger a man in a Venerian hard suit.
Shells in the four cannon barrels cooked off in quick succession. Three of the weakened breeches failed, flinging fragments of jagged tool steel across the corridor and shredding two of the Molts who'd been crippled by the initial blast. There had been another human gunner also, but she must have run down the end corridor.
I took the cutting bar from the dead Venerian's waist stud and started up the companionway. My armored boots clanged on the slotted metal treads. I hadn't had time to take off the leg pieces.
The important thing was that my face and chest were free. The weight didn't matter so much, but days of constriction had driven me almost mad.
Or beyond almost.
The companionway was full of smoke from the fire on the lower deck, but because the air wasn't circulating the conditions weren't as bad as I'd thought they would be. I wished I'd thought to detach the oxygen bottle from my suit; but I hadn't, and anyway the projectile that smashed the breastplate had likely damaged the regulator as well.
Shots and screams echoed up the tube. Some of what sounded like human agony probably c7ame from machines. I wondered if other members of the assault party had climbed
180     David Drake

Ling,
this high. Movement in hard suits was brutally exhau&
ad other men hadn't had Stephen to help them forward.
n
    The hatch onto the next deck was closed but not dogged
    tight. I could hear people raggedly singing a hymn on the
    other side. The leader was a female, and hers was the
    only voice that didn't sound terrified. I passed the hatch
    by and turned up the final angle of the companionway to
the highest deck.
    The hatch was sealed. I tugged at an arm of the central
    wheel. They'd locked it from the inside. I paused, think
    ing about the hatches I'd seen on the Montreal's lower
decks.
    A bullet howled up the companionway. It or a bit of it
    dropped at my feet, a silvery gleam, before it rattled its
    way back down through the stair treads.
    The locks were electrical, activated by a button in the
    center on the inner dogging wheel. The powerline ran
through the upper hinge.
    I set my bar's tip on the hatch side of the hinge and
4   squeezed the trigger. Nothing happened. I was dizzy from
    smoke and fatigue, I'd forgotten that the dead man wouldn't
    have slung his bar with the power switch on.
    I thumbed the slide and tried again. The blade screamed
    angrily and sank into the tough steel. Chips, yellow and
1 1 Tit,    blazing white, spewed from the cut. The severed power
    cable shorted through the hatch metal in a brief halo of
blue sparks.
    I tugged again on the wheel. This time it spun freely,
    three full turns to withdraw the bolts which clamped the
    hatch to its jamb. I grasped the vertical handhold, pulled
    the hatch toward me, and charged onto the bridge of Our
Lady of Montreal.
    I thought they'd be waiting for me, alerted by my bar's
    shriek and the inner wheel spinning as I undogged the
    hatch. I'd forgotten how much else was going on. There
    were six humans and maybe ten Molts in the domed cir
    cular chamber. They turned and stared at me as if they'd
    just watched the Red Death take off his mask.
AP I suppose they were right.
    Nearest to me were a pair of humans in white tunics. I
THROUGH THE BREACH  181

thrust rather than slashing at the face of the woman who held a cutting bar. She staggered backward. The man tried to point his rifle but I grabbed it by the fore-end and twisted the muzzle upward. He shrieked and pulled away, but I held him by the weapon he didn't think to drop. My bar cut spine-deep in his neck, drowning his cry in his own blood.
The bridge instrumentation was a ring of waist-high, double-facing consoles. The three human officers in the center of the ring wore metal helmets and gleaming backand-breast armor. One of them shouted an order.
Molts sitting at the outer positions lurched toward me from seats configured to their alien torsos. None of them had weapons, though one Molt picked up a portable communicator and threw it at my head.
I chopped a Molt'9 skull, then backhanded a deep gouge across the belly plates of another. I watched my body in amazement. The animal controlling me moved with the relentless fury of a storm against cliffs.
I still held the rifle like an oar in my left hand. I jolted a Molt back with the butt, then sawed through his ankles with a stroke that buried my bar momentarily in the pelvis of the creature who'd grabbed my forearm. I kicked the Molt free with an armored boot.
A bullet hit the back of the Molt toppling beside the cut-off feet. One of the officers was shooting at me with a handgun. His two fellows had ducked behind the ring of consoles. When he saw me turn toward him, he dropped flat also.
The screen of the nearest console showed a real-time image of the Oriflamme. Our five big plasma cannon had cooled enough to be reloaded and run out, but Stampfer hadn't fired again for fear of hitting those of us aboard the Montreal.
Additional men in ceramic armor trudged across the fused plain toward the Federation vessel. They looked pathetically small compared to the Oriflamme, much less the Montreal.
Molts threw themselves on me from right and left. I twisted my arm to saw the carapace of one with the back
        182 David Drake
        of my bar. The Molt's hard thorax jolted against me as
        gun fired and an awl of red pain stabbed through my uppe
        abdomen. The Fed soldier with his back to the other hatc
        had fired his shotgun.
            I punched the Molt holding my right arm with the cut
        ting bar's pommel. I broke the chitin, making the cre
        move back enough that I could draw the blade down throug
        his right thigh.
            Two of the Fed officers rose from behind the console
        again. My legs were mired in thrashing Molts whose mus
        cles contracted as they died. I dropped the cutting bar an
        brought the butt of the rifle I'd grabbed around to my righ
        shoulder.
            The woman fired her pistol at me from three meters awa
        and missed. The man who'd shot at me before gripped hi
        pistol with both hands as he pointed it. I thrust the muzzl
        of my rifle in his direction and jerked the trigger.
            My bullet blew apart the screen of the console a mete
        to the right of him. The woman behind that console gas
        and doubled up, clutching her groin. Instead of shootin
        me, the man threw himself under cover again.
            I couldn't move my legs. The soldier with the shotgu
        closed the breech over a fresh cartridge and raised hi
        weapon again. My rifle had a tube under the barrel so
        was probably a repeater, but I didn't know how to cha
        a new round. I threw it at the soldier and missed. The F
        ducked for an instant anyway.
            I squatted on the pile of spasming Molts, trying to fin
    ;q  my cutting bar or some other weapon. The Fed soldie
        dropped his shotgun and raised his hands over his head.
            Stephen and Piet Ricimer stepped past me. They sti
        wore their hard suits, but their visors were raised. Stephe
        deliberately fired into the curving outer bulkhead to rico
        chet a bullet behind the ring of consoles. A Molt hidin
J       there jumped up. A charge of buckshot from Piet's s
        gun knocked the Molt back with a ragged hole in hi
        plastron.
            The officer with the handgun raised his head to see
        what was happening. The second bullet from Stephen'
        revolving-chamber rifle hit the man in the forehead and
THROUGH THE BREACH  183

spun his helmet into the air in a splash of brains.
        The Fed sprang fully upright, his arms flailing. Stephen
    shot him again, this time through the upper chest, but when
    the man turned and fell we could see his skull had already
been opened like a soft-boiled egg.
        The Montreal's bridge was thick with gunsmoke and
    blood. I was beginning to lose color vision, and I didn't
seem to be able to stand up even though the Molts had
    finally become shudderingly flaccid.
        "I suffender!" a man screamed from within the ring of
    consoles. I remembered that there had been three officers
    there when I burst into the compartment. "In the name of
    Christ, have mercy!"
        "Stand with your hands raised, then!" Piet ordered with
    his shotgun still butted on his shoulder. He stepped aside,
    putting his back to a bulkhead rather than the open hatch
    way.
        Stephen knelt beside me. His rifle gestured the Fed sol
    dier farther away from the shotgun the man had dropped.
    Somebody hammered on the sealed hatch. They'd pay
    hell trying to break in like that.
        The third Fed officer rose from his hiding place. He
    peered from behind the helmet he'd taken off to hold in
    front of his face. There was a pistol holstered at his side,
    but I'm sure he'd forgotten it was there.
        Stephen traded the rifle for his flashgun. He nodded
    toward the hatch. "Open it," he said to the captured soldier.
    Stephen was ready, just in case whoever was on the other
    side came in wearing metal rather than ceramic armor.
        "Order your men to stop fighting," Piet said to the cap
    tured officer. The Fed was the youngest of the three on
    the bridge. He was pudgy, and his hair was so fine and
    blond that his pink scalp showed through it. "There's no
    need for more deaths."  0
        "How bad are you hit?" Stephen asked, his eyes focused
    on the hatch the prisoner was undogging.
        Tm just tired," I said. "None of this is my blood."
        Dole stamped through the hatchway with a cutting bar
    and a chrome-plated rifle. The gun's muzzle had been
    sheared off at an angle, but I supposed it would still shoot
        184 David Drake
        at the ranges we'd been fighting here.
            The stink of opened bodies was making me dizzy. I had
        to get out of the stench, but I was too dizzy to stand.
            "The hell it's not," Stephen said. "Dole, come here and
        give me a hand. We need to get him back to Rakoscy."
            His gauntleted fingers tore the side of my tunic the rest
        of the way open. There were two puckered, purple holes on
        the side just below my rib cage. The Molt hadn't shielded
        me completely from the shotgun pellets after all.
            "Surrender!" the Federation officer called into a micro
        phone flexed to his side of a console. "Captain Alfegor is
        dead! Surrender! Surrender! They'll kill us all!"
            Echoes of his voice rumbled up the companionways. I
        could still hear shots, though.
            "Didn't know where you'd gone to," Stephen said qui
A       etly. He reached around my back and under my knees.
        Dole knelt to link arms with him. "Had a dozen of them
        charge around the back corridor just when I'd drained that
        damned laser. Could have been a problem if Piet hadn't
        come up the companionway about the same time."
            "I know how you felt," I said; or I tried to, because
    ILI I   about that time the stink of death swelled over the last of
        my consciousness in a thick purple fog.
NEW VENUS

Day 140

The planet was uncharted. Piet had located it at a good time. The last day of the run, we'd used personal oxygen bottles because a patch had cracked badly.
I didn't have enough energy to run out with the others as soon as the ramp lowered. I sat in the hold on a pallet of chips, far enough back that the heat still radiating from the glazed soil didn't bother me. The naming ceremony on e side was over, and the crowd of relaxed sailors was breaking up.
At the base of the ramp, ten men under Salomon argued bitterly among themselves about the hoses we'd taken from Our Lady of Montreal to replace the set damaged when we fled Templeton. The Federation equipment was the correct diameter, but both ends of the hoses had male connectors-as did the fittings of our water tanks. We'd have to make couplers to use the hoses. That job could have been done during the long run from Quincy if anybody'd noticed the problem before.
I got up very carefully and walked down the ramp. I'd be in the way if I stayed in the hold. Salomon would have enough problems doing shop work without offloading the treasure first.
The chips had come cheap enough, I suppose. Three dead, only two wounded. The Feds hadn't been equipped to deal with our hard suits. Smetana had lost his legstupidly-by getting it caught in the mechanism of the Montreal's cargo lift. My wound was pretty stupid too.
The men fell silent as I walked past them. "Good to see

A
186     David Drake

you, Mister Moore," Salomon said formally. I gave him a deliberate nod.
The story'd gotten around. More than the story, the way it usually happens. The men seemed to think I was a hero. I thought-
The soldier's face dissolving in a red spray as I rammed my bar through her teeth and palate, then jerked the blade sideways.
I tried not to think at all, and it didn't help.
Piet, Stephen, and Guillermo were chatting at the lakeside. I joined them. Nearby, men had started laying out the temporary houses they'd live in while we were on New Venus.
"Feeling better, Jeremy?" Stephen asked to welcome my presence.
"I'm all right," I said. "Just tired. You know, the bruises I got from the back of my breastplate when the bullet hit me are worse than the little shot holes."
I waggled my left hand in the direction of where Rakoscy had removed the buckshot. I could move my arms well enough, but it still hurt to twist my torso.
"And if Rakoscy hadn't clamped off the vein those shots punctured," Piet said with a cold smile, "you wouldn't have felt any pain at all from your ribs. I hope the next time you'll remember you have nothing to prove. Nor did you on Quincy."
I shook my head. Shrugging was another thing I had to avoid. "It just happened," I said. "I wasn't trying . .
I wasn't human when it happened. I didn't want to say that. "The ground cover doesn't have a root structure to bind turf," I said. I pointed to the men surveying the ground beside the Oriflamme. "How are they going to make houses?"
"Oh," said Piet, "a frame of brush, then a spray glaze to seal and stabilize it. We won't be here but a week at the most."
He looked back at the Oriflamme and frowned. "The patch that failed could have killed us. It was my fault."
"Piet," Stephen said forcefully, "the only way we could've checked the substructure-which is what failed,
THROUGH THE BREACH  187

not the patch-is to have removed the inner hull in sections. Which would've taken us three months, sitting on the ground beside the Montreal and wondering when the next Fed ship'd pass by and snap us up. I still don't believe that a fifty-millimeter Fed popgun cracked a frame member that way."
"'Well, it was probably the strain of the Breach," Piet said. "I know, I know ... But not only can't we afford mistakes, we can't afford bad luck."
"I'd say our luck had been fine," I said. "At least half the Montreal's cargo was of current production chips, not pre-Collapse stock. There's enough wealth to . .
The value was incalculable. I would have shrugged. I turned my palms up instead.
"The value is roughly that of the gross domestic product of the Free State of Venus," Stephen said quietly.
I looked at him: the scarred gunman, the consummate killer. It was easy to forget that Stephen Gregg had once been in the service of his uncle, a shipping magnate. I suspected that he'd been good at those duties too.
Piet grinned, his normal bright self again. "I think I'll cast a plaque claiming the world for Governor Halys," he added. "Do it myself, I mean. We can weld it to one of those rocks."
He pointed. Three natives-Rabbits-who certainly hadn't been on the clump of boulders twenty meters away when Piet started speaking took off running in the opposite direction. The two males were nude except for body paint. The female wore a skirt of veins combed from the sword-shaped leaves of a common local plant. Her flaccid breasts flopped almost to her waist.
Piet and Stephen darted to the side so that they could watch the Rabbits past the boulders. Guillermo and I followed slowly. It hurt me to move, and I doubt the Molt saw any reason for haste.
Several of the crewmen noticed the fugitives as well. Kiley shouted and started to run, though he didn't have a prayer of catching them.
"Let them go!" Piet ordered. I was always surprised how loud his voice could be when it had to.
188     David Drake

Brush grew down to the lakeshore a little north of where w 'd landed. The Rabbits vanished into it.
e
"I thought I'd seen a village in that direction while we were making our approach," Piet said.
"There are no industrial sites on this world," Guillermo said. If he'd been human, his voice would have sounded surprised. "I examined infrared scans. Even overgrown, the lines of human constructions would show up."
Stephen looked at him. "You do that regularly?" he asked. "Check on IR while we're orbiting9"
"Yes," the Molt said simply.
orld isn't in the chart Jeremy
            Piet shrugged. "This w
        found for us," he said. "Even though the Federation car
        tographers had access to pre-Collapse data."
            Stephen was the only one of us who was armed. He'd
        unslung his flashgun when the Rabbits appeared, though
    U   he'd kept the muzzle high. Instead of reslinging the weap
        on, he cradled it in his arms.
            "During the Collapse," he said, "colonies pretty much
        destroyed themselves. It wasn't Terran attacks, certainly
    kc, not here on the Back Worlds. Maybe their ancestors-"
            He nodded in the direction the Rabbits had fled.
    t           came from Templeton or the like as things were
        breaking down there. Trying to preserve civilization."
            Piet sighed. "Yes," he said. "That could be. But you
        don't preserve civilization by running from chaos."
            He glanced back at the ship. Dole headed a crew work
        ing on the section damaged by the Montreal's plasma
        cannon, and Salomon's men had already stretc
N: I i  hed the
hoses to the lake.
    "I think we can be spared to visit the native village,"
he said, smiling again. "They don't appear dangerous.
    Stephen shrugged. "If we go," he said, "we'll
armed."
    He glanced at me, I guess for support. My mind was
lost in the maze of how you preserve civilization by
cutting apart the face of a woman you hadn't even seen
five seconds before.
THROUGH THE BREACH  189

"The Montreal carried a couple autogyros," Stephen said as we broke out of the path through the brush. "You know, one of those would have made scouting around our landing sites a lot simpler."
The Rabbit village was in sight beneath trees that stood like miniature thunderheads. Up to a dozen separate trunks supported each broad canopy.
"Woof!" said Maher, the last of the six in our party. "'Bout time we got clear of that!" Not only was Maher overweight, he'd decided to wear crossed bandoliers of shotgun shells and to carry a cutting bar. His gear caught at every step along a track worn by naked savages.
"You were going to fly the autogyro, Stephen?" Piet asked mildly. "Or perhaps we should have brought along one of the Federation pilots to do our scouting for us."
The Rabbits lived in a dozen or so rounded domes of wattle-and-daub. There were no windows, and they'd have to crawl on hands and knees to get in through the low doors. I wondered whether they had fire.
Stephen laughed. "Well, they're supposed to be easy to fly," he said. "Not that we had room to stow another pair of socks, the way we're loaded with chips."
Rabbits began to congregate in front of the huts as we approached. There were more of them than I'd expected from the number of dwellings, perhaps two hundred. The adult males carried throwing sticks, shell-tipped spears, and what were probably planting dibbles, though they would serve as weapons.
"Open out," Piet ordered in an even voice. "Don't point a weapon.,,
We fell into line abreast as we continued to saunter at the pace Piet set toward the village. He and Maher carried shotguns. Loomis had a rifle, Stephen his flashgun, and even Guillermo wore a holstered pistol, though I doubt he'd have been much use with it.
I held a cutting bar in both hands like a baton. Even its modest weight strained my abdomen if it hung from one side or the other.
190     David Drake

"Stephen," I said. "Will you teach me to shoot?"
"Yes," he said, the syllable pale with lack of affect.
"We won't need weapons now," Piet said briskly. "Wait here."
He strode ahead of the rest of us with his right hand raised palm-outward. "We are peaceful travelers in your land," he called in Trade English. "We offer you presents and our friendship."
Piet was still ten meters from the Rabbits when they threw themselves to the ground. The men lashed themselves with their own weapons; the women tore their skirts into tufts and tossed them in the air with handfuls of dirt. Small children ran screaming from one adult to another, demanding reassurance which wasn't to be found.
"Wait!" Piet boomed in horror as he sprang forward. "We aren't gods to be worshipped, we're men!"
He forcibly dragged upright a Rabbit who was drawing a barbed spearhead across his forearm. "Stop that! It's blasphemy!"
Stephen pushed his way against Piet's side, though if the Rabbits had turned on us, there wasn't a lot he could have done. I'd have been even more useless, but I stood to Piet's right and grabbed the polished throwing stick that a Rabbit was beating himself across the back
:Ij with. I wasn't about to try lifting anybody in my present
condition, but the Rabbit didn't fight me for the stick. It
was a beautifully curved piece. The wood was dense and
had a fine, dark grain.
"Stop!" Piet thundered again.
This time the Rabbits obeyed, though for the most part they huddled on the ground at our feet. The children's shrieks seemed louder now that the adults weren't drowning them out.
An old woman came from a hut, leaning on the arm of a young man. She wore a pectoral and tiara made from strings of colored shells.
The youth supporting her was nude except for a genit cup, like most other males. A middle-aged man walked a step behind and to the right of the woman. He wore a translucent vest of fish or reptile skin. I could see the
. . ............

JW`

THROUGH THE BREACH  191

impressions the scales had left after they were removed.
The ordinary villagers edged back. They crawled until they'd gotten a few meters away, then rose to a crouch. Except for the man in the vest, the villagers looked illnourished. That fellow wasn't fat, but he had a solid, husky build. He stepped ahead of the old woman, keeping enough to the side that he didn't block our view of her.
We shook ourselves straight again. I still held the throwing stick. I stuck my cutting bar under the front of my belt to have it out of the way.
The two sailors ostentatiously ported their guns. I'd been too busy to look, but I'd bet they'd been aiming into the crowd and now hoped Piet hadn't seen them. Piet probably had seen them, the way he seemed to see everything going on, but he didn't choose to comment. Could be he thought Loomis and Maher showed better judgment than the rest of us had.
The old woman stretched out both arms and began speaking in a cracked voice. Her words were in no language I'd ever heard before. She paused after each phrase, and the man in the vest thundered what seemed to be the same words. They didn't make any more sense the second time at ten times the volume.
Maher looked at me and frowned. I nodded the throwing stick as a shrug. I didn't know how long this was going to go on either. At least it wasn't an attack.
After ten minutes of stop-and-go harangue, the old
woman started to cough. The youth tried to help her, but
S' h swatted at him angrily. The man in the vest looked
baeck in concern.
The woman got control of her paroxysm, though she swayed as she lifted the clicking pectoral off. She handed it to the youth, mumbled an order, and then removed the tiara as well. It had been fastened to her thinning hair with bone pins.
The youth walked to Piet, holding the objects at arm's length. The Rabbit was shivering. His knees bent farther
-19,    with every step, so that when he'd reached Piet he was almost kneeling.
192     David Drake

"We thank you in the name of our governor," Piet said as he took the gifts. "We accept the objects as offered by one ruler to another, not as the homage owed only to God."
He turned his head and hissed, "Loomis? The cloth."
Loomis hastily pulled a bolt of red fabric out of his pack. He'd forgotten-so had I-the gift we'd brought. The cloth came from the Commandatura on Trehinga, but it might well be Terran silk. Stephen had suggested it would be useful for trading to Rabbits and free Molts.
Piet held the bolt out to the youth. The youth turned his head away. The man in the vest snarled an order. The youth took the cloth. He stumbled back from Piet, crying bitterly.
Piet's mouth worked as though he'd been sucking a lemon. "Well," he said. He turned and nodded back the way we'd come. "Well, I think we've done all we can here."
That was true enough. Though I for one wasn't about to bet on what we had done.
NEW VENUS

    Day 143
The moon was up, so I hadn't bothered to take a light
when I went walking. The satellite was huge, looking
    almost the size of Earth from Luna, though it had no
    atmosphere and its specific gravity was only slightly
    above that of water.
        The four crewmen's lodges were laid out as sides of a
    square. A bonfire leaped high in the middle and a fiddler
    played dance music. Repairs to the Oriflamme's hull were
    complete,'or as complete as possible. Liquor acquired on
    Trehinga and Templeton competed with slash the motor
    crewmen brewed from rations.
        Being able to walk for the past three days had loosened
    up my chest muscles. I still got twinges if I turned too
    suddenly, and when I woke up in the morning my low
    er abdomen ached as though I'd been kicked the night
    before; but my body was healing fine.
        I was returning to the Oriflamme. I'd continued to bunk
    aboard her. The minimal interior illumination hid rather
    than revealed the ground beneath the starship, but the
    moon was so bright that I noticed the hunching figure
    while I was still fifty meters away.
        "Hey!" I shouted. I wasn't carrying a weapon. I ran
    toward the figure anyway. Adrenaline made me forget
    the shape my body was in as well as damping the pain
    that might have reminded me. "Hey!"
        The figure sprang to its feet and sprinted away. When   J
    it was out of the Oriflamme's shadow I could see that it
    was a Rabbit-a female; judging from the skirt.
            193
194     David Drake

Piet opened the forward hatch holding a powerful light in his left hand and a double-barreled shotgun by the pistol grip in his right. The light blazed onto the Rabbit and stayed there despite her attempts to dart and twist out of the beam. Furrows dribbling fresh blood striped her back.
The Rabbit finally vanished into the brush. None of the men celebrating at the shelters had taken notice of my shout or the Rabbit.
Running-jogging clumsily-actually felt good to me, though I didn't have any wind left. The short spurt to the ramp left me puffing and blowing.
I knelt beneath the ship where the Rabbit had hidden. She'd dropped or thrown away something as she fled. I doubted it was a bomb-fire was high technology for these savages-but I wasn't taking chances.
Piet flared his lens to wide beam. "Anything?" he asked as he hopped down beside me.
"This," I said, picking up the handle of a giant comb: a carding comb for stripping leaf fibers so they could be woven into cloth. The teeth were long triangles of shell mounted edgewise so that they wouldn't snap when drawn through tough leaves.
The teeth were smeared a finger's breadth deep with blood so fresh it still dripped. Piet switched off the handlight. I crawled carefully from beneath the Oriflamme; it'd be several minutes before I had my.night vision back, and I didn't want to knock myself silly on,~ a landing strut.
"Perhaps we should set guards," Piet said. "Of course, we'll be leaving tomorrow. If all goes as planned."
I flung the comb in the direction of the village a kilometer away. There were drops of blood on the glazed soil where"I the Rabbit had hidden for her ceremony. I sat down on the
ramp. I felt sick. Part of it was probably the exertion.
Piet sat beside me. "You wouldn't have had to go as far as the village to find a woman for your desires," he said. "You could just have waited here."
There was nothing in his tone, and his face-soft~ned' by the moonlight-was as calm as that of a statue of
    




                      THROUGH THE BREACH     195
    
    Justice. The fact that he'd spoken those words meant the
    incident had bothered him as much as it did me. Wine let
    the truth out of some men; but for others it was stress that
    made them say the things that would otherwise have been
    hidden forever in their hearts.
    "I was just walking, Piet," I said quietly. "There's some
    of the men gone up to the Rabbit village, I believe; but I
    was just working the stitches out of my side."
    He nodded curtly. "It doesn't matter," he said. "That
    sort of thing is between you and the Lord."
    I got up and raised my face to the moon. "I haven't
    lied to anybody since I came aboard the Porcelain, Piet,"
    I said. My voice shuddered with anger. With all the things
    I'd done, before and especially after I met Piet Ricimer,
    to be accused of this-
    I thought about what I'd just said, and about the cloak
    of moral outrage I'd dressed myself in. I started to laugh.
    Some of my chest muscles thought I shouldn't have, but
    it was out of their control and mine.
    ePiet stood with a worried look on his face, Maybe he
    11thought I'd snapped, gone mad in delayed reaction to 
    n to too many things.
    "No," I gasped, "I'm all right. I was just going to say, I
    haven't been lying to anybody except maybe myself. And
    ie I'm getting better about that, you see9"
    4-We sat down again. "Jeremy," he said, "I'm sorry. I
    ht shouldn't have spoken."
    )nI shrugged. I could do that again. "If you hadn't," I said,
    44 you'd have gone the rest of your life thinking that's what
    ;e,I was doing out there tonight. When I was just going for
    a walk."
    terFifty meters away in the temporary 'accommodations,
    Irethe fiddler was taking a break. A chorus of sailors filled
    in a cappella, "A mighty fortress is our God, a bulwark
    he
          never failing. .
    as                                         They might as easily have swung into The Harlot of
     he   Jerusalem.I started to laugh again. This time my ribs
          forestalled me.
    .ied  infine," I repeated. I was beginning to wonder,
     of   though, and it wasn't my body that caused me the concern.

    




                 194            David Drake
                   Piet opened the forward hatch holding a powerful light
                 in his left hand and a double-barreled shotgun by the
                 pistol grip in his right. The light blazed onto the Rabbit
                 and stayed there despite her attempts to dart and twist
                 out of the beam. Furrows dribbling fresh blood striped
                 her back.
                   The Rabbit finally vanished into the brush. None of
                 the men celebrating at the shelters had taken notice of
                 my shout or the Rabbit.
                   Running-jogging clumsily-actually felt good to me,
                 though I didn't have any wind left. The short spurt to the
                 ramp left me puffing and blowing.
    0              1 knelt beneath the ship where the Rabbit had hidden.
                 She'd dropped or thrown away something as she fled. 1
                 doubted it was a bomb-fire was high technology for
                 these savages-but I wasn't taking chances.
                   Piet flared his lens to wide beam. "Anything?" he asked
                 as he hopped down beside me.
                   "This," I said, picking up the handle of a giant comb:
                 a carding comb for stripping leaf fibers so they could be
                 woven into cloth. The teeth were long triangles of shell
                 mounted edgewise so that they wouldn't snap when drawn
                 through tough leaves.
                   The teeth were smeared a finger's breadth deep with
                 blood so fresh it still dripped. Piet switched off the
                 handlight. I crawled carefully from beneath the Ori-
                 flamme; it'd be several minutes before I had my.night
                 vision back, and I didn't want to knock myself silly on
                 a landing strut.
                   "Perhaps we should set guards,
                                        Piet said. "Of course,
                 we'll be leaving tomorrow. If all goes as planned."
                   I flung the comb in the direction of the village a kilometer
                 away. There were drops of blood on the glazed soil where
                 the Rabbit had hidden for her ceremony. I sat down on the
                 ramp. I felt sick. Part of it was probably the exertion.
                   Piet sat beside me. "You wouldn't have had to go as
                 far as the village to find a woman for your desires," he
                 said. "You could just have waited here."
                   There was nothing in his tone, and his face-softened
                 by the moonlight-was as calm as that of a statue of

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH     195
    
       Justice. The fact that he'd spoken those words meant the
       incident had bothered him as much as it did me. Wine let
    t  the truth out of some men; but for others it was stress that
    L  made them say the things that would otherwise have been
    I hidden forever in their hearts.
       "I was just walking, Piet," I said quietly. "There's some
    f  of the men gone up to the Rabbit village, I believe; but I
    f  was just working the stitches out of my side."
       He nodded curtly. "It doesn't matter," he said. "That
    sort of thing is between you and the Lord."
       I got up and raised my face to the moon. "I haven't
       lied to anybody since I came aboard the Porcelain, Piet,"
       I said. My voice shuddered with anger. With all the things
       I'd done, before and especially after I met Piet Ricimer,
    ir to be accused of this-
       I thought about what I'd just said, and about the cloak
    d
       of moral outrage I'd dressed myself in. I started to laugh.
       Some of my chest muscles thought I shouldn't have, but
    it was out of their control and mine.
    ie Piet stood with a worried look on his face. Maybe he
       thought I'd snapped, gone mad in delayed reaction to 
    to too many things.
       "No," I gasped, "I'm all right. I was just going to say, I
       haven't been lying to anybody except maybe myself. And
    te I'm getting better about that, you see?"
       We sat down again. "Jeremy," he said, "I'm sorry. I
    ht shouldn't have spoken."
      )nI shrugged. I could do that again. "If you hadn't," I said,
       14 you'd have gone the rest of your life thinking that's what
      e,I was doing out there tonight. When I was just going for
    a walk."
      erFifty meters away in the temporary 'accommodations,
      rethe fiddler was taking a break. A chorus of sailors filled
      4ein a cappella, "A mighty fortress is our God, a bulwark
    never failing. .
      asThey might as easily have swung into The Harlot of
      heJerusalem. I started to laugh again. This time my ribs
    forestalled me.
      ed"I'm fine," I repeated. I was beginning to wonder,
      ofthough, and it wasn't my body that caused me the concern.

    




                    196            David Drake
    
                    "If President Pleyal establishes the rule he wants over
                    all mankind," Piet said, "his fall will be a collapse worse
                    than the Collapse. Because we don't have the margin for
                    survival that men had risen to a thousand years ago. Folk
                    like these-"
                      He waggled a finger northward.
                    -mistaking men for gods, they'll be all that remains
                    of humanity. We have to succeed, Jeremy."
    4! 1              "I'll be glad when we lift," I said. I looked at, Piet,
                    leaning back with his arms braced on the ramp. "Because
                    you're wrong, you know. It's not gods they think we
                    are. They're not worshipping, they're trying to placate
                    demons."
                    I shuddered, closed my eyes, and opened them again
                    on the vast, raddled face of the moon. "Which is why," I
                    went on, "that quite apart from standards of hygiene, the
                    women here are in no danger from me. I'm not interested
                    in a woman who thinks she's being raped."
                    I clasped my hands together to keep them from shak-
                    ing. "Particularly one who thinks she's being raped by a
                    minion of Satan."
                    And if God was Peace, then she would surely be cor-
                    rect.

    




    INK
    
                      DUNEEN
    
         Day 155
    
         My rifle roared, lifting the muzzle in a blast of gray
         smoke.'l now knew to hold the weapon tight against
         me, The first time I'd instinctively kept the buttplate
         a finger's breadth out from my shoulder. The rifle had
         recoiled separately andfast. Instead of pushing my torso
         back, it whacked me a hammerblow.
         "Did I hit it?" I asked, peering toward the target-a
         meter-square frame of boards twenty meters away. The
         aiming point was a circle of black paint. My bullet holes
         spread around it in a shotgun pattern against the rough-
         sawn yellow wood.
         "You hit it," Stephen said. "Reload and hit it again.
         Remember you want to be solid, not tense. You're using
         a tool."
         I cocked the rifle, then thumbed the breech cam open
         and extracted the spent cartridge for reloading. "It'd be
         easier if all our guns were the same kind, wouldn't it?"
         I said. I nodded toward the revolving rifle in the crook of
         Stephen's left elbow.
         "All machine work instead of craftwork?" Stephen said.
         "Where that thinking ends is another Collapse-a system
         of automatic factories so complex that a few hit-and-run
         attacks bring the whole thing down. Everybody starves or
         freezes."
         I pulled a cartridge from my belt loop but held it in
         my hand instead of loading. "That's superstition," I said,
         more forcefully than I usually spoke to Stephen. This was
         important to me. "Civilization isn't going to fall because
    
                         197
                                         V,
                                         V~
                                      
    
    




                    198           David Drake
    
                   every gunsmith on Venus bores his rifle barrels to the
                   same dimensions."
                   If man was ever really to advance, we had to design
                   and build our own electronics instead of depending on
                   the leavings of pre-Collapse civilization. That required
                   something more structured than individual craftsmen like
                   P
                    iet's father casting thruster nozzles.
                   Stephen shrugged. I couldn't tell how much it mattered
                   to him. "It isn't the individual aspect," he said. "It's the
                   whole mind-set. On Earth they're setting up assembly lines
                   again.
         I           "But for now. . ." I said as I slid the loaded round into
                   the chamber sized to it and not--quite-to that of any
                   other rifle aboard the Oriflamme, "I'll learn how to use
                   whatever comes to hand."
                   During the voyage from New Venus, Stephen had
                   showed me how to load and strip each of our twenty-
                   odd varieties of firearm. It gave us both something to
                   concentrate on between the hideous bouts of transit. This
                   was the first time I'd fired a rifle.
                   I thought of the officer on the Montreal's bridge
                   clutching the hole in her groin as she fell. The first
                   time I'd practiced with a rifle.
                     One of the local herbivores blundered into the clearing.
                    A peck of fronds was disappearing into its mouth. Spores,
                    unexpectedly golden~ showered the beast's forequarters
    TH,             and the air above it.
    :P1
                   The creature saw us. The barrel-shaped body froze, but
                   the jaws continued to masticate food in a fore-and-aft
                   motion. My shots hadn't alerted the creature to our pres-
                   ence. The local animals didn't seem to have any hearing
                   whatever.
                     "We have plenty of meat," Stephen said. "Let it go."
                   The creature turned 270' and crashed away through the
                   vegetation. I could track its progress for some distance by
                   the spores rising like a dust cloud.
                   I glanced down at my rifle. "I wasn't going to shoot it,"
                   I said.
                   I meant I wasn't going to try. The board target was c
                   siderably larger than the man-sized herbivore. The skill

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     199
    
    demonstrated thus far wasn't overwhelmingly high.
     "it gets easy to kill," Stephen said. His voice was
    slipping out of focus. "Don't let it. Don't ever let that
    happen."
     "One more!" I said loudly. I closed the breech with a
    distinct cluck, seating the cartridge, and raised the butt to
    my shoulder again.
     Conc ntrate on theforesight. The barrel wobbled around
    the target, let alone the bull's-eye. Squeeze the trigger,
    don'tjerk it. My whole right hand tightened.
     I tried to hold the rifle as I had the cutting bar as
    we sawed boards for the target, firmly but without the
    feeling of desperate control that the firearm brought out. I
    wasn't making something happen. I was easing the trigger
    back against the rough metal-to-metal contact points of a
    mechanism made by a journeyman rather than a master.
     The muzzle blast surprised me the way Stephen said
    it was supposed to. Splinters flew from a hole a few
    centimeters left of the bull's-eye.
     "Yeah," Stephen said. "You're beginning to get it. In
    another day or two, you'll be as good as half the crew."
     He shook his head disgustedly. "They think they can
    shoot, but even when they practice, they plink at rocks or
    ration cartons. If they miss, they don't have a clue why.
    They'll make the same damned mistake the next time, like
    enough."
     I extracted the empty case. Powder gases streamed
    through the open breech. "What does it take to get as good
    as you are, Stephen?" I asked, careful not to meet his eyes.
     "Nothing you can learn," he said. He sat down on the
    trunk of a fallen tree with bark like diamond scales. "And
    it's not something you'd think was worth the price, I
    suspect.
     I sat beside him. I couldn't hear the Oriflamme's pumps
    anymore. They must have completed filling our water
    tanks. "Do you know how long Piet intends to lay over
    here?" I asked. "It seems a comfortable place, if you don't
    mind muggy."
     I flapped the front of my tunic, sopping from the wet
    heat.

    




                200            David Drake
    
                "The only thing that worries me is the Avoid notation
                in the database you found for us," Stephen said. He half
                cocked his rifle and began to rotate its five-shot cylinder
                with his fingertips, checking the cartridge heads. The pawl
                clicked lightly over the star gear. "There's nothing wrong
                with the air or the biosphere, so why avoid it?"
                "There's a hundred charted worlds with that marker,"
                I said. "Maybe Pleyal woke up on the wrong side of the
                bed the morning the list was handed him."
                "Come on back and we'll clean your weapon," Stephen
                said as he rose. "Don't leave that to somebody else to-"
                I was staring skyward. Stephen followed my eyes to the
                glare of bright exhaust. "God damn it," he said softly. "It's
                a starship landing, and it sure isn't from Venus."
                We ran through the forest as the Oriflamme's siren
                sounded.
                The strange vessel drifted down like a dead leaf
                Starships-the starships I'd seen landing-tended to do
                so in a controlled crash because the forces being balanced
                were so enormous. This ship must have a remarkably high
                power-to-weight ratio, even though its exhaust flames were
                the bright blue-white of oxy-hydrogen motors rather than
                the familiar flaring iridescence of plasma.
                Dole was leading a party of twenty men from the main
                hatch into the forest. "Mister Gregg, do you want to take
                over?" the bosun shouted when he saw us. All the men
                were armed, but several of them hadn't waited to pull on
                their tunics when the alarm sounded.
                "No, go ahead," Stephen ordered as he sprang up the
                steps to the cockpit airlock.
                Dole's section would hide in the forest so that we
                weren't all bottled in the Oriflamme if shooting started.
                It would take anything from ten minutes to half an hour
                for the ship to lift. In the meanwhile, the Oriflamme was
                a target for anybody in orbit who wanted to bombard us.
                To a degree that worked both ways. The Oriflamme's
                gunports were open, though of course our guns couldn't
                sweep as wide a zone as could those of an orbiting ves-
                sel able to change its attitude. Stampfer was raising the
                17-cm gun into firing position. The violent blasphemy he
    
    Jill

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     201
    
    snarled during the process, only a meter from Piet's couch,
    showed how nervous the gunner was.
     Stephen grabbed the flashgun slung from the same hook
    as his rolled hammock. I think if he'd had his favored
    weapon, he would have stayed with Dole outside, Stephen
    took a repeating rifle with him when we left the ship
    beca"' se the dog-sized local predators hunted in packs of
    three or more.
     Piet glanced aside from his console. "They've an-
    nounced they're friendly," he said. "And I presume they
    are or we'd know it by now, but. . . "
     Because the strangers didn't use plasma motors, they
    could communicate by radio even while they were land-
    ing. That didn't seem a sufficient trade-off for the greater
    power of fusion over chemical energy, but it had its
    advantages.
     Stephen donned his helmet as he stepped out the airlock
    again. Piet smiled and returned to his plot.
     I followed Stephen. I still carried the slung rifle. I'd
    picked up my cutting bar also, as much for the way it
    focused me as for any good I'd be able to do with it
    against a starship.
     The strange vessel was no bigger than a featherboat,
    though it was shorter and thicker than the Nathan, say,
    had been. It settled only twenty meters from the Ori-
    flamme, bow to bow. Its combustion engines were loud
    by absolute standards, but they whispered in comparison
    to those of a normal starship. Plasma thrusters mixed
    low-frequency pulses with the hiss of ions recombining
    across and beyond the upper auditory band, creating a
    snarl more penetrating and unpleasant than I could have
    imagined before I heard it myself.
     The ship's four stubby legs seemed to be integral rather
    than extended for landing. Portions of the scaly brown
    hull were charred from heat stress during reentry, but
    the material didn't look like the ablative coatings I was
    familiar with. It looked like tree bark.
     The strange vessel had no visible gunports or hull open-
    ings of any kind. I walked toward it; either leading Stephen
    or following him, it was hard to say. A spot grew in the

    




       iv
    
                    202            David Drake
                    mid-hull. At first I thought a fire smoldered on the coating,
                    but it was a knot opening as it spun slowly outward.
                      The hole froze when it reached man-size. The figure
                    that stepped out of the ship was humanoid but certainly
                    not human, though most of its body was covered with a
                    hooded cape of translucent fabric. It had reptilian limbs
                    and a face covered with patterned nodules like those of
                    a lizard's skin. The jaw was undershot, the eyes pivoted
                    individually, and the hands gripped a stocked weapon with
                    a ten-liter pressure tank.
        all           "I'd worry," Stephen murmured, "if they weren't
                    armed." His voice was in the husky, dissociated mode
    M               in which I knew he didn't worry at all; only planned
                    whom to kill first.
                      The second person out of the ship was a human, though
                    he wore a flowing cape like that of the guard who pre-
                    ceded him. Tiny flowers filled the socket of his left eye
                    like a miniature rock garden, and his right leg beneath the
                    cape's hem was of dark wood with a golden grain. When
                    the cape blew close to his body, I could see a handgun of
                    some sort tucked against the front of his right shoulder.
                      "Hello, Gregg," the man said. It was hard to think of
                    someone with flowers growing from his face as being
                    human, and the fellow's rusty voice didn't help the impres-
                    sion. "I thought the ' Feds had killed you on Biruta."
                      Two more reptiles, armed as the first had been, got out
                    of the strange ship. Their capes were a uniform dull gray,
                    but the human's had underlayers which returned sunlight
                    in shimmers across the whole optical spectrum.
                      "Hello, Cseka," Stephen said. "They tried, but we got
                    away."
                      Cseka glanced beyond us. Piet stood in the cockpit hatch,
      TV1,          "Ricimer too, eh?" Cseka said. "Well, I didn't get away
                    They caught me on Biruta and they made me a slave. Hov
                    long's it been, anyway? Standard years, I mean."
                      "Five years, Captain," Piet said. "Would you com,
         f k
                    aboard the Oriflamme? Your friends, too, if they car
         A I        to."
                      "Aye, we'll do that," Cseka said. He spoke a few tbroat
                    words to his guards and- stumped forward. "These are tf

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     203
    
     Chay," he said, again in Trade English. "And I'm no longer
    a captain, Ricimer, I'm chief adviser to the Council of On
     Chay."
      Cseka walked with a stiffness that the false leg didn't
     fully explain. I wondered what other injuries the cape
     concealed.
      "And I'm the worst enemy Pleyal and his bastard Fed-
     eration will ever have," Cseka added as he climbed the
     cockpit ladder. He spoke quietly, but his voice squealed
     like chalk on slate.                        3
      The Chay walked with quick, mincing steps, though
     there was nothing birdlike about their erect bodies. Their
     bulging eyes swept at least 240' even when they faced
     front, and they continually rotated their heads to cover the
     remaining arc.
      "The mummy on Respite," I murmured to Stephen as
     we followed the guards back aboard the Oriflamme.
      "I was thinking that," he said. "And now I really wonder
     how long ago he was buried."
      Stephen was still distant from his surroundings. Per-
     haps it was mention of Biruta, where Pleyal's men had
     treacherously massacred Venerian traders. For reasons of
     state, there was still formal peace between the Free State
     of Venus and the North American Federation; but because
     of Biruta, there was open war beyond Pluto, and survivors
     like Piet and Stephen were the shock troops of that war.
      Piet and Stephen and Captain, now Chief Adviser,
     Cseka.
      The Long Tom was aligned with the bow port-and the
     Chay vessel-but not run forward to battery. Stampfer
     was still with the gun, but he'd sent his crew aft so that
     only he and the navigation officers waited for us in the
     bow compartment. Piet had dropped the table which hung          it,
    on lines from the ceiling. Men watched through the hatch
    and from an arc outside the cockpit.
     "Five years," Cseka said. "You lose track. Five years."
     He took the tumbler of cloudy liquor Piet offered him:
    slash distilled from algae. This was a bottle we'd brought
    from Venus rather than what the motor crews brewed
    whenever we landed, but there wasn't a lot of difference.

    




                  204            David Drake
    
                  "We have, ah, wines and such," Piet said. "Loot, of
                  course."
                  Cseka drained his tumbler in three wracking gulps.
                  Slash proved anywhere from fifty to eighty percent etha-
                  nol. "A taste of home, by God," he muttered. "The Chay,
                  they can do anything with plants, but they can't make
                  slash that's real slash."
                  "Perhaps they're too skillful," Stephen said. I don't
                  know whether he was joking. "Slash doesn't permit sub-
                  tlety."
                  "I was their slave for . . ." Cseka said. He frowned
                  and refilled his tumbler. "Years. You can't measure it.
                  Pleyal's slave, bossing gangs of Molt slaves all across
                  the Back Worlds. The eye, that was from Biruta. They
                  took my leg off on a place that hasn't any name. Pleyal
                  doesn't waste medicines on slaves when amputation will
                  do
                  He swallowed another three fingers of slash. Cseka's
                  eye was fixed on the bottle, but I can't guess what his
                  mind saw.'
                  "And then the Chay raided the plantation I was running
                  on Rosary." Cseka gave us all a broad, mad grin. The tiny
                  flowers wobbled in his eye socket as he turned his head.
                  "I escaped with them. They might have killed me before
                  they understood. That would have been all right, I'd still
                  have been free of Pleyal."
                    The Chay had a sweetish odor like that of overripc
    oil 1~,       fruit. I couldn't tell whether it was their breath or theii
                  bodies. They looked silently around the compartment
                  One of them reached toward the 17-cm cannon, but hi!
                  long-fingered hand withdrew before it quite touched tho
                  gun. Stampfer, squat and glowering, relaxed minusculely
                  "I've been guiding On Chay ever since," Cseka said
                  "Not leading-the Council leads. But I know the Fedo
                  and I help the Chay fight them. The bastards."
                  "We came through the Breach," Piet said, "but we')
                  have to return the long way to Venus. We'll carry yo
                  back with us and give you a full share of-"
                  "No!" Cseka shouted. His hand closed on the neck
                  the bottle. I thumbed the power switch of my cuttin
    P

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     205
    
    bar and opened my left hand to grab the nearest Chay's
    weapon before he could-
     Cseka relaxed and beamed his clownface grin at us
    again. "No, I'm where I belong," he said. He spoke now
    in a cracked lilt. "Killing Feds. Killing all the Feds, every
    one of the bastards, every one."
     He poured more slash. Stephen almost hadn't moved,
    but "almost" was the amount he'd tucked the flashgun
    into his side to have a full stroke when he swept the butt
    across the heads of Cseka and the guard nearest him. Piet
    had reached across the back of his couch, where a double-
    barreled shotgun hung by its sling, and the lever from the
    plasma cannon's collimator was in Stampfer's hand.
     "I want you to come back to On Chay with me," Cseka
    said, sipping this time instead of tossing the liquor off.
    "I told our scouts to look for ceramic-hulled ships, you
    know. To report to me at once and not to attack. And here
    you appear in this system."
     He seemed to be oblivious of what had almost hap-
    pened. Perhaps he didn't remember. The Chay hadn't
    moved, but their facial skin had shifted from green/brown
    to mauve.
     "We appreciate the offer . . ." Piet said. "But-"
     "No, it's not out of your way," Cseka said with a dis-
    missive wave of his hand. "The fourth planet here."
     "That's a gas giant," Salomon said sharply from his
    console.
     "Yes, the second moon out," Cseka agreed. He was all
    sweet reason now. The sharpness was gone, but his voice
    still sing-songed. "It'll be worth your time. The Chay grow
    tubular fullerenes, grow them, any length you want. Kilo
    for kilo, they're worth more than new-run chips."
     Piet's face grew blankly quiet. He wasn't looking at
    anyone. We all waited for him to speak. The Oriflamme
    wasn't a democracy.
     He smiled dazzlingly. "Yes, all right," he said to Cseka.
    "We'll follow you, then?"
     Cseka nodded, the flowers bobbing in his eye socket.
    "Yes, yes, that's what we'll do," he said. Suddenly, fierce-
    ly he added, "I knew there'd be ships from Venus sooner

    




    206           David Drake
    
    or later. Between us, we'll kill them all!"
     He turned and slammed out through the open airlock
    without further comment. The three guards exchanged
    glances, only their eyes moving, before they strutted after
    their human leader.
     Stephen relaxed slightly., "Cseka was always a bit of a
    hothead," he said in an emotionless voice.
     Piet watched the castaway climb back aboard the vessel
    in which he had arrived. "That was a different man, the
    one we knew," he said.
     "You trust him, then?" I said. I switched off the cutting
    bar and hung it, so that I could work life back into the
    hand with which I'd been gripping the weapon.
     "No," said Piet. The port of the Chay vessel began to
    rotate closed before the last of the guards hopped through.
    "He's obviously insane. But he's different from the man
    Stephen and I knew."
     He pushed the button controlling the Oriflamme's siren,
    cIling the men aboard for liftoff.
     I dropped my rifle and ammo satchel on the deck ' "I'm
    going with them," I said. I jumped from the airlock instead
    of using the steps. Over my shoulder I called, "We need
    to know more about the Chay than we do now!"
     Men piling aboard via the ramp looked in surprise as I
    sprinted to the alien vessel. Nobody tried to call me back
    from the bridge. Piet and Stephen weren't the sort to waste
    their breath.
     "Cseka!" I shouted. "Open up! Let me ride with you!"
     The port continued to spin slowly closed. It had shrunk
    to the size of my head. I stuck the blade of my unpowered
    cutting bar into the opening.
     The port stopped closing. I waited. The Chay vessel's
    hull pulsed slowly as I stood beside it with my hand on
    the grip of my bar.
     After a minute or so, the knot rotated the other way
    again. When the opening was large enough, I climbed
    aboard.

    




                                    - ---------
    
                     ON CHAY
    
        Day 156
    
        The engines' firing level reduced gradually, as though
        someone was shutting down the fuel valves by micro-
        adjustments as we settled toward the moon's inhabited
        surface. Some thing was, but not a person, unless the
        Chay vessel herself had personality as well as life.
        One of the reptiles chewed a banana-shaped fruit that
        dribbled purple juice down his jaw and the front of his
        cape. It seemed to have a narcotic effect. The Chay's
        eyes hadn't moved since he began eating; translucent lids
        slipped back and forth across them at intervals.
        Cseka lay on his back, staring at the frameless screen
        that covered the cabin ceiling. Instead of a real-time scan,
        adjusted images swept over the display area at one- or two-
        second intervals.
        None of the vessel's crew was anywhere near the con-
        trols aft. The ship was landing itself.
        "Are those irrigated lands?" I asked, gesturing toward a
        swatch of blue-green on the surface swelling toward us. It
        could as easily have been a lake. I wasn't sure whether the
        patterns I saw in the colored area were real or an artifact
        of the unfamiliar optical apparatus.
        "We live on mats of vegetation," Cseka said in a
        drugged voice. He didn't look at me when he spoke.
        "On Chay has too many earthquakes to live directly
        on the ground, The mats slide when the earth shakes,
        you see."
        "Life couldn't arise on a planet-'moon'-so unsta-
        ble," I said, speaking the thought I'd had ever since I
        connected the Chay with the mummy on Respite. "It must
    
                        207
    'maim

    




                  208           David Drake
    
                  have been colonized from somewhere else. Perhaps in the
                  far past."
                  "Yeah, that's probably so," Cseka agreed without inter-
                  est. "There's maybe a hundred Chay worlds. They all call
                  themselves On Chay. I suppose the Chay had a Collapse
                  too."
                  Translucent circles like strings of frog eggs clung to one
                  another within the mat we were approaching. Elsewhere,
                  larger circles differed in hue from the neighboring vegeta-
                  tion. The primary lowered in the sky above us, a turgid
                  purple mass shot with blues and yellow.
                  The controls spoke in a guttural, blurry voice. The two
                  sober Chay looked around. Cseka roused himself from his
                  couch and growled toward the controls.
                  The engines fired at high output. We accelerated side-
                  ways, and I fell against a bulkhead. The resilient surface
                  cushioned me, then formed into a grip for my furious
                  hand.
                  "I'm to guide your friends down outside the city," Cseka
                  grumbled. "I forget the way plasma thrusters tear up every-
    j~            thing around."
                  The Chay vessel was smaller inside than I'd expected.
                  The thick hull contained everything necessary for the
                  starship's operation and the well-being of the crew, but
                  it didn't leave much internal volume.
                    "The Oriflamme is already in orbit?" I asked.
                  Cseka looked at me as if he were trying to remember
                  where I'd come from. I hadn't noticed anything odd when
                  I ate rations prepared for Cseka-none of the food was
                  meat, according to him, though I'd have sworn otherwise.
                  Most likely, the castaway's problems had nothing to do
                  with his present diet.
                  "You said we were guiding my friends down," I prodded.
                  "So they were waiting for us?"
                  "Yeah, sure," Cseka said with an angry frown. "Look,
                  we got here, didn't we? Our ships don't process course
                  equations as fast as the Feds do, maybe, but they don't
                  come down sideways because a cosmic ray punched the
                  artificial intelligence at the wrong time."
                    We'd transited from above Duneen almost as soon as

    




               THROUGH THE BREAcH     209
    
    we reached orbit. A human vessel-even the Oriflamme
    with Piet running the boards-would have taken at least
    half an hour to calibrate.
     The next transit, from a point so removed that the sys-
    tem's sun was only a bright star when it rotated across the
    ceiling screen, had taken what I think was the better part
    of a day. I was used to transits in quick series, several to
    several score insertions in sequence, followed by periods
    of an hour or more to recalculate. Chay vessels used a
    completely different system.
     The advantage-it minimized the horrible sickness of
    transiting through nonsidereal universes-was balanced by
    the fact that the Chay didn't continue accelerating during
    calibration. We were in free fall all the time we waited for
    the brain built into the vessel's hull to prepare for the
    next transit. Combustion rockets weren't as fuel-efficient
    as plasma thrusters, and the navigational system obviously
    didn't cope with small, sudden changes as well as humans'
    silicon-based microprocessors did.
     "They were met in orbit," Cseka murmured, settling
    back onto his couch. "But they didn't want to land until
    we'd arrived. You bad."
     The ceiling visuals were more like mural paintings than
    the screens I was used to. The mat of vegetation covered
    the bow third of the image. There were circular fields of
    varying size within the general blue-green mass. Occa-
    sional bright, straight lines suggested metalwork. From
    what Cseka had told me about Chay culture, I assumed
    they were biologically formed as well.
     I'd thought the castaway would be babblingly glad of
    human company after his years among aliens. Instead,
    Cseka remained in his own world throughout the voy-
    age. He gave verbal orders to the controls when the ship
    demanded them. My questions were answered in mono-
    syllables or brief phrases, the way a busy leader snaps at
    an importunate underling; responses only in the technical
    sense, which in no way attempted to give me the under-
    standing I'd requested.
     Despite that, I'd learned a great deal about the Chay to
    guide Piet when he dealt with the race. A day's discomfort
                                                 ~i, J1

    




    210           David Drake
    
    was nothing compared to what we'd been through already;
    and the risk-
     I'd made that decision when I came aboard the Porce-
    lain. So had we all.
     The vessel was settling to the west of the mat. As we
    neared the ground I realized that resolution of the Chay
    optics was amazingly good, more like still photographs
    than the scanned images I was used to. The visuals were
    real, too, not data cleaned up by an enhancement program.
    The surface had all the warts and blemishes of a natural
    landscape.
     The soil beneath us was russet, yellow, and gray. There
    were dips and outcrops, but no significant hills. Frequent
    cracks jagged across the surface, often streaming sulphur-
    ous gases. Vegetation outside the large mats was limited
    to clumps and rings. None of it was high enough to cast
    a shadow from the primary on the eastern horizon.
     "Is it breathable?" I asked as I watched a fumarole just
    upwind of where we trembled in a near-hover. "The air."
     "What?" Cseka said. He blinked, then frowned. "Of
    course it's breathable. A little high in carbon dioxide,
    that's all. These-"
     He plucked the cowl of his cape. It stretched across his
    face as a veil.
     "-filter it. I'll have some brought to your ship."
     He spoke to the vessel's controls again. We resumed
    our descent at less than three meters a second.
     "The Chay wear them also," I said. We would land
    in a shallow depression hundreds of meters in diameter,
    half a Mick from the inhabited vegetation. Atmosphere
    vessels-platforms supported by three or more translucent
    gas bags-drifted from the city toward the spot.
     "When they're out of their domes, yes," Cseka said.
     I squatted against the bulkhead's lower curve, not that
    we were going to land hard enough to require my cau-
    tion. If the Chay couldn't breathe the atmosphere of On
    Chay without artificial aids, there was no question at all
    that they were the relicts of a past civilization rather than
    autochthons.
     The engines roared at higher output and on a distinctly

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH     211
    
    JY;       different note. I recalled how the nozzles had dilated as
              the Chay vessel landed on Duneen. The exhaust spread
              to reflect from the ground as a cushion against the low-
              er hull.
    I we       "Do you have a filter for me?" I asked, pitching my
    ay        voice to be heard over the engines. How quickly didC02
    lis       poisoning become dangerous? Could I run to the Ori-
    ~re       flamme after she landed?
               "Christ's blood," said Cseka. He wiped his good eye
    -a]       With theback of his hand, then waved toward the guard
              whose muscles had frozen while the last of the fruit was
              a centimeter from his mouth. "Take his!"
    re         Cseka growled a few additional words to the Chay. The
    nt
    r_        mobile guards unfastened their fellow's cape by running a
    ~d        finger down a hidden seam. They pulled the garment away
              from him as we landed lightly as thought.
               One of them handed the cape to me. I wrapped it around
    st        my shoulders, avoiding the patch of sticky purple juice.
    "I        The edges sealed when I pressed them together, though the
    )f        fabric felt as slick as the surface of the Oriflamme's hull.
               The Chay's naked body was skeletally thin. The pebbly
              frontal skin was light gray-brown, while the sides and back
    .s        were a darker shade of the same drab combination. The
              color variations of the face and arms were absent.
               The creature wore a net garment similar to a bandeau
              across its midriff. A few small objects hung from the
              meshes. I couldn't guess what their human analogs
              might be.
               One of the Chay spoke. It was the first time I'd heard
              one of their voices. The word or words seemed sharper
    t         than those of Cseka speaking the language, but obviously
              he managed to communicate.
               The whorled patch of bulkhead spun slowly outward,
    t         opening to a dark sky and the coruscation of the Ori-
              flamme's thrusters descending. I smoothed the sides of
              my borrowed cape over my nose and mouth, then ducked
              through the hatchway as soon as it had opened enough to
              pass me.
               The Oriflamme dropped in a wide circle of Chay ves-
              ssels, ten or a dozen of them. These ships were constructs,
               as
                s
               Th,
               e S, I

    




     ICY
                    212           David Drake
    
                    three to six pods linked by tubes fat enough that a man or
                    Chay could crawl between them.
                    The individual hulls were similar to the one that had
                    carried me to On Chay. I had a vision of giant pea vines
                    festooned with starships. I suppose that was pretty close
                    to the truth.
                    The Oriflamme wobbled slightly like a man walking
                    on stilts, though anyone who'd seen another starship land
                    would be amazed at how skillfully Piet balanced the thrust
                    of his eight engines. The Chay escort kept formation around
                    him like fish schooling rather than individually-controlled
                    machines. They dropped with less than a quarter of their
                    jets lighted, further proof of how much less massive they
                    were than human vessels.
                    I'd used my hand to block the glare of the Oriflamme's
                    thrusters. When Cseka got out behind me, he'd sealed the
                    front of his cowl up over his eyes. I tried the same thing.
                    The fabric blocked the high-energy-UV and blue-por-
                    tion of the exhaust and dimmed the whole output to com
                    fortable levels, without degrading the rest of my vision
                    more than ten or twenty percent. That was about as good
                    as our helmet visors.
                    The dirigibles I'd seen on our vessel's screen sailed
                    nearer. The supporting gas bags were the size and shape
                    of the starship hulls, though the walls were thin enough
                    to be translucent. Eight to ten meters beneath each set of
                    bags hung a platform, some of which were large enough
                    to hold several score Chay.
                    The bigger dirigibles mounted a plasma cannon at the
                    bow. The weapons were metal and of small bore, swivel
                    guns like those Our Lady of Montreal had carried.
                    I nudged Cseka. "Where do they get the cannon?" I
                    shouted over the Oriflamme's hammering roar.
                    "Trade," he said. "For fullerenes. We've got embassies
                    from most of the states of Earth here, but the shipments go
                    through too many hands. That's why we want Venerians.
                    To set up our own foundries."
                    About half the Chay riding the dirigibles wore plain
                    gray capes like those of Cseka's guards. The remain4er
                    were clad in a variety of other metallic hues. Most of
    41

    




                     THROUGH THE BREACH     213
    
    these were shades of silver, but cinnabar reds and blues as
    poisonous as that of copper sulfate were dazzlingly pres
    ent. A few Chay gleamed with the same gold undertones
    as Cseka's cape.
    A hundred meters up, the Chay vessels increased thrust
    and hovered while the Oriflamme dropped out of their cir
    cle. Moving in a single flock, the escorts pulsed sideways
    through the sky in the direction of the mat of vegetation.
    The Oriflamme landed nearby in an explosion of dirt.
    Each of the thruster nozzles acted as a shaped charge blast
    ing straight down. The soil was friable, without enough
    sand in the mixture to bind it into glass.
    I hunched and covered my head with my arms. Cseka
    remembered to duck a moment later, but the two guards
    who'd followed us out of the ship continued gaping at the
    Oriflamme until the dirt cascaded over us. It was like being
    caught in a rugby scrum.~
    I fell over on my right side. One of the rocks that
    bounced off my forearm would have knocked me silly if
    it had hit my head instead. Pebbles settled while the wave
    of lighter dust traveled outward in an expanding doughnut.
    A dirigible nosed toward us through the cloud.
    I shook the hem of my cape free of the dirt loading it and
    jogged toward the Oriflamme. Cseka shouted something,
    but I couldn't understand the words. Maybe he was calling
    to the Chay in their own language.
    The forward airlock opened as I neared the Oriflamme.
    Stephen, identifiable even in a hard suit by his size and
    the slung flashgun, swung down the integral steps and
    stamped toward me across the glowing crater the plasma
    motors blew around the vessel.
    He raised his visor when he was clear of the throbbing
    boundary. "I'll carry you," he said.
    s"I hoped you might," I said, but he didn't hear me
    because he had to lock his visor down again to draw a
    breath.
    I stepped into his arms and, like Saint Christopher car
    rying our Lord, Stephen tramped back across the blasted
    rsoil and up the steps into the Oriflamme. The ground had
    fcooled below the optical range, but radiant heat baked the

    




                 214            David Drake
    
                 sweat from my calves and left arm in the few seconds I
                 was exposed.
                 Both valves of the airlock stood open until Stephen set
                 me down. The forward compartment was closed off from
                 the rest of the ship. Piet and half a dozen senior members
                 of the complement waited for us in oxygen masks.
                 "This is a filter," I said, plucking the hood down from
                 my eyes. I realized how strange I must look. "How high
                 is the carbon dioxide?"
                 "Five and a half percent," Piet said. The outer door
                 had closed, so he took his mask cautiously away. "I'm
                 surprised the Chay breathe Duneen's atmosphere when
                 their own is so different."
                 "They're as alien here as we are," I said. "From what I
                 could drag out of Cseka-believe me, he's crazy. It's like
                 his mind was dropped and all the pieces were put together
                 blind."
                 I hawked to clear my throat. My cape's filter mecha-
                 nism didn't seem to bind the ozone formed by plasma
                 exhausted into an oxygen atmosphere. On the main screen,
                 three dirigibles moved toward the Oriflamme. Cilia on the
                 platforms' undersides rowed the air. They raised some dust
                 from the ground, but less than turbines of similar thrust.
    
                 "There's no overall direction-they're as likely to fight
                 "There's a hundred or so Chay worlds," I resumed.
                 with each other as trade.".
                   "How unlike humans," Piet said dryly.
                 "Some of them do trade with the Feds," I said. "And
                 it sounds like the Feds have taken control of some Chay
                 worlds. Most of the Chay, though-like this system, they're
                 marked 'Avoid' on the pilotry chart because a Fed ship gets
                 handed its head if it messes with the locals."
                   One of the dirigibles swung broadside to the Oriflamme;
    -Bill        it hovered with its platform on a level with the cockpit
                 hatch. The six supporting gas bags loomed above us. Their
                 total volume was several times that of the starship. Low-
                 ranking Chay stood near bales of gray capes like those
                 they themselves wore, waiting for our hatch to open.
                 "I didn't see a single piece of metalwork, much less
                 ceramic, on the ship," I said. I nodded toward the image

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     215
    
    of the armed dirigible. "They've got cannon-"
     "Southern Cross work," said Stephen without bothering
    to look again at the weapon he'd already assessed. "And
    about as dangerous at one end as the other, I'd judge."
     "They can do anything with plants," I said. "They can
    sequester lanthanides in fullerene tubes a meter long, Cseka
    swears."
     "What good is that?" Stephen asked.
     "On Earth, they're starting to use them to replace dam-
    aged nerves," I replied. "Cseka wants us to set up a cannon
    foundry here. In exchange, they'll provide either biological
    products or the plant stocks that make them. He's serious,
    but-"
     "Us, to set up a foundry?" said Piet. "Or Venus?"
     I nodded with my lips pursed. "Yeah, that's the thing.
    I think maybe he means us. We could convince him that
    we don't have the expertise ourselves, but--2'
     "Unless he remembers what my father does for a living,"
    Piet said with a smile.
     "We can't train this cack-handed lot to cast cannon!"
    I snapped. "Any more than I could teach them to build
    silicon Als. Or breathe water! But I don't know how well
    Cseka is going to bear anything that doesn't agree with
    what he wants to hear."
     Piet nodded. "Not a unique problem," he said. "Fhough
    I think we'd better meet with his leaders. Compressed
    fullerenes are what give our hulls-"
     He tapped Stephen's breastplate affectionately.
     -and armor hardness that Terran metallurgists can't
    equal. If the Chay are so much better at creating fullerenes
    than we are with our sputtering techniques-"
     Piet smiled.
     "--then we owe it to Venus to learn what we can."
     He fitted the mask back over his face. "Our hosts have
    waited long enough," he said. "I'll take a few men and
    some gifts to meet with them. And we'll see what we see."
     Stephen frowned at "I'll take"; but as I'd noticed before,
    he didn't waste his breath in futile argument. "I'm one of
    the men," he said.
     "And I'm another," I added.

    




                     216           David Drake
                     "Yeah, those are food crops," Cseka agreed, peering over
                     the edge of the platform at the brown and ocher vegetation
                     twenty meters below. "The inside stems and the leaves
                     both. You wouldn't know it was the same plant."
                      The platform didn't have a guardrail, but Piet seemed
                     equally nonchalant as he leaned forward to view the fields.
                     Chay agriculture was labor-intensive: at least a hundred
                     gray-clad figures stooped over the sinuous crop, pruning
                     and cultivating. The vines were as big around as my thighs,
                     but the relatively small leaves looked more like fur than
                     foliage.
    46,               Stephen and I stayed back a step from the edge. He gri-
                     maced every time Piet overhung the platform, and his free
                     hand-the one not on the grip of his flashgun-was poised
                     to snatch his friend back if a jolt sent him toppling.
                      However, the dirigible rode as solidly as a rock. The
                     platform was suspended on hoselike tubes that stretched
                     and compressed as the gas bags lifted or fell in the breeze.
                     The deck undulated only slightly as cilia beneath stroked
                     us forward.
                      We slid between two brown-tinged domes together cov-
                     ering nearly a hectare. "Workers' housing," Cseka volun-
                     teered, gesturing with his elbow toward the dome on our
                     side of the platform. I could see the dim outlines of tiered
                     buildings under the curving surface. Cseka had spoken
                     more during the ride from the Oriflamme's landing site a
                     kilometer away than he did during the day's voyage from
                     Duneen.
                      I carried a flashgun too, but just as a gift to the council.
                     Our ceramic cassegrain lasers were far superior to the
                     nearest Terran equivalents, though not many Venerians
                     cared to use weapons so heavy and unpleasant for the
                     shooter. I sometimes wondered whether Stephen carried
                     a flashgun because each round was so effective, or if a
                     part of him liked the punishment.
                            dome far larger than those housing th,
                      A clear                              e. Chay
                     workers loomed before us. The structures inside looked
                     like mushrooms with multiple caps one above another on a'

    




               -_.Now
    
               THROUGH THE BREACH    217
    
    single central shaft. Those near the middle of the enclosure
    had eight or nine layers.
     Our dirigible settled to the ground. Rather, settled onto
    a living surface of hair-fine leaves woven as tightly as car-
    peting. The arched opening in the dome was big enough for
    three or four people to walk abreast. The passage writhed
    like an intestine instead of going straight through to the
    interior.
      Come," said Cseka. "The council will be waiting for
    US"
     He stepped from the platform to the carpet of vegeta-
    tion. Stephen and Piet fell in to either side of the cast-
    away, while the three of us carrying presents-Dole and
    Lightbody with me-followed closely behind. Chay on
    the dirigibles wheezed a fanfare on horns several meters
    long driven by four musicians squeezing bellows simul-
    taneously.
     There wasn't a door at either end of the tunnel, but its
    walls were lined with fine hairs that greatly increased the
    surface area. That and the winding course-the dome's
    wall was only three meters through even here where it was
    thickened, but the passage was a good twenty-served to
    filter the carbon dioxide down to levels the Chay
                                                               found
    comfortable.
     A crowd of Chay with their cowls thrown back lined
    both sides of the route inside the dome. At least half of
    them wore the colored garments I'd come to associate with
    higher ranks. As we six humans entered the enclosed area,
    the spectators began to stamp their feet in a slow rhythm.
    The flooring was as hard and dense-grained as a nutshell,
    and the dome reverberated.
     We walked along a boulevard a hundred meters wide,
    thronged with stamping Chay. Musicians from the dirig-
    ibles followed us, wheezing on their horns. Additional
    spectators leaned from the upper stories of buildings.
     "Do they have radio, do you suppose?" I said. I was
    speaking mostly to myself at first, but I added loudly
    enough to be heard by the men ahead of me, "Captain
      seka, do the Chay have radio?"
      A party in silvery capes marched to meet us. They
     P,

    




                  218           David Drake
                  played instruments a meter and a half long; bangles on
                  either end clattered like the beads of an abacus when the
                  musician plucked his one string. These strings, the bellows
                  trumpets, and the stamping crowd each kept an individual
                  rhythm. Only the cacophony aboard Absalom 231 in the
                  atmosphere of Decades approached the result.
                    Cseka turned his head. "Only to talk to human ships,"
                  he shouted. "We use beans that vibrate the same as others
                  from the same pod instead."
                    He shrugged. "The range is only a few light-seconds
                  and they aren't faster than light, nothing like that. But
                  they work."
                    The string players reversed course to precede us down
                  the boulevard. The towers were arranged in three rings of
                  increasing height. At the center of the enclosure, a low
                  building sat in a circular court several hundred meters
                  across.
                    Near the entrance to the central structure was a cage,
        fid       grown rather than woven in a lattice with about a hun-
    _4            dred millimeters across openings. The two lines of string
                  players parted around it. A man-a human being in the
                  remnants
                         of a Federation uniform--clutched the bars to
                  hold his torso upright.
                    There were-three at least, maybe more-human
                  corpses in the cage with the living man. One of them
                  had been dead long enough that the flesh had sloughed
                  to bare his ribs. The stench of death and rotting waste was
                  a barrier so real that I stumbled three steps away.
                    Piet stopped and touched his hand to Cseka s arm,
                  "What's this?" Piet asked, exaggerating his lip movements
                  to be understood without bellowing.
                    "Sometimes we take Feds alive," Cseka said noncha-
                  lantly. "They're brought here for entertainment."  ei
                    His right hand came out from beneath his cape with
                  the handweapon I'd seen outlined there. Grip, receiver, bu
                  and barrel were one piece of dark brown, black-grained  b&
                  wood. A lanyard growing from the butt quivered back in  slit
                  a springy coil which held the pistol out of the way when     insi
                  it wasn't in use.                              'V
                    Cseka fired. A snap of steam lifted the gun muzzle. The    seve
     i ~iw

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     219
    
    prisoner screamed and arched convulsively. He skidded on
    his back, thrashing across a floor slippery with filth.
     Cseka held his weapon up for us to see. "Darts," he
    said. "They're not fatal, not usually. But they drop a
    fellow quicker than bullets. And they-"
     He aimed again toward the prisoner. The procession
    halted when we did, but the wracking music continued.
     Piet put two fingers under the barrel of the dart gun
    and lifted it away. "Please don't," he said. "The things
    we have to do in war are terrible enough."
     "Nothing could be enough!" Cseka shouted. He raised
    the pistol and brought it down in a slashing stroke at Piet's
    bead. Stephen blocked the blow with his left forearm,
    catching Cseka's wrist numbingly. The pistol flew loose
    and slithered back under the cape.
     Cseka began to giggle. "Nothing could be enough,"
    he repeated. "Some day we'll have them all here, with
    your help."
     He strode around the left side of the cage. We five
    Oriflammes scrambled to catch up, but the Chay in the
    procession resumed marching without missing a step.
     The Chay hadn't reacted to the momentary human con-
    flict. The Fed prisoner lay quiescent. His eyes were open,
    and his chest trembled like that of a dog panting.
     "Our rifles throw fireballs a hundred meters," Cseka
    said, his voice raised only to be heard over the background
    noise. The maniacal rage switched itself off and on in
    an eyeblink. He tapped the barrel of Stephen's flashgun.
    "Within their range, they're better than this."
     "Within their range," Stephen repeated. There was noth-
    ing in his tone to suggest he believed the Chay shoulder
    weapons-they certainly weren't rifled-were really as
    effective as his laser at any range.
     The string players flared to either side of the central
    building. The structure was nearly cylindrical, as if a
    balloon had been inflated in a tube. The walls slanted
    slightly inward and the roof edge was a radiused curve
    instead of square.
     We walked into the building. The single chamber held
    several score Chay in golden capes and at least a dozen

    




                   220           David Drake
                   humans. Like us, the humans wore the gray local gar-
                   ment, but their hats were of a number of Terran styles.
                   I recognized a pair of Southerns, a large man in a kepi
                   with United Europe military insignia, and a pair of women
                   from the Independent Coastal Republic. Their state had
                   been fighting for thirty years against Pleyal's federated
                   remainder of North America.
    M                There was an open aisle down the center of the room.
                   Cseka led us toward the empty dais at the end. The music
                   and stamping outside stopped, but the chamber sighed
                   with the spectators' breathing. The walls were lighted
                   from within, giving the effect of translucence which the
                   black exterior belied.
                     We halted two paces from the dais, as close as any of
                   the spectators stood. A human leaned close to me and said
                   in Trade English, "You're from Venus, is it not so? You're
                   bringing arms to trade?"
                                                    though
                     "We're passing through," I replied; in a whisper
                   the questioner had spoken normally. I think he was a
                   European. United Europe had no extra-solar colonies, but
                   several of its states engaged in trade beyond Pluto.
                     He sniffed. "There's nothing they want but arms, can-
                   non especially," he said. "Well, there's enough for all."
                     The wall behind the dais rotated open like the port in
                   the Chay starship. Ten Chay carried through three others
                   on a litter whose wooden surface gleamed like polished
                   bronze.
                     The trio were completely naked and very old. They
                   hunched like dogs sitting up. Their skins were nearly
                   white. Their three tails twisted together and appeared to
                   have fused into one flesh.
                     The silver-caped porters lowered the trio to the dais.
                   The spectators shouted. The voices of the Chay were
                   more or less in unison though of course unintelligible.
                   The humans-the man next to me, at least-cried, "Hail,
                   the all-powerful council!"
                     The trio's mouths opened as one. "Greetings to t~is
                   worshipful assembly," boomed the front wall of the cham-
                   ber while the two side walls were snarling something in,
                   the language of the Chay themselves. The Trade English
     ~ik

    




                    THROUGH THE BREACH     221
    
         words seemed synchronized with the lipless mouth of the
         center councilor.
          The room stilled. The walls had been suffused with
         amber light. The floor level was now emerald green,
         and the hue was slipping upward as if by osmosis.
         The councilors focused their independently-rotating eyes
         on us.
          "We have discussed you with Lord Cseka," said the
         center figure. His voice through the front wall was under-
         standable despite the sidewalls' accompanying harsh gut-
         turals. "Your enemies are our enemies. Together we will
         drive the Federation pirates out of existence except as our
         slaves and your slaves."
          The trio paused. The councilors were as thin as mum-
         nues, pebbly skin sunken drumhead-tight over an armature
     t   of bi ne. Their ribs fluttered when they breathed.
           0
          P ~t
           e lifted his arms forward to call attention to himself
         without advancing into the cleared zone before the dais.
         "All-powerful council!" he said in a voice pitched to be
         heard in a larger arena than this one. "We bring you
         the greetings of Venus and our ruler, Governor Halys.
         We ourselves are but chance travelers, but permit us to
         0ff r a few trifles as a foretaste of the trade the future
         I e
         will b ing between your people and ours."
           He twisted his head back toward me. "Jere-" he mur-
         mured. I gave him the flashgun before he finished the
         request.
           "A laser with a range of kilometers," Piet called. The
         weapon weighed nearly twenty kilos, as I well knew, but
         he balanced it on the palm of one hand so that he could
         deploy the charging parasol from the butt with the other.
           "In good light, you can fire every three minutes at full
         power!" he added. We weren't providing spare batteries
         as a part of this gift. "Your enemies and ours of the
         Federation have no handweapons so effective."
           A porter took the gift from Piet and set it on the dais
         beside the council. Lightbody held his load out. Piet shook
         his head curtly and gestured to Dole instead.
           Dole handed forward a round bowl a meter in diam-
         eter. Piet raised it overhead and turned it so that all the
          a
          s
           a
          Feder
           A
             p
             a
            p
            bde
          esl
                                         t
                                         0
             ar
    
             t
              r
              h
              0
    
          Is
              t
    
              e
               e
               n
    
              c
               0
    
    r
    c
    ~h head u
           Dole han
          eter. Piet ra

    




                  222           David Drake
    
                 assembly could see Governor Halys' gray pearl charge on
                 a field of creamy translucence.
                 "As your folk with plants, so ours with ceramics," Piet
                 said. "This is merely a symbol of-"
                 He flung the bowl down on the floor as hard as he
                 could. It bounced back into his hands with the deep,
                 throbbing note of a jade gong. The assembly, Chay and
                 humans alike, gasped with surprise.
                 "-the skill with which our experts, experts whom I
                 can encourage to journey here from Venus, cast plasma
                 cannon!"
                 The sidewalls rumbled phrases in the local tongue,
                 though the councilors weren't speaking. Chay spectators
                 whispered among themselves. The human ambassadors
                 eyed us with speculation and some disquiet.
                 "One last thing," Piet said as a porter took away the
                 undamaged bowl. He was emphasizing thai we were geese
                 who would lay golden eggs, a prize for what we would
                 bring rather than what we were. "Like the others, this is
                 only a symbol of the trade that will start upon our return
                 to Venus."
                 Piet took from Lightbody the navigational computer
                 we'd stripped out of one of the Federation ships captured on
                 Trehinga. I'd have reduced the simple unit to components
                 for ease of storage, but Piet stopped me for reasons I now
                 understood.
                 "In order to capture a vessel in transit," Piet said, "your
                 AT must solve the same equations the other vessel's does.
                 We of Venus will supply you with electronic artificial
                 intelligences that will allow you to track Federation ships
                 across the bubble universes instead of being limited to
                 attacking those you find grounded or in orbit. There will
                 be no safety for the enemies of On Chay and Venus!"
                   This time the Chay spectators stamped their feet as the
    4il           translation boomed to them from the sidewalls. It was
                  almost a minute after a porter took the-crude-Al that
                  the chamber quieted again.
                 The walls replied in the councilors' three voices, "Men
                 of Venus, our folk are already delivering to your vessel
                 phials of drugs, fabrics, and the tubular fullerenes we

    




                   THROUGH THE BREACH    223
    
       know your folk especially prize. Trade for the future,
       yes ... But we will propose to you other arrangements
       as well. Go now, and tomorrow we will meet with you
       again."
         Piet bowed low. I knelt and tugged Dole and Lightbody
       down with me. The aisle through the assembly had closed,
       but the spectators squeezed aside again to let us pass. The
       Chay were stamping their enthusiasm.
         I was in the lead of our party, walking with the steady
       arrogance that befitted a gentleman of Venus. I'd never
       before in my life wanted so badly to get out of anything
       as I did that drumming council chamber.
       "I wonder if this balloon can go faster than it has so far?"
       Piet said, looking over the fittings of the dirigible carrying
       us back to the Oriflamme. We were traveling at about 20
       kph, the speed of a man jogging.
    t    He raised an eyebrow in question as he swept his glance
       over the airship's crew. The dozen Chay present on the
       return journey wore the gray of common laborers. They
       continued to ignore Piet and the rest of us.
         "The big ones with guns," Dole said, answering the
       surface question. "They've got more legs on the bottom
       than these do." He thumped his bootheel on the platform.
         "They might speak English anyway," I said.
         "My thought as well," Piet agreed in a satisfied tone.
       This was no place to discuss our real intentions.
         The primary was past mid-sky, flooding the land with
       soft blue light. On Chay was a warm world for all its
       distance from the sun. The planet it circled was nearly
       a star in its own right, and vulcanism spurred by the gas
       giant's gravity warmed the satellite significantly.
         Another pair of small dirigibles passed ours on their
       way back to the city. Tents of thin sheeting had sprung
       up around the Oriflamme during our absence, and bales
       of unfamiliar material were stacked near the main hatch.
       The council had been as good as its word when it promised
       gifts.
         "They really want to be our friends," I said. Even if the

    




                 224           David Drake
    
                 Chay understood English, they weren't going to pick up
                 my undertone of concern.
    17j          "On their terms," Stephen said, "they certainly do."
                 Men wearing Chay capes moved out of the way so that
                 the dirigible could land beside the open forward airlock.
                 The ground had cooled, so we didn't have to hop from
                 the platform to the ship in reverse of the way we had
                 disembarked.
                 The first thing I noticed when I stepped down was that
                 the ground wasn't still. Microshocks made the surface
                 tremble like the deck of a starship under way.
                 Dole must have thought the same thing. He nodded to
                 the tents crewmen were building from fabric the Chay had
                 brought and said, "Even if we get a big one and they come
                 down, it's not going to hurt nobody."
                 I nodded agreement, then grinned. A seasoned spacFr
                 adapted to local conditions; the landsman I'd been six
                 months ago would have been terrified. On Venus,
                 ground shocks might rupture the overburden and let in
                 the hell-brewed atmosphere.
                 "Guillermo?" Piet called to the Molt who'd been
                 directing outside operations during our absence. "Turn
                 things over to Dole and join us on the bridge, please."
                 The Chay crew paid us no attention. They backed the
                 dirigible from the Oriflamme before turning its prow
                 toward the city. Again I noticed the delicacy of the
                 driving cilia. Mechanical propellors or turbines would
                 have scattered the tents our crew had just constructed
                 Salomon waited for us alone in the forward section,
                 though as we entered a pair of sailors carried bedrolls
                 toward the main hatch while discussing the potential of
                 converting Chay foodstocks, into brandy.
                 "I've run initial calculations for an empty world twenty
                 days from here," the navigator said. "We'll have to refine
                 them in orbit, of course."
                 "I don't know that it's come to that, exactly," Piet said
                 cautiously. I'm sure he would have started the calculations
    IN           himself if Salomon hadn't already done so.
                 "Cseka scares the hell out of me," I said. "The Chay
                 scare me even worse. They-"
    a
    
    41

    




                  THROUGH THE BREACH     225
    
        "They're friendly," Piet said.
       "They're not human," I said. "An earthquake may not
       hurt you, but it isn't your friend. There's nothing I saw
       in there today-"
        I waved in the direction of the city.
       '~-that convinces me they won't decide to eat us
       because, because Stampfer's got red hair."
       "I haven't had a chance to look over the goods they've
       brought us. . ." Stephen said. He took off his helmet and
       knea ed his scalp with his left hand. "But I don't think
       theirels much doubt that trade-in techniques, at least,
       given the distance-could be valuable."
       He gave us a humorless grin. "Of course, that's only if
       the Chay decide to let us go. Jeremy's right, there."
       Guillermo had said nothing since he entered behind
       us. He was seated at his usual console. His digits were
       entering what even I recognized as a sequence to lift us
       to orbit.
       Piet laughed briefly. "So you all think we should take
       off as soon as possible," he said. "Even though Chay
       knowledge could give Venus an advantage greater than all
       the chips the Federation brings back from the Reaches?"
       "What we think, Piet," Stephen said, "is that you're in
       charge. We'll follow whatever course you determine."
       "I'm not a tyrant!" Piet snapped. "I'm not President
       Pleyal, 'Do this because it's my whim!'"
       I swallowed and said, "Somebody has to make decisions.
       Here it's you. Besides, you're better at it than the rest of us.
       Not that that matters."
       I grinned at Stephen. His words hadn't been a threat,
       because the big gunman accepted that all the rest of us knew
       the commander's decision was the law of this expedition.
       As surely as I knew that Stephen would destroy anything
       or anyone who tried to block Piet's decision.
       "Yes," said Piet. He sat down at his console and checked
       a status display. "Air and reaction mass will be at capacity
       within the hour. We'll check the gifts, see what's worth
       taking and what's not, but we'll leave the bales where
       they are for the time being. We don't want to give the
       impression that we're stowing them for departure."
    
                                                      A~,,J
        0
    
    ~a

    




                     226           David Drake
    
                     He looked up at the rest of us and smiled brilliantly.
                     "Primary set is in six hours. An hour after that, we'll
                     inform the crew to begin loading operations. When they're
                     complete-another hour?-we'll close the hatches and
                     lift."
                     Piet rubbed his forehead. "I didn't," he added as if idly,
                     much care for the way our hosts treat their prisoners."
                     The Oriflamme shuddered as another shock rippled
                     through the soil beneath us.
    
                     The primary was just below the horizon. The sun at zenith
                     in the clear sky was only a blue-white star, though it cast
                     a shadow if you looked carefully.
                     Three dirigibles rested outside the entrance to the
                     domed city, their partially deflated gas bags sagging.
                     The airships and their crews were armed, but the Chay
                     all wore gray. None of their officers were present, and
                     the guards themselves didn't bother to look at me as I
                     walked into the dome.
     Half a dozen Chay in orange and pastel blue capes
    preceded me by twenty meters. A group of gray-clad
    laborers followed at a similar distance, chattering~2
                     themselves. Like me, some of the laborers left their cowls
                     up and the veils over their faces even after they entered
                     the dome.
                     I hadn't done a more pointlessly risky thing since the
                     night I went aboard the Porcelain. Though ...
                     Boarding the Porcelain hadn't made me a man, perhaps,
                     but it had made me a man I like better than the fellow
                     who'd lived on Venus until then. I wasn't going to leave
                     a human prisoner here to be tortured to death.
                     The hard floor of the dome was a contrast to the springy
                     surface of the mat on which it rode. The cape hung low
                     enough to cover my feet, but I was afraid somebody
                     wuld notice that the sound of my boots differed from
                      o
                     the clicking the locals made when they walked. I took
                     deliberately quick, mincing steps.
                     There were hundreds of pedestrians out, but the broad
                     boulevard seemed deserted by comparison with what I'd
                                                        FJ J

    




                    THROUGH THE BREACH     227
    
        seen in the afternoon. Though the dome was clear, it
        darkened the sky into a rich blue that concealed all the stars
        except the sun itself The walls of overhanging apartments
        wicked soft light from within, but even the lower levels
        weren't bright enough to illuminate the street.
         I could see the cage ahead of me. I gripped the cutting
         bar beneath my cape to keep it from swinging and calling
         attention to itself; and because I was afraid.
         I could claim to be looking around; but the Chay would
         want to carry me back to the Oriflamme, and if they did
         that they'd see we were loading the ship to escape. To
         save the others, I'd have to insist on staying overnight
         in the city. What would the Chay do with me when the
         Ori
           flamme lifted?
         Lord God of hosts, be with Your servant. Though I'd
         been no servant of His; a self-willed fool, and a greater
         fool now because I wouldn't leave an enemy of mine to
         die at the hands of enemies of his.
         I'd slipped away from the Oriflamme without causing
         comment. I told Dole I was going for a walk to calm
         my nerves. I didn't want my shipmates to worry if they
         noticed I was gone.
         It didn't seem likely they would notice, what with the
         work of preparing for departure. I was only in the way.
         There were no guards around the Council Hall or the
         cage in front of it. Occasional Chay strode across the
         court, on their way from one boulevard to another, but
         they didn't linger. Even those in bright garb were hard to
         see. My gray cape would be a shadow among shadows.
         A Chay in silvery fabric walked out of the Council Hall
         carrying a bundle. I paused beside a tower, close against
         the wall. If the fellow had been a moment slower, I'd have
         been crossing to the cage myself. The grip of my bar was
         slick with sweat.
         The Chay thrust his bundle into the cage. He had to
         wiggle it to work it through the mesh. It fell with a
         slapping sound to the floor within. The Chay called
         something obviously derisory in his own language, then
         went back the way he'd come.
    
    AW-01

    




     Bill           228           David Drake
    
                   Feeding time at the zoo. The prisoner didn't move. I
                   couldn't even be sure which of the still forms within the
                   lattice was the living man.
                   There wouldn't be a better time. I walked to the cage,
                   keeping my steps short. Out of the comer of my eye I
                   saw a Chay laborer start across the courtyard. I continued
                   forward, my heart in my throat. The Chay disappeared past
                   or into a neighboring residential tower.
                   I took the cage in my left hand and shook it to test
                   the structure. The bars were grown as a unit, not tied
                   together where they crossed. They were finger-thick, hard
                   and obviously tough; but my bar would go through them
                   like light through a window.
                   "Ho! Federation dog!" I snarled. I pitched my voice low
                   though loud enough for the prisoner to hear. I could still
                   brazen out my presence if I had to. "Come close to me
                   or it'll be the worse for you!"
                   "I don't think he can move, Jeremy," Piet said from
                   behind me. "We'll have to carry him."
                   I turned, my mouth open and the tip of the bar sliding
                   from beneath my cape. Piet was indistinguishable from a
                   Chay in his gray cape, but his voice was unmistakable.
                   "Yeah, well," I said. I switched my bar on. "I'll drag
                   him out, then."
                   The blade zinged across the bars. I cut up, across and
                   down, then bent to slash through the base of the opening.
                   I wondered how the Chay had created the cage to begin
                   with, since it didn't appear to have a door anywhere.
                   I couldn't believe they'd simply grown it around their
                   prisoners.
                   Piet caught the section as it started to fall. He held a
                   cape to me as I hung my bar. I'd brought an extra garment
                   myself, so Piet tossed his spare onto the cage floor to be
                   rid of it.
                   My boot skidded on the slimy surface. I had to grab the
                   frame to keep from falling. One of the prostrate figures
                   moaned softly. I raised his torso, tugged the cape around
                   him, and lifted him in a packstrap carry.
                   The cut section now hung from the hinge of tape Piet
                   had wrapped around it. When I ducked out, he taped the
    ~.. , Im

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     229
    
    other side so that our entry wasn't obvious.
     The prisoner was a dead weight, though a modest one.
    It was like carrying an articulated skeleton, more awkward
    than heavy. Piet took the man's other arm and we strode
    back the way we'd come.
     "Do Chay get drunk, do you suppose?" I said.
     "Let's hope so," Piet said. "We're a couple of fools to
    do this."
     The few remaining pedestrians scurried along with their
    heads down. "If the Chay have a curfew . . ." Piet said,
    speaking my thought.
     "The dome wall isn't very thick except where the door
    is," I replied. "I can cut a way out if the gate's closed,
    We can."
     The tunnel was open. A Chay in a violet garment
    entered as we neared it. We passed him in the other
    direction. He called out in his language. We ignored him.
    I walked on my toes to approximate the mincing Chay gait
    until we were around the first bend in the gateway.
     The sunlight outside was as faint as my hope of salvation.
    I drew a great breath through my filter and said, "So far, so
    good."
     The crews of the airships on guard didn't challenge us.
    Some of the Chay were eating beneath their veils. The mat
    of vegetation rolled underfoot, absorbing high-frequency
    ground shocks and smoothing them into gentle swells.
     A tall figure strode toward us from the shadow of a
    translucent brown dome. "I'll carry him, if you like,"
    Stephen offered in a low voice.
     "He's not heavy," Piet said.
     We walked on. Stephen fell into step behind us and a
    little to Piet's left, where he could watch our front as well
    as guarding the rear. This final part of the route was over
    an organic causeway crossing scores of circular fields only
    ten or twenty meters in diameter,
     The ground rumbled. A line of dust lifted in the distance,
    kicked into motion by the quake. The causeway swayed
    gently. Beneath us, plants waved their zebra-striped foliage
    at us.
     "I hadn't expected that the two of you would do this

    




       q1111
    
                   230            David Drake
    
                   together," Stephen said in a pale voice. We hadn't spoken
                   during the trek, but we could see that now there were no
                   Chay between us and the edge of the mat.
                   "We weren't, Stephen," Piet said. "Jeremy made a
                   foolish decision quite independently of me."
                     "I jumped out of a year's growth when he spoke t
                                              0 me,"
                   I said.
                   My voice sounded almost normal. That surprised me.
                   I'd just learned that Stephen thought I'd supplanted him
                   in Piet Ricimer's friendship. I'd known there were a lot 'm
                   of ways this jaunt could get me killed, but that one hadn't
                   occurred to me.
                   "Tsk," said Stephen. "I don't lose control of myself,
                   Jeremy."
                   I stumbled, then stared at him past the sunken form of
                   the man we carried. "Do you read minds?" I demanded.
                     "No," said Piet. "But he's very smart."
    J 1             "And a good shot," Stephen said with a throaty chuckle.
                     I laughed too. "Well, nobody sane would be doing this,"
                   I said aloud.
                   Though the mat felt like a closely woven carpet to walk
                   on, it was actually several meters thick. The edge was a
                   sagging tangle of stems, interlaced and spiky. There were
                   no steps nor ramp off the island of vegetation; the Chay
                   never walked on bare soil. The ground beyond bounced
                   the way tremors shake the chest of a sleeping dog.
     L,-,            Stephen hopped down ahead of us. "Drop him to me,'
    lffi~ I L      he said, raising his arms. "I'll take him from here."
                   I looked at Piet. He nodded. "On three," he said. "One,
                   two, three-"
                   Together we tossed the moaning prisoner past the border.
                   Stephen caught him, pivoting to lessen the shock to the
                   Fed's weakened frame. The landscape heaved violently.
                   Stephen dropped to his knees, but he didn't let his charge
                   touch the ground.
                   My cape tore half away on brambles as I clambered
                   down, baring my legs to the knee. There was no longer
                   need for concealment, only speed.
                   Stephen strode onward with the Fed held lengthways
                   across his shoulders like a yoke. Small shocks were

    




                THROUGH THE BREACH     231
    
     incessant now. I had to pause at each pulse to keep from
     falling when the ground shifted height and angle.
     "I should have allowed more time," I muttered. The
     Oriflamme was still out of sight beyond the rim of the
     bowl in which we'd landed.
      "You were there before I was," Piet reminded me.
     "Don't worry," Stephen said, "They aren't going to
     leave without us."
      Piet laughed. "I suppose not," he agreed.
     "I'd thought . . ." I said. "Maybe I'd just put him out
     of his misery. But I couldn't do that,"
     Stephen gave an icy chuckle. "We've brought him this
     far," he said. "We may as well take him the rest of
     the way."
     We reached the lip of the bowl. The center of the
     depression was only twenty meters or so lower than the
     rolling plain around it, but that was still enough to conceal
     a starship. Sight of the Oriflamme warmed my heart like
     the smile of a beautiful woman.
     A squeal similar to that of steam escaping from a huge
     boiler sounded behind us. It was more penetrating than a
     siren and so loud that it would be dangerous to humans
     -any closer than we were.
     I turned. Three cannon-armed dirigibles lifted above
     the city.
     "Here," said Stephen, swinging his burden to Piet as
     if the Fed were a bundle of old clothes. "I'll watch the
     rear.9~
     He locked a separate visor down to protect his eyes. A
     full helmet would have been obvious even under his cowl.
     Stephen parted his cape and threw the wings back over his
     shoulders, clearing his flashgun and the satchel of reloads
     slung on his left side.
     I seized the Fed's right arm. "Run," Piet said, and we
     started running.
     The Oriflamme was three hundred yards ahead of us.
     The ground had been still for a moment. Now On Chay
     shook itself violently. I stumbled but caught myself. The
 1iprisoner9s legs swung like a pendulum to trip Piet and
     send him sprawling.

    




                  232           David Drake
                   As Piet picked himself up, I glanced over my shoulder.
                  The Chay dirigibles were a hundred meters high. Stephen
                  walked sedately twenty meters behind us, watching our
                  pursuers over his shoulder. The alarm still screamed from
                  the Chay city.
                   Piet and I ran on. We'd taken only three strides when
                  the bolt from a plasma cannon lit the soil immediately
                  behind us into the heart of a sun.
                   The shock wave flung us apart. I smashed into a waist-
                  high bush that might have been the ancestor of the mat
                  on which the city was built. It clawed my chest and my
                  legs as I tore myself free.
                   The cannon that had fired was a bright white glow in
                  the bow of the center dirigible. Stephen swung his own
                  weapon to his shoulder. A meters-long oval of soil blazed
                  between him and us where the slug of plasma struck.
      J            Stephen fired. The bolt from his laser was a need
                                                     le
                  of light against retinas already shocked by the plasma
                  discharge.
                  The underside of a gas bag supporting the right-hand
                  dirigible ruptured in a veil of thin blue flames. The Chay
                  used hydrogen to support their craft. The fire spread with
                  the deliberation of a flower opening, licking the sides of
       i          the bags adjacent to the one the bolt had ignited. The craft
                  sank out of sight. The crew was trying desperately to land
                  before the conflagration devoured them as well as their
                  vehicle.
                  Piet stumbled forward alone with the prisoner. I grabbed
                  the Fed's free arm and shouted, "D'ye have a gun?"
                  "Only a bar!" Piet said. "I didn't want to hurt the Chay,
                  just free this poor wretch."
                   A laser pulse plowed glassy sparkles across the ground'~
    -11E          ahead of us. The bastards were shooting at us with the
                  flashgun we'd given them that morning!
                  Stephen fired. A microsecond following the snqp of his
                  bolt, our world erupted in another plasma discharge.
                  The shock threw Piet and me sprawling, but this time
                  the cannoneers were aiming at Stephen. Dirt fused into
     lit,
                  shrapnel and blew outward in a fireball which kicked,
                  Stephen sideways with his cape afire.

    




            --------- MMMMNMMMM~
                                              All~
               THROUGHTHEBREACH       233
    
     Fifty meters from us, Salomon or Guillermo lit the
    Oriflamme's thrusters momentarily to check the fuel feeds.
    Bright exhaust puffed across the encampment, blowing
    down tents and disturbing the piles of Chay goods we
    were abandoning. Grit sprayed the back of my neck.
     We had no secrets now. Stampfer would be screaming
    curses as he tried to rerig the Long Tom for combat,
    but that would take minutes with the Oriflamme laden
    as heavily as she was now.
     I started toward Stephen. His flashgun had ignited a
    bag of the left-hand dirigible an instant before its plasma
    cannon fired, Blue hydrogen flames, hotter than Hell's
    hinges for all their seeming delicacy, wrapped the mid-line
    gas bag and involved the sides of the bags adjacent to it.
     I'd seen Stephen shoot before. If he hadn't hit the Chay
    gunner, even at five hundred meters, it was because he
    didn't choose to kill even at this juncture.
     The dirigible's crew dumped their remaining lift to
    escape. The platform dipped out of sight, taking with it
    the white glare of the plasma cannon's stellite bore. Only
    the center vehicle was still aloft; its cannon would be too
    hot to reload for some minutes yet.
     Stephen rolled to his feet before I could reach him.
    His fingers inserted a charged battery in the butt of his
    flashgun and snapped the chamber closed over it before
    he tore away the blazing remnants of his cape. The rocky
    soil still glowed from the second plasma discharge, and a
    nearby bush was a torch of crackling orange flames.
     I turned again. Piet was beside me. The Fed had managed
    to lift his torso off the ground. We snatched him up again
    and bolted for the Oriflamme's ramp, dragging the fellow's
    feet. Stephen staggered behind us like a drunk running.
     Twenty men spilled out of the Oriflamme's main hatch.
    Those with rifles banged at the dirigible. Given the range
    and light conditions, I doubt any of them were more
    effective than I would have been.
     "Get aboard!" Piet screamed. Kiley and Loomis each
    took the prisoner in one hand and one of us in the other,
    as if they were loading sacks of grain. "Don't shoot at the
    Chay,they're-"

    




                  234            David Drake
    
                  The sky behind us exploded. A sheet of fire flashed
                  as bright for a moment as if the primary had risen. I
                  looked back. Bits of the last dirigible cascaded in a red-
                  orange shower while hydrogen flames lifted like a curtainIh
                  rising.
                  A Chay plasma cannon would cool very slowly because
                  of its closed breech and the high specific heat of the
                  metal from which it was cast. The gunners had tried to
                  reload theirs too soon, and the round cooked off before
                  it was seated. The thermonuclear explosion shattered the
                  platform, rupturing all six hydrogen cells simultaneously.
                  Parts of the fiery debris were the bodies of the dirigible's
                  crew.
                  We tumbled together in the forward hold. The ramp
                  began to rise. Dole was shouting out the names of crewmen
                  present. I hoped nobody'd gone so far from the hatch that
                  he was still outside.
                  The Oriflamme lifted before the hatch sealed. Reflected
                  exhaust was a saturated aurora crowning the upper seam.
                  Men of the support party disappeared up the ladderway
                  in obedience to the bosun's snarled orders. I lay on my
                  back, too wrung out to move or even rise. Piet bent
                  over the rescued prisoner, so Piet at least was all right.
                  Rakoscy ripped away Stephen's smoldering trousers with
                  a scalpel.
                  I rolled over, but my stomach,heaved and I could barely
                  lift my face from the deck. Molten rock had burned savage
                  ulcers into Stephen's calves above the boot tops. Bloody
                  serum oozed as Rakoscy started to clean the wounds
                  Stephen rested on one elbow, holding his flashgun muzzle
                  high so that the hot barrel wouldn't crack from contact
                  with the cooler deck.
                  "Christ's blood, I shouldn't have gone back to the city!"
                  I said. Piet was there to free the prisoner also, but that
                  didn't change my responsibility. "Now I've made the
                  Chay enemies for all their soldiers we killed."
                  "Dole," Piet ordered, "send this man up to the forward
                  cabin and get some fluids in him. We don't want him to
                  die on us now."
    A~,
                    "We didn't kill anybody, Jeremy," Stephen said. He

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     235
    
    wasn't looking at me. He wasn't looking at anything,
    though his eyes were open.
     "Ferris and Lightbody!" Dole snapped, "You heard the
    captain. And a bath wouldn't hurt him, neither."
     I managed to sit upright. I didn't speak. Maybe
    Stephen hadn't seen the third dirigible explode, hadn't
    seen the Chay bodies trace blazing pinwheels toward the
    ground ...
     "As for what the plasma cannon did. . Stephen
    continued in an emotionless voice. "I'll take responsibility
    for my own actions, Jeremy, but not for what others choose
    to do,"
     "Here, I've got your flashgun, Stephen," Piet said, gently
    lifting the weapon from his friend's hand.
     "I've got enough company in my dreams as it is,"
    Stephen said as our thrusters hammered us toward orbit.

    




                                NEW ERYX
    
                   Day 177
     mill,:
     01 T          The portable kiln chuckled heavily on the far side of
                   the Oriflamme, spraying a smooth coat of glass onto the
                   cracks in the hull. The run from On Chay hadn't been
                   unusually stressful, but the Oriflamme was no longer the
                   vessel that had lifted in maiden glory from Venus.
                     The constant drizzle didn't affect the kiln, but I already
                   felt it was going to drive me mad in much less time than.
                   the week Piet said we'd need to refit. "Does it ever stop,
                   do you think?" I muttered. "The rain, I mean."
                     "The globe was almost entirely Overcast when we
                                                    thro
                   orbited," Piet said mildly. He smoothed the
                   closure of a Chay cape. Because of the confusion
                   loading, we had fifty-odd of the garments aboard. They
                   turned out to be waterproof. "There's no pilotry data, of
                   course."
                     The world he'd named New Eryx-after the factorial
                   hold of Stephen's family on Venus-was uncharted, at
                   least as far as the Federation database went. Piet and
                   Salomon had extrapolated the star's location by examining
                   the listed gradients and found a planet that was technically
                   habitable. Even if it was driving me insane.
    Jff                                "I've never gotten used to a bright sky," Stephen said.
                    "Too much Venus in my blood, I suppose. I like the
                    overcast, and I don't mind the rain."
                                       Lacaille, the prisoner we'd rescued, came by with a file
                    of sailors who carried the trunk of one of the squat trees
                    growing here in the dim warmth. They didn't notice the
                    three of us sitting on a similar log.
                                       236
                                                       at
       6iT                                             of
                                                       'd

    




    1v
    
                    THROUGH THE BREACH     237
         Lacaille had been first officer on a ship in the Earth/Back
         Worlds trade, a year and a half's voyage in either direction     5
         for Federation vessels. Now he was talking cheerfully with
         men who'd helped kill a hundred like him the day we
         boarded Our Lady of MontreaL
         "I'm glad we rescued him," I said. "He's a. .
         "Human being?" Piet suggested. There was a smile in
         his voice.
         "Whatever," I said. Trees like the one the men with
         Lacaille carried had a starchy pith that could be eaten
         or converted to alcohol. Lacaille said identical trees were
         common on at least a score of worlds throughout the
         region. New Eryx wasn't on Federation charts; but some
         body'd been here, and a very long time ago.
         "He's fitting in well," Stephen said. "Of course, we
         saved his life. You did."
         I snorted. "I can't think of a better way to make a man
         hate you than to do him a major favor," I said. "Most men.
         And damned near all women."
         Stephen stood and stretched powerfully. He'd slung a
         repeating carbine over his right shoulder with the muzzle
         down to keep rain out of the bore. The only animal
         life we'd seen on New Eryx---if it was either animate
         or alive-was an occasional streamer of gossamer light
         which drifted among the trees. It could as easily be phos
         phorescent gas, a will-o'-the-wisp.
         "Think I'll go for a walk," Stephen said without looking
         back at us. He moved stiffly. The bums on his legs were
         far from healed.
         "Do you have a transponder?" Piet warned.
         "I'll be able to home on the kiln," Stephen called,
         already out of sight. "Low frequencies travel forever."
         "Because he seems so strong," Piet said very softly,
                                                       J'R~i~
         "it's easy to overlook the degree to which Stephen is in
         pain. I wish there was something I could do for him."
              r
         He turned and gave me a wan smile. "Besides pray, of
         course. But I wouldn't want him to know that."
         "I think," I said carefully, "that Stephen's the bravest
         man I'll ever know." Because he gets up in the morning
         after every screaming night, and he doesn't put a gun in

    




    238           David Drake
    
    his mouth; but I didn't say that to Piet.
     I cleared my throat. "What'll happen with the Chay, do
    you think?" I said to change the subject.
     "There's enough universe for all of us, Chay and Molts
    and humans," Piet said. "And others we don't know about
    yI wouldn't worry about what happened at On Chay, if
    et.
    that's what you mean. There'll be worse from both sides
    after we've been in contact longer, but eventually I think
    we'll all pull together like strands in a cable. Separate,
    but in concert."
     "Optimist," I said. Christ! I sounded bitter.
     Piet laughed and put his hand over mine to squeeze
    it. "Oh, I'm not a wide-eyed dreamer, Jeremy," he said.
    "We'll fight the Chay, men will, just as we fight each o
                                        t
    er. And the Chay fight each other, I shouldn't wonder."
     His tone sobered as he continued, "The real danger isn't
    race or religion, you know. It's the attitude that some men,
    some people-Molts or Chay or men from Earth-have
    to be controlled from above for their own good. One day
    1 believe the Lord will help us defeat that idea. And the
    lion will lie down with the lamb, and there will be peace
    among the nations."
     He gave me a smile; half impish, half that of a man
    worn to the edge of his strength, uncertain whether he'll
    be able to take one step more.
     "Until then," Piet said, "it's as well that the Lord has men
    like Stephen on His side. Despite what it costs Stephen, and
    despite what it costs men like you and me."
     The kiln chuckled, and I began to laugh as well. Anyone
    who heard me would have thought I was mad.

    




          UNCHARTED WORLD
    
    6ay 232
    
    'We touched the surface of the ice with a slight forward
    way on instead of Piet's normal vertical approach. For this
    landing, he'd programmed a ball switch on his console to
    control the dorsal pairs of attitude jets. He rolled the ball
    upward as his other hand chopped the thrusters.
     The three bands of attitude jets fired a half-second pulse.
    Their balanced lift shifted enough weight off the skids to
    let inertia drag us forward. Steam from the thrusters' last
    spurting exhaust before shutdown hung as eight linked
    columns in the cold air behind us as the Oriflamme ground
    to a halt.
     Salomon unlatched his restraints and turned to face Piet's
    couch. "Sir," he said, "that was brilliant!"
     I swung my feet down to the deck. Men with duties dur-
    ing landing had strapped themselves to their workstations.
    The rest of us were in hammocks on Piet's orders. No
    matter how good the pilot, a landing on an ice field could
    turn into disaster.
     The reaction-mass tanks were almost empty, though.
    Our choice had been to load a nitrogen/chlorine mixture
    from the moon of one of the system's gas giants, or to risk
    the ice. The gases would have given irregular results in the
    plasma motors as well as contaminating the next tank or
    two of water. Nobody had really doubted Piet's ability to
    bfing us down safely.
     "Thank you, Mister Salomon," Piet said as he rose from
    his console. "I'm rather pleased with it myself."
     He glanced at the screen, then touched the ramp control.
    
                    239

    




                     240            David Drake
    
                      "At least we don't have to wait for the soil to c
                                             ool," he
                     added.
                     The center screen was set for a 360' view of our sur-
                     roundings. There was nothing in that panorama but ice
                     desert picked out by rare outcrops of rock. Irregular fis-
                     sures streaked the surface like the Oriflamme's hull crazing
                     magnified. The ice crevices weren't dangerously wide.
                     Most of those I could see were filled with refrozen melt-
                     water, clearer and more bluish than the ice surrounding.
                     "I'll take out a security detail," Stephen said. He clasped
                     a cape of some heavy natural fabric around his throat and
                     cradled his flashgun. I didn't have warm clothing of my
                     own. Maybe two or three of the Chay capes together ...
                     "Security from what, Mister Gregg?" Salomon asked in
                     surprise.
                     "We don't know," Piet said. "We haven't been here
                     before."
                     I picked up my cutting bar and snatched a pair of capes
                     as I followed Stephen aft. Crew members weren't going
                     to argue the right of a gentleman to appropriate anyth ng
       oil            that wasn't nailed down. Besides, this wasn't a world at
                      even men who'd been cooped up for seven weeks were in
                      a hurry to step out onto.
                     The ground beneath the Oriflamme collapsed with the
                     roar of breaking ice. We canted to port so violently that I
                     was flung against the bulkhead. Men shouted. Gear we'd
                     unshipped after our safe landing flew about the cabin.
                     The vessel rocked to a halt. I'd gotten halfway to m),
                     feet and now fell down again. The bow was up 15' and
                     the deck yawed to port by almost that much. I was afraid
       :7,            to move for fear the least shift of weight would send the
                      Oriflamme down a further precipice.
                     Piet stood and cycled the inner and outer ai I C
                     doors simultaneously from his console. "Mister Salo
                                                       ZOO,
    
                      Guillermo," he said formally. "Stay at your control,
    10                please. I'm going to take a look at our situation fro
                      outside."
                      Stephen and I followed Piet through the cockpit hatc
                      Elsewhere in the ship, men were sorting themselves out
                      Their comments sounded more disgruntled than afraid.
    
    AN
                                                        th

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH     241
    
            I was terribly afraid. I'd left the capes somewhere in the
            cabin, but I held my cutting bar in both hands as I jumped
            the two meters from the bottom of the hatch ladder to the
            ground.
            The wind was as cold as I'd expected, but the bright sun-
            light was a surprise. Unless programmed to do otherwise,
            the Oriflamme's screens optimized light levels on exterior
            visuals to Earth daytime. This time the real illumination
            was at least that bright.
            The Oriflamme's bow slanted into the air; her stem was
            below the surface of the shattered ice.
            "We're on a tunnel," Stephen said, squatting to peer
            critically at the ground. "We collapsed part of the roof.
            Do you suppose the sunlight melts rivers under the ice
            sheet?"
            "Can we take off again?" I asked. The wind was an
            excuse to shiver.
            "Oh, yes," Piet said confidently. "Though we'll all have
            blisters before we dig her nozzles clear . .
    
    ,,~e c
            x
    
            blis

    




              LORD'S MERCY
    
    Day 233
    
    The sweat that soaked my tunic froze at the folds of the
    garment. The mittens I'd borrowed were too large. We'd
    reeved a rope through the tarp's grommets to serve as
    handles. It cut off circulation in my fingers even though
    there were four of us lifting the hundred-kilo loads of ice
    and scree away from the excavation.
     At least we weren't going to be crushed if we slipped.
    Stampfer headed a crew of ten men, off-loading the broad-
    side guns using sheerlegs and a ramp. If a cannon started
    to roll, it was kitty bar the door.
     We reached the crevice fifty meters from the Oriflamme.
    Maher and Loomis at the front of the makeshift pallet were
    staggering. Dragging the tarp would have been a lot easier,
    but the gritty ice would have wom through the fabric in
    only a trip or two.
     "Stand clear," I ordered.'The sailors in front dropped
    their comers. Lightbody and I tried to lift ours to dump
    the load down the crevice. I could barely hold the weight;
    Lightbody had to manage the job for both of us. Next load
    Maher and Loomis would have that duty, but the load after
    that-
     "About time for watch change, isn't it, Mister Moore?"
    Maher asked 'In a husky whisper.
     "One more trip,~l I muttered. I didn't have any idea
    how long we'd been working. Blood tacked the mittens
    to my blistered palms, and I'd never been so cold in
    my life.
     "Yes, sir!" said Maher.
    
                     242                 im,

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     243
    
     We started back to the excavation. I could barely see,
    but the route was clear of major obstacles.
     In the pit, men worked with shovels, levers, and cut-
    ting bars to clear the thruster nozzles. The whole plain
    was patterned with tunnels chewed through the ice by a
    creature several meters in diameter. It had moved back
    and forth like a farmer plowing a square field, each swing
    paralleling without touching the one laid down previously
    in the opposite direction.
     I suppose Piet was right to name the world Lord's
    Mercy. If we'd set down exactly parallel to the tunnel
    pattern, the Oriflamme might have flipped upside down
    when the roof collapsed. On the other hand, if we'd landed
    perpendicular to the tunnels, we might never have known
    they were there.
     The Oriflamme's siren moaned briefly: it was time to
    change watches after all. We were working two hours on,
    two hours off. I didn't dare think about how much longer
    the process would have to go on.
     "I'll take it," I said. The men dropped their comers
    of the emptied tarp; I started to drag it alone toward the
    excavation.
     "Dear God I'm tired," I muttered. I didn't know I was
    speaking aloud.
     "You got a right to be, sir," Lightbody called appre-
    clatively as he and the others slanted away toward the
    hatch.
     The common spacers were each of them stronger than
    me and knew tricks that made their effort more productive
    besides. I was helping, though, despite being by birth a
    gentleman. A year ago I'd have found that unthinkable.
     "We'll take that now, sir," said Kiley, at the head of
    the team from the starboard watch replacing, mine. I gave
    him the tarp. Our replacements looked stolid and ready to
    work, though I knew how little rest you could get in two
    hours on a ship being stripped of heavy fittings.
     I thought of Thomas Hawtry, Would he and his clique
    have been out working beside the sailors if they'd made
    it this far on the voyage?
     Stephen limped up the ramp from the excavation. He

    




                     244           David Drake
                     hadn't been directing the work: Salomon did that. Stephen
                     was moving blocks that only one man at a time could
                     reach, and nobody else on the Oriflamme could budge.
                      I laughed aloud.
                      "Eh?" Stephen called.
                      "Just thinking," I said. Oh, y~s, Hawtry would have
    M                obeyed any order that Stephen Gregg was on hand to
                     enforce.
                      Stephen sat down on a stack of crates, loot from Our
                     Lady of Montreal; for the moment, surplus weight. I sat
                     beside him. "Are you feeling all right?" he asked.
                      His flashgun was in a nest of the crates, wrapped in a
                     Chay cape to keep blowing ice crystals from forming a
                     rime on it. I'd set my cutting bar there too when Salomon
                     'Put me on the transport detail. Stephen wore his bar
                     slung. He'd used it in the excavation, so refrozen ice
                     caked the blade.
                      "I feel like the ship landed straight on top of me," I said.
                     I heard Dole snarling orders to the men in the excavation.
                     "You look a stage worse than that."
                      "I'll be all right," Stephen said. His voice was colorless
                     with fatigue. "I'll drink something and go back down in
                     a bit. They need me there."
                      He glanced at the closed forward airlock. Piet hadn't
         1j,         moved from his console since he'd organized the pro-
                     cedures. He even relieved himself in a bucket. If the
                     Oriflarnme started to shift again, it would be Piet's hand
                     on the controls-balancing risk to the ship and risk to
                     the men outside, where even exhaust from the attitude
                     jets could be lethal.
     41               "They'll need you when the port watch comes back on."
                     I said forcefully. "Until then you're off duty."
                      I was marginal use to the expedition as a laborer, but=
                     I could damned well keep Stephen from burning him-
                     self out. Having a real purpose brought me back from
                     the slough of exhaustion where I'd been wallowing tk
                     past hour.
                      Stephen shook his head, but he didn't ar
                                      gue. After t
                     moment, he removed a canteen from the scarf in which
                     he'd wrapped it to his waist cummerbund-fashion. Body

    




                THROUGH THE BREACH     245
    
     heat kept it warm. He offered it to me. I took a swig and
     coughed. Slash that strong wasn't going to freeze at the-
     temperatures out here in any case.
       ~~ephen drank deep. "There's algae all through this
     ice, he said, tapping his toe on the ground. "That's why
     it looks green."
       He offered me the canteen; I waved it away. Kiley's
     men stepped briskly toward the crevice with their first
     tarpaulin of broken ice. They'd be moving slower by the
     end of their watch 
       "There was a lot of rock in some of the loads we
     brought out," I said. "We're not down to the soil, are
     we?"
       Stephen laughed. He was loosening up, either because
     of me or the slash. "Frass," he said. "Worm shit. The
     tunnel was packed solid for a meter or so like a plug.
     If we'd landed just a little more to the side, the skid
     would've been on top of it and we might-"
       Three hundred meters from where we sat, ice broke
     upward as if it were being scored by an invisible plow.
     I jumped to my feet and shouted, "Earthqua-"
       It wasn't an earthquake. The head of a huge worm
     broke surface. The gray body, flattened and unsegmented,
     continued to stream out of the opening until the creature's
     whole forty-meter length writhed over the plain.
       The transport crewmen dropped their tarp to stare. Dig-
     gers climbed from the excavation, summoned by shouts
     and the sound the worm made breaking out. Stephen had
     unwrapped his flashgun, but the worm didn't threaten us.
     It was undulating slightly away from the Oriflamme.
    t  "I doubt it even has eyes," I said. "Maybe it hit a dike
     of rock that it's going to cross on the surface."
       "All right, all right," Dole hectored. "You've had your
     show, now let's get this bitch ready to lift, shall we?"
       Something dark green and multilegged. climbed out of
     the opening the worm had made. This creature was about
     three meters long. Its mandibles projected another meter.
     Th.ey curved outward and back like calipers so that their
       points met squarely when the jaws closed.
       The predator took one jump toward the worm it had been

    




                     246            David Drake
    
                     pursuing through the tunnel, then noticed the Oriflam e
                     and the men outside her. The beast turned, hunched mon
                     three of its six pairs of legs, and leaped toward us.
                     "Back to the ship"' Dole bellowed. The men of his
                     watch turned as ordered and ran for the excavation.
                     I unhooked my cutting bar. The main hatch couldn't
                     be closed because of ice wedged into the hinge. There'd
                     seemed no need to clean it while the excavation was still
                     in process ...
                       A second beast like the first hopped from the tunnel; a
     11-2            third member of the pack was directly behind the second.
                     The worm wriggled into the distance, perhaps unaware
                     that its pursuers had suddenly turned away.
                       The leading predator covered ten meters at each hop.
                     Because its legs worked in alternate pairs, the creature
                     no more than touched the ice before it surged forward in
                     another flat arc.
                       Stephen's flashgun whacked. The bright sunlight of
                     Lord's Mercy dimmed the weapon's normally dazzling
                     side-scatter.
                       The bolt hit the predator's first thoracic segment and
       J1,           shattered the plate in a spray of creamy fluid. The head,
                     the size of a man's torso, flipped onto the creature's back.
    r    i           It was attached by only a tag of chitin. The enormous
                     mandibles scissored open and loudly shut.
                       A fourth hard-shelled predator crawled from the tunnel.
                     The three living members of the pack hopped toward us,
                     ignoring the thrashing corpse of their fellow.
                       Either the creatures thought the Oriflamme was pre
                                                         Y,
                     or they were reacting to us individual humans as interlop-
        IF           ers in their hunting territory. Either way, their intentions
                     weren't in doubt.
                       Stephen clicked up the wand that supported his laser's
                     solar charger, then spread the shimmering film. He hadn't
                     brought spare batteries with him this time.
                       "I'll draw them away from the hatch," I said. I began
                     walking out onto the ice field. I didn't trust the footing
                     enough to run.
                       Stephen set his flashgun on the crates with the panel
                      tilted toward the sun. He left it there and strode parallel

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     247
    
    to me, triggering his cutting bar briefly to spin the blades
    clear of ice. The predators angled toward us, one after
    another.
     Ice powdered beneath the creatures every time they
    sprang. The bottoms of their feet were chitin as jagged
    as the throat of a broken bottle. It gave the beasts good
    purchase on any surface soft enough for it to bite.
     A band of single-lensed eyes gleamed from a ridge
    curving along the top and front of each predator's
    headplate. Though the individual eyes didn't move, the
    array gave the creatures vision over three-quarters of the
    arc around them.
     The nearest creature focused on me. Its mandibles swung
    a further 30' open, like a hammer rising from half to full
    cock. Its deliberately short hop put me exactly ten meters
    away for the final spring.
     I threw myself forward, holding my bar vertical in
    front of me. The predator slammed me down, but I was
    insidi~ the circuit of its mandibles instead of being pierced
    through both sides when the tips clashed together.
     The knife-edged chitin was thicker than that of a Molt's
    carapace, but my bar's ceramic teeth could have sheared
    hardened steel. The blade screamed as I cut the left mandi-
    ble away. The creature stood above me, ripping my thighs
    with its front pairs of walking legs.
     I held my bar in both hands and cut into the predator's
    head. Side-hinged jawplates cracked and crumbled on the
    howling bar.
     The creature sprang back. White fluid gushed from the
    wound in its head. The creature's abdomen was slender
    and hairy, like that of a robber fly. It twisted around under
    the, thorax as the creature went into convulsions.
     Stephen was holding the second predator's mandibles
    away from his chest with both hands. The beast shook him
    violently, trying to break his grip. Stephen had dropped
    his cutting bar. It lay beneath the creature's scrabbling
    back legs.
     I rose and slashed at the base of the right mandible,
    again using both hands. My feet slid out from under me.
    I caught the target in the belly of my blade, but my long

    




    248           David Drake
    
    draw stroke cut into the joint at a flatter angle than I'd
    intended.
     Weakened chitin cracked like a fifle shot. Stephen
    tossed the mandible away. A ribbon of pale muscle flut-
    tered behind it.
     Stephen still had to hold the remaining mandible to
    prevent it from impaling him. I stood and fell down again
    immediately. I was slipping on my own blood and fluids
    from the creatures I'd butchered.
     The last predator poised ten meters from Stephen for
    the leap that would cut him in half. A laser bolt stabbed
    through its open jaws. The flux lit the creature's exploding
    head through translucent flesh and chitin.
     Piet flung down the flashgun. The solar panel that had
    recharged it quivered like a parachute. He raised a cutting
    bar. "Handweapons only!" Piet shouted as he charged the
    wounded predator. Twenty men carrying tools from the
    excavation followed him, slipping on the ice.
     Stephen let the creature throw him free. It poised to leap
    onto him again, predator to the last. Piet sawed three of
    its legs apart in a single swipe. In a few seconds, all the
    left-side legs were broken or sheared. Men hacked with
    clumsy enthusiasm into the creature's thorax.
     I stood up, then fell over again. Hall and Maher ran to
                                           JL
    me. Stephen crawled on all fours behind them.
     "Rakoscy!" Piet shouted. "Rakoscy, get ovei here I
     "Christ's blood, his legs've been through a fucking
    meat grinder!" Dole cried. "Bring that fucking tarp over
    here' We need to get him into the fucking shipt"
      Mister Moore," somebody said with desperate earnest- aw
    ness. "Please let go of your bar. Please. I'm going to take
    it out of your hand."
     The last voice I heard was Stephen's, snarling in a
    terrible singsong, "He'll be all right and I'll kill any
    whoreson who says he won't!"
    
                                         ML

    




                WEYSTON
    
    Day 249
    
    Piet lifted the cutter's bow so that we wouldn't stall
    even though the thruster feed was barely cracked open.
    The display held a 30* down angle to our axis of flight,
    paralleling the barren ground a thousand meters below.
     "You know. . ." Stephen said, one leg braced against
    the sidewall and his left hand gripping the central bench
    on which the two of us sat. "You're going to feel really
    silly if you have to explain how you got yourself killed
    on a sandhill like this."
     "Tsk, don't call it a sandhill," Piet said cheerfully. "The
    name honors your uncle, remember. Besides, it's not a
    stunt, I saw something when I brought the Oriflamme in."
     "And why shouldn't the officers go on a picnic?" I said.
    My legs were straight out, but I was trying my best not to
    let them take any stress. Though the shins were healing
    well, they hurt as if they were being boiled in oil if I
    moved the wrong way.
     Lightbody's lips moved slowly as he watched the screen
    from the jump seat and separate attitude controls behind
    Piet's couch. I think he was murmuring a prayer. From
    Lightbody, that would be normal behavior rather than a
    comment on the way the cutter wallowed through the air.
    1 doubt it occurred to Lightbody to worry when Piet was
    the pilot.
     "Found him!" Piet said./"Eleven o'clock!" Stephen said,
    pointing. P'There it is!" I said.
     Metallic wreckage was strewn along hundreds of meters
    of sandy waste, though the ship at the end of the trail looked
    
                    249
                                                  'I Is

    




    7
    
                   250           David Drake
    
                   healthy enough. It was a cheaply-constructed freighter of
                   the sort the Feds built in the Back Worlds to handle
                   local trade.
                  "They came in on automated approach," Piet guessed
                  aloud. He boosted thrust and gimballed the nozzle nearly
                  vertical. "Hit a tooth of rock, ripped their motors out, and
                  there they sit since. Which may be fifty years."
                  The cutter dropped like an elevator whose brakes had
                  failed. Piet made a tight one-eighty around the crash site,
                  killing our momentum so that he didn't have to overfly
                  for the horizontal approach normal with a single-engined
                  cutter.
                  "Not very long," Stephen said. "Light alloys wouldn't
                  be so bright if they'd been open to the atmosphere any
                  length of time."
                    We crossed the trail of torn metal, then blew
                                                    out a
                   doughnut of dust as we touched down within wen y
                                                   t    t
                   meters of the freighter's side hatch.
                    Piet turned his head and smiled slightly. "If I don't keep
                   my hand in, Stephen," he said, "I won't be able to do it
                   when I have to."
    JE              "You could fly a cutter blindfold on your deathbed,
                   Captain," Lightbody said. "Begging your pardon."
                    Lightbody squeezed by to undog the hatch. I could have
                   done that job if anybody's life had depended on it, but
                   none of us still aboard.the Oriflamme needed to prove
                   things to our shipmates.
                    Weyston's air was thin and sulfurous, unpleasant with-
                   out being dangerous. The system was charted but unoc-
                   eupied. Federation cartographers hadn't even bothered to
                   give the place a name, since there was nothing beyond the
                   planet's presence to bring a vessel here.
                    We needed to reseal the Oriflamme's hull; this was
                   the suitable location closest to Lord's Mercy. We had
                   sufficient reaction mass for some while yet-which was a
                   good thing, because observation supported the note in the
    R              pilotry data that the planet had no free water whatever.
                    I stood deliberately as Lightbody swung himself onto
                   the coaming of the dorsal hatch. "Give you a hand, sirT
                   he asked, reaching toward me.
    ILI

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     251
    
     "I'm not proud," I said. I clasped the spacer's shoulders
    and paused, steeling myself to flex my legs and jump.
     "I've got him, Lightbody," Stephen said. He clasped me
    below the rib cage and lifted me like a mannequin onto the
    cutter's hull.
     I laughed. "All right," I said, "you've convinced me I'm
    bloody useless and a burden to you all. Can we look over
    the wreck, now?"
     Stephen handed Lightbody a rifle and his own flashgun
    as I slid down the curve of the hull to the ground. This
    flight was basically recreation, but there was no place
    on the Back Worlds where we were safe. By now, it
    didn t strike any of us as silly to go armed on a lifeless
    world
     There was movement inside the wreck.
     "Hello the ship!" Piet called. No one responded. I pow-
    ered my cutting bar.
     A man in gray trousers and a blue tunic hopped from the
    hatch. Stephen presented his flashgun. "No!" the stranger
    shouted. "No, you can't shoot me!"
     "We don't have any intention of shooting you, sir,"
    Piet said. He crooked his left index finger to call the man
    closer. The fellow had a sickly look, but he was too plump
    to be ill fed. "Are there any other survivors?"
     "No one, I'm the only one," the Fed said.
     I walked around him at two arms' length. I wouldn't
    have trusted this fellow if he'd said there was a lot of sand
    hereabouts. He'd been relieving himself out the hatch; and
    almost out the hatch.
     "Anybody aboard?" I called, waiting for my eyes to
    adapt to the dim interior. The power plant was dead, and
    with it the cabin lights.
     The chamber stank. Blood and brains splashed the for-
    ward bulkhead above the simple control station.
     Ijerked my head back. Piet and Stephen were behind me.
    The castaway squatted beneath the muzzle of Lightbody's
    rifle.
     "His name's McMaster," Stephen said, nodding toward
    the Fed. "He was the engineer. Doesn't seem as happy to
    be rescued as you'd think."

    




             252            David Drake
    
             "Let's check the other side," I said, walking toward the
             freighter's bow. "Is there any cargo?"
             The hatch from the cabin to the rear hold had warped
             in the crash, though there was probably access through
             the ship's ripped underside.
             "Windmills," Stephen said. "They lost the starboard
             thrusters maybe a month ago on a run from Clapperton
             to Bumphrey. This was the nearest place to clear the feed
             line, but the Al wasn't up to the job of landing."
             Piet said, "Two Molts and the human captain were
             killed in the crash. I don't think McMaster is complete-
             ly ...
             "Oh, he's crazy," Stephen said. "But he started out a
             snake or I miss my bet."
             The graves were three shallow mounds in the lee of the
             wreck. I prodded with the blade of my cutting bar and
             struck mauve chitin ten centimeters below the surface.
             Stephen dragged the corpse of a Molt out by its arm. The
             creature's plastron was orange and had a spongy look.
             "She hit the bulkhead during the crash," Piet said. "I
             don't think we need disturb the others."
             Together we scooped tawny sand over the corpse again.
             I used my bar, the others their boots. "Decided where the
             next landfall is going to be?" Stephen asked.
             "Clapperton," said Piet. "There's a sizable Fed colony
             there, but Lacaille and the pilotry data agree that only one
             of the major land masses is inhabited. We can fill with
             water and maybe hunt meat besides."
             We had the Molt covered as well as it had been when
             we started. Stephen stepped back from the grave and sur-
             veyed the landscape. "What a hell of place to be buried,"
             he said.
               "It's only the body," Piet said in mild reproof
             We all felt it, though. This was a world with no life of
             its own, that would never have life of its own. Being bur- t
             ied here was like being dumped from the airlock be41
             stars.
             Stephen frowned. He stepped to the third mound and
             pulled something from the sand.
               I squinted. "A screwdriver?" I said.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     253
    
     Stephen held it out to us. "That's what it was made for,"
    he said softly.
     The shaft was stained brown. Sand clung to the dried
    fluid. Not blood, but very possibly the copper-based ichor
    that filled a Molt's circulatory system.
     Stephen wagged the tool delicately in the direction of
    the castaway on the other side of the wreck. "Didn't trust
    there'd be enough food to last till ... whenever, do you
    think?" he said.
     "The crash unhinged him," Piet said.
     Stephen raised an eyebrow. Piet grimaced and said,
    "We can't leave a human being here!"
     Stephen flung the screwdriver far out in the sand. "Then
    let's get back," he said mildly. "Only-let's not name
    this place for Uncle Ben, shall we? He won't know,
    but I do."
    
                                                 IN

    




                              CLAPPERTON
    
                   Day 290
    
                   Air heavy with moisture and rotting vegetation rolled into
                   the hold as the ramp lowered. Though we'd landed after
                   sunrise so that the glare of our thrusters wouldn't alert
                   distant Fed watchers, the thick canopy filtered light to
                   a green as deep as that reaching the bottom of a pond.
                   Treetops met even over the river-by which we'd entered
                   the forest.
                   We piled out of the vessel. Our exhaust had burned
                   the leaf mold to charcoal traceries which disintegrated
    'Hit           when a boot touched them. Black ash spurted to mix
                   with steam and the gray smoke of tree bark so wet that
                   it only smoldered from a bath of plasma.
                   There were twenty of us to start, though another crew
                   would lay hoses to the river as soon as we were out
                   of the way. Six of the men were armed. The rest of
                   us carried tools and the net which, once we'd hung it
                   properly, would camouflage the Oriflamme's track. Piet
                   had nosed us between a pair of giant trees and almost
                   completely into the forest, but the starship's stem could
                   be seen from an autogyro following the river at canopy
                   height.
                   "Good Christ!" said Stampfer, pointing his rifle with
                   both hands. "What d'ye call that!"
                   Piet had taken the Oriflamme straight over the bank at
                   a point that the river kinked. Bobbing belly-up in the slight
                   current at the bend was a creature twenty meters long. Its
                   four short legs stuck up stiffly; the toes were webbed, but
                   the forefeet bore cruel claws as well.
    
                                     254
        lip

    




    AW,
    
                          THROUGH THE BREACH 255
       The smooth skin of the creature's back was speckled
       black over several shades of brown, but the original
       ly white underside now blushed pink. We'd boiled the
       monster as we coasted over it.
       Its head was broad and several meters long. The skull
       floated lower than the creature's distended belly, but I
       could see that the long, conical teeth would interlock when
       the jaws were closed.
       The big predators here live in the water," Lacaille said.
       He gestured with his three-hooked grapnel. He and I were
       one of the two teams who'd climb to anchor the top of
       the net. "That's good that that one's dead. It'll be a month
       before another big one moves into the territory."
       The Federation officer chewed his lower lip. "I didn't
       know they got that big," he said. "They don't around
       North Island base."
       "Let's go, you lazy scuts!" Dole ordered. "Quicker we
       get this hung, the likelier you are to get home and sling
       your neighbor off the top of your wife!"
       Strictly speaking, the bosun was talkin to the men
                                              .9
       dragging the net out of the hold. Everybody knew that
       the likely delay was in getting lift points twenty meters
       up the tree boles, though.
       I waved acknowledgment and walked back to the left
       hand tree of the pair at the Oriflamme's stem. Stampfer
       started with us. Stephen called, "I'll keep an eye on this
       end," and waved the master gunner toward the center of
       I the track.
       "Are there many dangerous animals?" I asked Lacaille
       with a nod toward the predator floating in the shallows. A
       The corpse had bloated noticeably since I'd first seen it.
       Unlike McMaster, Lacaille had become a willing ship
       mate. He was a real ship's officer, not a noble who'd had
       authority but no skill. I think he was glad to serve with
       a company of spacers as good as Piet Ricimer's. There
       wasn't a better crew in the human universe.
       "No big carnivores on land," Lacaille said. "There's
       dangerous animals, sure, and some of the plants are poi
       son. The garrison bums back the jungle for a hundred
       meters around the base."

    




    256           David Drake
    
     He shrugged. "A soldier got bitten on the foot and had
    his leg swell up till they cut it off. But it could've been a
    thorn instead of a sting. Liquor's killed twenty-odd that I
    know of."
     We'd told both Federation officers that we'd drop them
    with their own people when we could. I don't think that
    affected either Lacaille's helpfulness or McMaster's surly
    silence. People's dispositions were more important than
    their attitudes.
     The tree Lacaille and I were to climb had shaggy but-
    tress roots that spread its diameter at the base to almost
    twenty meters. The three of us walked carefully to the far
    side of the bole where plasma hadn't scoured the hairy
    surface.
     I'd insisted on being one of the climbers, because I
    needed to convince myself that my shins had healed
    properly. Maybe Lacaille had something similar in mind.
    The Chay had certainly handled him worse than the bug
    on Lord's Mercy had done me.
     The Oriflamme didn't carry climbing irons, so Lacaille
    and I wore boots with sharpened hobnails. This tree's
    shaggy bark and the stilt roots of the giant on the other
    side of the Oriflamme ought to make it easy to get to the
    height required.
     "Trade me for a moment," Stephen said. I didn't know
                                    Slipp A
    what he meant till he handed me the flashgun and ed
    the grapnel and coil from my belt. Stephen stepped back
    and swung the hooks on a short length of line.
     The trunk started to branch just above where the top
    of the buttress roots faired into the main trunk. Leaves
    fanned toward the light seeping through the thin canopy
    over the watercourse. The lower limbs were stubby and
    ig t.
    not particularly thick, but they'd support a man's we
    Our exhaust had shriveled some of the foliage.
     Stephen loosed the grapnel at the top of its arc. The
    triple hook wobbled upward, stabilized by the line it drew.
    It curved between the trunk and the upraised tip of a limb.
    As the line fell back, it caught on rough bark and looped
    twice around the branch. The hooks swung nervously
    beneath the limb with the last of their momentum. If the

    




    k
    
                         THROUGH THE BREACH     257
    
              line started to slip under my weight, the points should lift
              and bite into the wood.
              I returned Stephen's flashgun. I hadn't brought a weap-
              on; my cutting bar would just have been in the way as
              I climbed. The weight of the cassegrain laser felt good.
              Among the forest sounds were a series of shrill screams
              that made me think of something huge, toothy, and far
              more active than the predator now bloating in the river.
              Lacaille started up the line ahead of me. Hey, I thought,
              but I didn't say anything. He ought to be leading, because
          i   he still had a grapnel to toss to a higher branch.
                I followed the Fed, walking up the top of a buttress
              root like a steep ramp. The 8-mm line was too thin for
              comfortable climbing. Lacaille and I wore gloves with the
              fingers cut off, but my palms hurt like blazes whenever
              I let my weight ride on the line. I used my hands only
              to steady myself Fine for the first stage, but there were
              another ten meters to go.
                Lacaille got out of my way by stepping to the next limb,
              15* clockwise around the tree bole though only slightly
              higher. He tried to spin his grapnel the way Stephen had.
              The hooks snagged my branch.
                "Hey!" I shouted-more sharply than I'd have done
              if I hadn't still been pissed at Lacaille taking the lead.
              Besides, I was breathing hard from the exertion, and my     J
              shins prickled as though crabs were dancing on them.
                "Sir!" Lacaille said. "I'm sorry!"
                He slacked his line. Weight pulled the hooks loose for
              Lacaille to haul back to his hand.
                 Look," I said, "neither of us is"-I shrugged-"an
              exp"ert. Just toss the damned thing over a branch a couple
              meters up. That's all I want to climb at a time on the
              straight trunk anyway."
                I crossed my legs beneath the branch as I worked my
              own grapnel loose for the next stage. The line had cut a
              powdery russet groove in the bark. Sticky dust gummed
              both the line and my fingers.
                Lacaille tossed his grapnel, this time with a straight
              overann motion. More our speed. He set his hooks in a
              limb not far above him and scrambled up, panting loudly.
               C

    




                                                            Ar,
    
                    258            David Drake
    
                    That was a three-meter gain, a perfectly respectable por-
                    tion of the ten we needed.
                    I stuck the grapnel's shaft under my belt and shifted
                    to the branch Lacaille had just vacated. My line dangled
                    behind me like a long tail. I paused to brush sweat out of
                    my eyes. I saw movement to the side.
                    Three creatures the size of bandy-legged goats peered
                    down at me from a limb of an adjacent tree. Two were
                    mottled gray; the third was slightly larger. It had a black
                    torso and a scarlet ruff that it spread as I stared at it.
                    "Holy Jesus!" I shouted. I snatched at my grapnel, the
                    closest thing to a weapon I was carrying.
                    The trio sprang up the trunk of their tree like giant
                    squirrels. They vanished into the canopy in a handful Of
                    jumps. Divots ripped from the bark by their hooked claws
    lit IT          pattered down behind them.
                      "Are you all right?" Stephen shouted. "What's hap-
                    pened?"
                      "We're all right!" I shouted back. I couldn't see the
                    forest floor, so Stephen couldn't see us, much less the
                    creatures that had startled me. "Local herbivores is all."
                      That was more than I knew for certain, but I didn't want
           J
                   Stephen to worry.
                     "There's something sticky here," Lacaille warned. "I
                   think it's from the tree. Sap."
                     I peered upward to make certain that Lacaille was out
                   of the way before I started to climb. This portion of the
                   trunk was covered with a band of some mossy epiphyte.
                   Tiny pink florets picked out the dark green foliage.
                     Something was pressed against the bark a few degrees
                   to Lacaille's left and slightly above him. I doubted that he
                   could see the thing from his angle. It eased toward him.
       P             "Freeze, Lacaille!" I shouted.
                     "What?" he said. "What?" His voice rose an octave on
                   the second syllable. He didn't move, though.
                     The thing was a dull golden color with blotches of
    P              brown. It could almost have been a trickle of sap like
                   the one Lacaille had noticed, thirty million years short of
                   hardening to amber.
                     Almost. It had been creeping sideways across the bark's

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH    259
    
             corrugations. The creature stopped when Lacaille obeyed
             my order to freeze.
               I drew the grapnel from my belt, then paid the line out
             in four one-meter loops.
               "What's happening, Moore?" Lacaille said. He had his
             voice under control. He was trying to look down at me
             without moving anything but his eyes.
               "Not yet," I whispered. Lacaille couldn't hear me. I was
             speaking to calm myself.
               I lofted the grapnel with an underhand toss. It sailed as
             intended through empty air past the creature.
               The thing struck like a trap snapping. Its head clanged
             against the grapnel's slowly rotating hooks and flung them
    C        outward-with the creature attached.
               "Watch out below!" I screamed. The snakelike thing
             streamed past me, dragged by the weight of steel where
             it had expected flesh. I let go of the line.
               The creature was a good ten meters long, but nowhere
             thicker than my calf. Tiny hooked legs, hundreds of them,
             waggled from its underside.
               I heard the ensemble crash into the ground. A cutting
    t        bar whined. The blades whanged momentarily on metal,
             probably the grapnel's shaft.
               "What was it?" Lacaille demanded. "Can I move now?
             What was it?"
               "It was a snake," I said. "I think it was a snake."
               I wiped my eyes again. "Stephen?" I called. "Tell them
             to hitch the hawser to Lacaille's line where it is, will you?
             We've gone as high in this tree as I want to go."
               "Roger," Stephen said, his voice attenuated by distance
             and the way the foliage absorbed sound.
               I looked at Lacaille. "Yeah, it's all right now," I said.
             "I hope to God it's all right."
             I stepped away from the 2-cm hawser so that Dole and
             his crew could begin lifting the camouflage net. Lacaille
             knelt beside the creature a few meters out from the cone
             of roots. The snake had slid the last stage of its trip to
             Stephen's cutting bar.
               Stephen looked from the creature to me. "Don't touch

    




    260           David Drake
    
    the damned thing unless you want to get clawed by those
    feet," he said. "I think it's dead, but it has a difference of
    opinion."
     I squatted beside Lacaille. The creature's skull was
    almost a meter long. Stephen had cut it crosswise, then
    severed the back half from the long body-which was
    still twitching, as Stephen had implied.
     "I should've taken a bar with me," I said. "I was crazy
    not to."
     "This worked pretty well," Stephen said. "I don't see
    how you could improve on the results."
     He tilted up the front of the creature's skull on his bar.
    A bony tongue protruded a handbreadth from the circular
    mouth. The tongue's tip had broken off on the grapnel.
    The sides of the hollow shaft were barbed and slotted.
    The tongue was designed to rip deep through the flesh
    of the creatures it struck, then to suck them dry.
     "Wonder if it injects digestive fluids?" Stephen mused
    aloud.
     Lacaille stood, then doubled up and began to vomit.
     "Get him back to the ship," Stephen suggested quietly.
    "Guillermo can find some slash if you can't."
     "I can find something," I said. "Come on, Lacaille.
    need a drink, and out here is no damned place for anybody
    who feels as queasy as I do right now."
     "I'm all right," Lacaille muttered as he cautiously
    straightened. He wiped his mouth with the back of his
    hand before he turned to face me.
     "Any one you walk away from, hey?" he said with an
    embarrassed smile. "I suppose I can walk."
     He could. We could. Dole's men were raising one end
    of the net by the hawser Lacaille and I had drawn into the
    branches on Lacaille's grapnel line. We'd wired a pulley
    to the limb as well. It wasn't strictly necessary, but it made
    the lift a lot easier for the men below.
     I was only half kidding about needing a drink. Since
    the snake stalked us, I'd trembled while we continued to
    work high in the tree. Seeing the creature close up made
    the fear worse.
     We stepped over the rolled net. The bosun was arguing
                                              P-

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     261
    
    precedence with Salomon, whose men were laying hoses
    to the river. Both men paused and nodded to us. Piet,
    examining the tree that would anchor the other end of
    the camouflage, waved cheerfully.
     "You saved my life," Lacaille said in a low voice.
     "That fellow might have decided I looked juicier," I
    said. "He wasn't anybody's friend."
     We had to pick our way carefully across the burned
    patch surrounding the Oriflamme. Dense roots withstood
    the gush of plasma and lurked within the ash, ready to
    turn an ankle or worse.
     "Look," Lacaille said. He stopped and waited for me to
    meet his eyes. "I won't fight my own people."
     "Nobody asked you to," I said. "Christ's blood, d'ye
    think we can't do our own fighting?"
     Lacaille grimaced and shook his head in frustration.
    "Look," he said. "McMaster? You should have left him
    where he was."
     "You're not the first to think that," I said slowly. I
    glanced around. I didn't know where McMaster was. I
    couldn't find him outside nor among the party shifting
    gear in the hold ten meters from where Lacaille and I
    stood. "Piet's ... soft-hearted, though."
     "Tonight," Lacaille said. "When shortwave propaga-
    tion's good, McMaster's going to signal the North Island
    base on the backup commo suite aft."
     Salomon's men joined Dole's on the 2-cm hawser. It
    would be easier to slide the hoses under the hem of the
    camouflage net than to lift the roll, so the teams were
    combining to do the jobs in sequence.
     "He told you?" I asked without emphasis.
     "McMaster brags about things that nobody would
    admit!" Lacaille said. "Not just this, terrible things! He's
    a terrible man."
     Piet walked toward us, probably wondering what we
    were discussing.
     "Yeah, I can believe that," I said. It wasn't surprising
    that a man who'd been swimming for years in the filthy
    slough of President Pleyal's colonies would be unable to    74~,
    recognize that Lacaille might have feelings of gratitude

    




                    262           David Drake
                    toward those who'd saved his life. Far more surprising
                    that Lacaille's personal decency had survived.
    7V               "Ah. . ." I added. "Don't say anything to Piet, though.
                    All right?"
                     Lacaille nodded in relief. "You'll tell Mister Gregg?"
                    he asked.
                     "Stephen's got enough on his conscience as it is," I said,
                    putting on a bright smile to greet Piet. "I'll see that this
                    one's handled."
                    We sat at trestle tables sawn from the local wood with
                    cutting bars. The boards' surface was just as rough as
                    you'd imagine. The afternoon's downpour had driven the
                    ash into the clay substrate in a butter-slick amalgam. We'd
                    spread cover sheets over us, but the rare chinks of evening
                    sky we could see were clear.
                     "You know . . I" said Dole with a mouth full of tree-
                    hopper, maybe one of the trio that'd startled me. It had
                    peeked down at the commotion, this time where Stephen
                    could see it. "That fellow out in the lake might not have
                    steaked out so bad."
                     "Not for me, thanks," I said, thinking about the mon-
                                                   a ragout
                    ster's teeth. At the other table they were eating
        I           of the local "snake." I didn't even look in that direction.
                      Precooked, even," Piet said with a grin. He looked as
    ILI'
                    relaxed as I'd seen him in a long while. We'd have known
                    by now if a Fed on Clapperton's far side had chanced to
                    notice us sliding into the forest. "Well, we had other things
                    on our mind."
                     Winger, the chief motor mechanic, said, "I don't like
                    the way the main engine nozzles are getting, sir. We've
                    switched out the spares aboard, and they're getting pretty
                    worn themself."
                     "Umm," Salomon said. "They wouldn't pass a bottoniry
                    inspection at Betaport, but I don't think we need to worry
                    as yet.,,
                     An animal screamed in the near distance. It was probably
                    harmless-and the "snake" couldn't have made a sound if
                    it had wanted to-but my shoulders shrank together every
                    time I heard the thing.

    




                        THROUGH THE BREACH     263
    
            The local equivalent of insects swarmed around the
            hooded lights we'd spiked to tree boles to show us our din-
            ner. The creatures were four-legged. They varied in size
            from midges to globs with bodies. the size of a baseball
            and wingspans to match. They didn't attack us because of
            our unfamiliar biochemistry, but I frequently felt a crunch
            of chitin as I chewed my meat.
            "The nearest place that'd stock thruster nozzles is Riel,"
            Lacaille volunteered without looking up from his meal.
            But the port gets a lot of traffic, and it's defended."
            "Real defenses?" Dole asked, glancing over at Lacaille.
            "Or a couple guns and nobody manning them?"
            "I'd sure rather have warehouse stock than cannibalize
            a ship," Winger said. "It's a bitch of a job unscrewing
            bumed-in nozzles without cracking them."
            The little receiver in my tunic pocket squawked, "Call-
            ing North Island Command! Calling North Island Com-
            mand! This is-"
            Everyone in hearing jumped up. The opposite bench
            tilted and thumped the ground. Lacaille's mouth opened
            in horror.
             What in the name of Christ is that?" Stephen asked
             soffly. He wasn't looking at me. His eyes roved the forest,
             and the flashgun was cradled in his arms.
             It's all right!" I said. "Sit down, everybody. It's all
             right."
            "Yes, sit down," Piet decided aloud. He bent to help
            raise the fallen bench, holding his carbine at the balance
            so that the muzzle pointed straight up. He'd jacked a round
            into the chamber, and it would take a moment to clear the
            weapon safely.
              He sat again and looked at me. "What is all right?"
            "-Venusian pirate ship full of treasure," my pocket
            crackled. I took the receiver out so that everyone could see
            it. "Plot this signal and home on it. I don't have the coordi-
            nates, but it's somewhere in the opposite hemisphere from
            the base. Calling-"
            I switched the unit off. Dole said, "McMaster!" and
            stood up again.
              "Don't!" I said.
             cr a
    
            nat
              c
    
              e
               'P
    
                         s
    ~the b
    
             stooc
               r

    




    264           David Drake
    
     Dole stepped over the bench, unhooking his cutting
    bar.
     "Sit down, Mister Dole," Piet said, his voice ringing
    like a drop forge.
     The bosun's face scrunched up, but he obeyed.
     "And the rest of you," Piet said, waving to the men at the
    other table and the far end of ours. They'd noticed the com-
    motion, though they couldn't tell what was going on.
     "I fiddled the backup transmitter," I said in a voice
    that the immediate circle could hear. "No matter what
    the dial reads, it's transmitting a quarter-watt UHF. He
    could be heard farther away if he stood in the hatch and
    shouted."
     Stephen made a sound. I thought he was choking. It
    was the start of a laugh. His guffaws bellowed out into
    the night, arousing screamers in the trees around us. After
    a moment, Stephen got the sound under control, but he
    still quivered with suppressed paroxysms.
     "We still have to do something about the situation,
    though," Piet said softly.
     "No," I said. From the comer of my eye, I noticed a
    shadow slip from the main hatch and vanish into the
    forest. "The situation has just taken care of itse If.'
     A smile of sorts played with Piet's mouth. 'Yes," he
    said. "I see what you mean. He doesn't want to be aboard
    the target his friends are going to blast."
     He turned his head. "Mister Dole," he said crisply,',
    "we'll have the net down at first light. The voyage isn't
    over, and we may need it another time. I expect to lift
    fifteen minutes after you start the task."
     "Aye aye, sir!" the bosun said.
     "I suppose it'll be weeks before another big g
                                 gulper takes
    over this stretch of the river," Lacaille said.
     "Maybe not so long," Stephen said. He got up and
    stretched the big muscles of his shoulders. "And anyway,
    I'm sure there are more snakes and suchlike folk than the
    one you and Jeremy met."
     He chuckled again. The sound was as bleak as the ice
    of Lord's Mercy.

    




               ABOVE RIEL
    
    Day 311
    
    Guillermo's screen showed the world we circled in a
    ninety-four-minute orbit. The central display was a frozen
    schematic of Corpus Christi, Riel's spaceport, based on
    pilotry data, Lacaille's recollections, and images recorded
    during the Oriflamme's first pass overhead.
     "There are fourteen vessels in port that probably have
    thruster nozzles of the correct size," Piet said, sitting on
    the edge of his couch. Thirty of us were crowded into
    the forward compartment, and his words echoed on the
    tannoys to the remainder of the crew. "Besides those,
    there's a number of smaller vessels on the ground and
    a very large freighter in orbit."
     "Freighter or not. . ." Kiley murmured, "anything that
    weighs two kilotonnes gets my respect."
     "Two of the ships are water buffalos without transit
    capability," Piet continued. "We'll have to carry our prize
    off to an uninhabited system to strip it, so they're out.
    Likewise, a number of the ships are probably unservice-
    able, though we don't know which ones for sure. Finally,
    there's a Federation warship in port, the Yellowknife."
     There was a low murmur from the men. Somebody said,
    "Shit," in a quiet but distinct voice.
     "Yes," Piet said. "That complicates matters, but two of
    our nozzles have cracked. Maybe they just got knocked
    around when we tipped on Lord's Mercy, but it's equally
    possible that the other six are about to fail the same way.
    This will be risky, but we have no options."
      Hey, sir," Stampfer said. "We'll fucking handle it. You
    just tell us what to do."
    
                    265

    




                  266            David Drake
    
                  That wasn't bravado. Stampfer and everybody else
                  in the Oriflamme's crew believed that Captain Ricimer
                  would bring us all home somehow. Emotionally, I
                  believed that myself Intellectually, I knew that if I
                  hadn't stumbled as I ran toward the Montreal, the Fed
                  plasma bolt would have killed me instead of the man a
                  step behind.
                  "For ease of drawing reaction mass," Piet said, "the
                  port is in the bend of a river, the Sangre Christi. It's a
    oil
                  wampy area and unhealthy, since Terran mosquitoes and
                  mosquito-borne diseases have colonized the planet along
                  with humans."
                  Men glanced at one another in puzzlement. Malaria
                  didn't seem a serious risk compared to the others we'd
                  be chancing on a raid like this.
                  A slight smile played across Piet's mouth. "As a result,"
                  he explained, "the governor and officers of the garrison
                  and ships in port stay in houses on the bluffs overlooking
                  the river."
                  His index finger swept an arc across the display. "That
                  should slow down any response to our actions."
                  Piet sobered. "I'll take the cutter down at twilight, that's
                  at midnight ship's time, with fourteen men aboard," he
                  said. "A party of six will secure the Commandatura and
                  port control-they're together."
                    "I'll take care of that," Stephen said.
                  Piet's grin flickered again. "Yes," he said. "I hoped you
                  would."
                  He looked at me. "There are four gunpits with laser
                  arrays. The fire control system and the town's general
                  communications both need to be disabled. You can handle
                  that, Jeremy?"
                  Sure," I said. The task was a little more complicated
                  t
                  han it might have sounded to a layman. You have to
                  identify the critical parts in order to cut off their pow-
                  er, blow them up, whatever. But I shouldn't have any
     1111"t
                  difficulty.
    Ift!            "Or Guillermo could," Stephen said, scratching the side
                  of his neck and looking at nothing in particular.
                    "I'll do itil" I said.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     267
    
     "I'll need Guillermo for the other phase of the opera-
    tion," Piet said. "I don't expect any trouble about landing
    a cutter without authorization, but I personally can't go
    around asking which of the ships ready to lift have thruster
    nozzles in good condition. Guillermo can speak to Molt
    laborers and identify a suitable prize without arousing
    suspicion."
     He glanced down at the navigator in the couch to his
    left. "Mister Salomon, you'll command the Oriflamme in
    my absence. We'll rendezvous, the Oriflamme and my
    prize, at St. Lawrence. I don't believe there's any reason
    to proceed there in company."
     Salomon nodded. Men were tugging their beards, rub
    bing palms together-a score of individual tricks for deal-
    ing with tension. I kept clearing my throat, trying not to
    make a noise that would disturb the others.
     "All right," said Piet. "Stephen, you and I will get
    together and decide on personnel. When we've done that,
    then we'll go over tactics. I'd like the rest of you to
    vacate the compartment for a time, please, so that we can
    organize the raid."
     His eyes met mine. "Not the people already told off for
    the mission, of course."
     Crewmen drifted toward the passageway aft. Dole and
    Stampfer waited grimly. They obviously weren't about to
    leave unless they got a direct personal order to do so. I
    doubted Piet would push the point. You want your most
    aggressive men on a project like this.
     I shoved off carefully and caught the stanchion to which
    Stephen was anchored. "Didn't want me along?" I said
    very softly.
     Stephen shrugged. He didn't look at me. "I don't much
    want Piet risking his neck by leading this one," he said in
    a similar voice. "But there wasn't a prayer he'd listen if
    I said that."                                   IN
     He gave me a broad smile. "I'm responsible for you,
    Jeremy," he said in a bantering tone. "I brought you
    aboard.
     "Then remember I'm a member of this crew," I said.
    ,A
      nd a gentleman of Venus!"

    




         mow-
    
                    268            David Drake
    
                    The compartment had cleared except for the officers
                    and two petty officers. "Stephen?" Piet called. "Jeremy?"
                    "Oh, I won't forget that, Jeremy," Stephen said. He
                    directed himself with an index finger toward the consoles
                    at the bow. "Nor, I think, will our enemies, hey?"
    
    j~
    
    ~jT
    
    IP ~~i

    




                      RIEL
    
       Day 312
    
       Our outer hull pinged as it slowly cooled. The pilot's
       screen was coarse-grained and only hinted at our sur-
       roundings. Besides, with fourteen men packed onto a
       cutter, there were too many heads and torsos in the way
       for me to see more than an occasional corner.
       "Hell," said Winger. "With all the chips we're carrying,
       it'd be easier to buy the engine hardware."
       "This'll be easy enough," Stephen replied in his chilling
       singsong. "It always has been in the past. Dead easy."
       No one spoke for a moment. Our harsh breathing
       sounded like static on a radio tuned to open air.
       "All right," Piet said decisively. "Commandatura team
       and Guillermo first, we others wait five minutes. I don't
       want anyone to notice just how full this cutter is."
       Dole and Lightbody undogged the hatch, though the
       bosun would go with Piet to capture the ship that
       Guillermo picked. Fourteen men weren't many to oper-
       ate a starship of a hundred tonnes or more, so Piet had
       picked the most efficient members of the Oriflamme's
       crew.
       Stephen was the first out, jumping lightly to the ground.
       Under ordinary circumstances, Stephen seemed a little
       clumsy. Now, and at previous times like this, he moved
       with a dancer's grace.
     "Hand me the crate," he ordered bleakly. Lightbody
    and 1, seated on the hatch coaming, swung the chest of
    weapons into Stephen's waiting hands. He didn't appear
    JL to notice weight that had made the pair of us grunt.
    
                       269

    




                    270           David Drake
    
                    I hadn't missed anything for being unable to see the
                    vision screen. Piet had brought us down at the north end
                    of the field, some distance from the river. The cutter was
                    tucked in between a freighter that was either deadlined
                    or abandoned-several of her hull plates were missing-
                    and a water buffalo, a tanker that hauled air and reaction
                    mass to orbiting vessels too large or ill-found to land
                    normally.
                    Neither of our neighbors was lighted. There was no
                    likelihood of anybody noticing that the cutter's sheen was
                    that of hard-used ceramic, not metal.
                    We hopped down from the hatch. Guillermo was the
                    last out. A Molt who disembarked from a Fed vessel
                    ahead of humans would be whipped to death for his
                    presumption.
                     Guillermo skulked away from us, heading toward a
    SR
                    large freighter in the second row back from the river. A
                    gang of Molt laborers was carrying cargo aboard from
                    high-wheeled hand trucks.
                    "Take it easy, stay together, and ignore the other people
                    out on the streets tonight," Stephen said. His eyes passed
                    over us, but they didn't appear to light anywhere. "If we
                    do our jobs, there won't be a bit of excitement. That's the
                    way we want it."
                     A dead man wouldn't have spoken with less emotion.
                    We set off toward the Commandatura, three short blocks
                    beyond the inland side of the field. Kiley and Lightbody
                    carried the packing crate. We wore a mix of
                                           garments
                    picked up on Federation planets, exactly like the crews of
                    ships in Back Worlds' trade. None of the men or Molts on
                    errands about nearby vessels gave us more than a passing
    
    4V              glance.
                     The port was fenced off from the town of Corpus
                    Christi. The pivoting gate was open, and the Molts in
                    the guard shack were eating some stringy form of rations.
                    Nearby was a gunpit. The multitube laser there was also
                    crewed by Molts.
                     The street cutting the chord of the riverbend was paved.
                    We sprinted to avoid a truck whose howling turbogenua-
                    tor powered hub-center electric motors in all six wheels.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     271
    
    A Molt drove the vehicle, but he was obviously under the
    direction of the man on the seat beside him. The human
    waved a bottle out his side window and jeered us.
     "Wait a little, buddy," Kiley said. He was breathing
    hard because of the load of weapons. "Just you wait . .
     The street leading directly to the Commandatura was
    paved also and lighted. Stephen, walking with the stiff-
    legged gait of a big dog on unfamiliar territory, led us
    down one of the parallel alleys instead.
     Buildings in this part of Corpus Christi were wooden
    and raised a meter above the ground on stilts. Individual
    structures had porches, but they weren't connected into
    a continuous boardwalk between adjacent buildings. We
    walked in the street itself, one more group among the
    sailors and garrison personnel.
     If the town had a sewer system, it'd backed up during
    some recent high water. Enough light came from the signs
    and screened windows of the taverns for us to avoid large
    chunks of rubbish. Vehicular traffic disposed of most of
    the waste by grinding it into the mud in a fetid, gooey
    mass. The air was hot and still, and insects whined.
     A flung chair tore through the screen of a building we'd
    passed. Inside, a shot thumped. My right hand reached for
    the cutting bar that I didn't have.
     "Keep moving!" Stephen ordered without raising his
    voice.
     "Yellowknife! Yellowknife!" men shouted in unison
    above a rumble of generalized rage. Crewmen from the
    warship were fighting with port personnel, nothing for us
    to worry about.
     My right hand clenched and unclenched in sweaty des-
    peration. Bells rang. A van tore past, towing a trailer with
    barred sides and top. We walked on.
     The Commandatura was a two-story masonry building
    with an arching facade that added another half story. It
    stood on a low mound, but floodwater had risen a meter
    up the stonework at some point in the past. A double
    staircase led to the lighted front door on the second story.
    CONSTABULARY was painted in large letters on the wall
    above the street-level entrance on the side.

    




                   272            David Drake
                     There were twenty steps from the street to the Com-
                   mandatura's front door. Originally there'd been a park in
                   front of the building, but it was full of rubbish now. T e
                   governor and folk of quality wouldn't spend enough time
                   here to make the effort of beautifying it worthwhile.
                     The door was unlocked. Stephen entered. I gestured
                   Kiley and Lightbody in ahead of me, then helped them
                   snatch open the lid of the crate of weapons. The feel of
                   my cutting bar was like a drink of water in a desert.
                     No one was at the counter on the left side of the
                   anteroom. The plaque on the door to the right read com-
     R             MUNICATIONS. A hallway ran past that room toward the
                   back of the building. The door beside the commo room
                   was steel with the stenciled legend KEEP LOCKED AT ALL
                   TIMES. Other doors were wooden panels, some of them
                   ajar.
                     Stephen signaled Kiley an
                    d Maher to watch the hall,
                    then tapped his own chest before pointing to the commo
                    room. Lightbody gripped the door handle and rotated it
                    minusculely to be sure that it wasn't locked.
                   He nodded. The rest of us poised. Stephen lunged in
                   behind the opening door.
                     No one was inside the windowless room. The atmos-
    Eli L           phere was stifling and at least 10' C above the muggy
                    heat outside. The air-conditioning vents in the floor and
                    ceiling were silent; banks of electronics clicked and mut-
                    tered among themselves.
                   "I've got it," I whispered, stepping to the box that
                   controlled the building's own alarm system.
                   "Just because you can breathe the muck here," Loomis
                   said in genuine indignation, "that's no cause to let your
                   air-handling system go like this. What kind of people are
                   these?"
                   On Venus, as surely as in interstellar space, a break-
                   down in the air system meant the end of life. Loomis'
       ~j j
                    father supervised a public works crew in Betaport, but I
                    think we all felt a degree of the same outrage.
                   "Lightbody, watch Jeremy's back," Stephen said. "The
                   rest of you come along. There's somebody supposed to be
                   on duty, and they may not have gone far."

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     273
    
    scious of setting the cutting bar down to open my tool
     The job centered me so completely that I wasn't con-
    
    kit. After I disconnected the alarms, I went to work on
    the port's defenses.
     A vehicle clanging its alarm bell pulled up beside the
    building. My hand moved for the cutting bar as I looked
    at Lightbody in the hallway.
     He nodded and stepped out of my angle of vision. I
    heard the front door open, then close. Lightbody was back.
    "It's all right, sir," he whispered. "It's the Black Maria
    bringing a load of drunks to the lockup down below."
     I went back to work. A fire director in the southern
    gunpit controlled the four laser batteries. I couldn't touch
    the director itself, but its data came from the port radar
    and optical sensors. I switched them off, then used the tip
    of my bar to cut the power cable to their console. Sparks
    snapped angrily between strands of wire and the chassis,
    but the tool's ceramic blades insulated me.
     1 heard steps in the hallway. "It's Kiley," Lightbody
    said.
      There's four guys in the lounge," Kiley said as he
    joined Lightbody in the hall. "We're tying them up. Mister
    Gregg didn't want you to worry, sir."
     I nodded. I'd found the circuitry powering Corpus
    Christi's landline telephones. I could shut the system
    down, but I wasn't sure I wanted to. If the phones
    went out, people all over the community would run
    around looking for the cause of the problem. Some of
    them would come here.
     The steel door clanked. Somebody had rested his hand
    against the other side as he worked the lock. I moved
    to the commo room doorway with my cutting bar; Kiley
    and Lightbody flattened themselves on either side of the
    steel door.
     The panel swung inward. A Fed in a gray tunic and CON-
    S BIULARY brassards on both arms stepped through. He
     TA
      ha
     ad cut on his forehead and an angry look on his face.
     Hey!" he snarled. "If you fuckers can't get the air-
    conditioning fixed, we're going to have somebody croak
    in the cells down there!"

    




    J
    
                  274            David Drake
    
                  He glared at us momentarily. Concrete steps led down
                  behind him to a room full of echoing metal and alcoholic
                  vomit. I grabbed his throat in my left hand and jerked
                  him forward. Lightbody clubbed the Fed behind the ear
                  as Kiley pulled the door closed.
                  I let the Fed fall as a dead weight. I drew a deep breath.
                  Lightbody took the man's wrist and pulled him into the
                  commo room.
                  "I think he's still alive, sir," Lightbody said. He poised
                  the buttplate of his carbine over the man's temple. "Do
                  you want me to ...
                  "Yes, tie him," I said. I was pretty sure that wouldn't
                  have been Lightbody's first suggestion, Lightbody
                  shrugged and undid the Fed's belt for the purpose.
                    "Here's the others coming," Kiley murmured.
                  "Come on," I heard Stephen's muffled voice say. "We'll
                  head back to the cutter."
                  I went to the console and dumped the phones after all.
                  The more confusion, the better ...
                  "Wouldn't it be better to go to the new ship?" Loomis
                  asked.
                  "Only if we knew which it was," Stephen replied in a
                  tone so emotionless that I shivered.
                  I opened the unit's front access plate. There were three
                  circuit cards behind it. I pulled them.
                  Stephen stuck his head'into the commo room. "Trou-
                  ble?" he said, glancing at the unconscious Fed.
                    "No sir, not so's you'd mention it," Lightbody said.
                  The unlocked stairwell door swung open. Stephen
                  turned. Loomis tried to point his shotgun but the
                  steel panel banged closed again, knocking the gun bar-
                  rel up.
                  "Grubbies!" shrieked a voice attenuated by the armored
                  door.
                  "Outside!" I shouted as I zipped my kit closed over a
                  jumbled handful of tools.
                  Stephen pushed the door open and fired his flashgun
                  down the stairs one-handed. Metal in the cells below
                  vaporized, then burned in a white flash. Stephen clanged
                  the door shut again.

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     275
    
                We bolted out the front of the Commandatura, carry-
               ing our weapons openly. Lightbody jumped aside to let
               me lead.
    r           The van towing the cage was pulled up to the side door.
               Nobody was inside the vehicle, but the diesel engine was
               running. A Fed ran out the constabulary door. Kiley fired,
               knocking the man's legs out from under him with a charge
               of buckshot in the thighs.
                The constabulary door banged against its jamb and
               bounced a few centimeters open. Stephen's laser spiked
               at a nearly reciprocal angle to that of his first bolt. Men
    It         screamed as more burning metal sprayed.
                I'd never seen controls laid out like those of the van.
               The steering wheel was in the center of the front com-
               partment. There were hand controls to either side of the
               wheel, but no foot pedals.
                "I'll drive, sir!" Loomis cried, handing me his shotgun.
               I slid across the bench seat as the others piled in.
                Loomis twisted the left handgrip and let a return spring
    is         slide it to the dash panel, then pulled the right grip out
               to its stop. The diesel lugged momentarily before it
    ~a         roared, chirping the tires. We pulled away from the
               Commandatura. The door of the trailer for prisoners wasn't
               latched. It swung open and shut, ringing loudly each time.
                Loomis turned us and headed up the paved street direct-
               ly toward the gate. The trailer oscillated from side to side.
    u_
               It swiped a stand of pickled produce, hurling brine and
               glass shards across the front of the nearest building, then
    en         swung the other way and hit a cursing pedestrian who'd
    he         managed to dodge the careening van.
    ar-         A siren sounded from the spaceport. It can't have had
               anything to do with us, there wasn't time. Stephen reached
    ,ed        past Loomis from the other side and flicked a dash control.
               Our bell began to clang.
    ra          Three Molts were swinging a gate of heavy steel tubing
               across the.port entrance. Their.officer, a human wearing
               a gray tunic, saw our van coming. He waved his rifle to    4
    ,un        halt us.
    Dw          The four Molts who crewed the port-defense laser were
    Yed
               watching the Commotion among the ships on the field. The

    




                    276           David Drake
    
                   siren came from the Yellowknife. All the Fed warship's
                   external lights were on, flooding her surroundings with
                   white glare.
                   Loomis steered for the narrowing gap between the gate
                   and its concrete post. The Molts continued to trudge for-
                   ward. The officer threw his rifle to his shoulder and aimed.
                   Stephen's flashgun stabbed. The Fed's chest exploded.
                   Our left fender scraped the gatepost. My door screeched
                   back in an accordion pleat. The right-side wheels rode
                   over the bottom bar of the gate. The second and third bars
                   bent down but the sturdy framework as a whole didnt
                   flatten.
                   The van tilted sideways to 45', then flipped over onto
                   its roof in sparks and shrieking.
                   I was in the backseat, tangled with Tuching and Kiley.
                   Lightbody had wound up in front. Stephen was kicking
                   open the door on his side and Loom-is lay halfway through
                   the shattered windshield. The van's wheels spun above
                   us till Lightbody had the presence of mind to rotate a
                   handgrip and disengage the transmission.
                   One of the Molts lay pinned between the pavement and
                   the twisted gate. He moaned in gasping sobs that pulsed
                   across his entire body.
                   The gatepost had stripped off the sliding door in back
                   before we went over. I crawled out. The gunpit crew were
                   running to their multitube laser.
                   The leading Molt wore a white sash-of-office. Stephen
                   shot him. The bolt hit the right edge of the alien's cara-
                   pace, spinning the corpse sideways in a blast of steam to
                   trip another member of the gun crew. Stephen bent and
                   snatched the carbine which Lightbody had thrust t~rough
                   the window as he started to wriggle from the van.
                   I still held Loomis' shotgun. I raised it, aiming for the
                   Molt climbing into the seat on the left side of the gun
                   carriage.
                   My target was ten meters away. Stephen had taught me
                   that a shotgun wasn't an area weapon: it had to be aimed
                   to be effective. The Molt's mauve plastron wobbled, but
                   not too much, over the trough between the side-by-side
                   barrels. The charge of shot would kick the gunner out of
    
                                                         kLI
    oil,

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     277
    
    his seat, his chest shattered in a splash of brown ichor. All
    I had to do was pull the trigger.
     I couldn't pull the trigger. I couldn't kill anything this
    way, in the dispassion that distance brought. Not even
    though the laser's six-tube circular array depressed and
    traversed toward me at the Molt's direction.
     Stephen shot the gunner in the head. The Molt went into
    spastic motion as if he was trying to swim but his limbs
    belonged to four different individuals.
     Another Molt jumped into the right-hand seat. Stephen
    worked the bolt of his rifle without taking the butt from his
    shoulder and blew the back off the second gunner's trian-
    gular skull also. The last member of the crew disentangled
    himself from his dead leader, stood, and immediately fell
    flailing.
     "Come on!" Stephen shouted. He set the carbine on the
    pavement beside him and braced his hands against the
    van's quarterpanel. "We'll tilt this back on its wheels!"
     I handed the shotgun to Lightbody and ran toward the
    gunpit. Loomis pulled himself the rest of the way through
    the windshield and rested on all fours in front of the
    van. His palms left bloody prints on the concrete, but
    if he could move, he was in better condition than I'd
    feared.
     A 300-tonne freighter midway in the second row fluffed
    her thrusters. The plume of bright plasma wobbled toward
    the town as it cooled, bome on the evening breeze from
    the river. The engine test would go unremarked by Feds
    in the port area in the present confusion, but for us it
    identified the vessel Piet and his men had captured.
     The dead Molts had fallen from the gun's turntable.
    I sat in the left seat and checked the control layout:
    heel-and-toe pedals for elevation and traverse, a keyboard
    for the square 20-cm display tilted up from between my
    knees.
     The laser hummed in readiness beside me. The tubes
    were pumped by a fusion bottle at the back of the pit.
    One such unit could have driven all four guns, but the
    Fed planners had gone to the extra expense of running
    each laser array off a dedicated power source.

    




                    278           David Drake
    
                   If there'd been a common power plant, I could probably
                   have shut it down from the Commandatura. At the time
                   that would have seemed like a good idea, but I'd have
                   regretted it now.
                   Gunports fell open along the Yellowknife's centerline,
                   black rectangles against the gleaming metal hull. The
                   muzzle of a plasma cannon slid out. The gunners began
                                               ed freighter.
                    to slew their weapon to bear on the captur
                     Loomis knelt with his hands pressed to his face. Stephen
                    and the other three crew members rocked the van sideways,
                    then pulled it back and gathered their strength for a final
                    push. Either they'd unhitched the trailer, or the crash had
                    broken its tongue.
                     My targeting screen set a square green frame over the
                    bow of the Yellowknife. I keyed a 1 mil/second clock-
                    wise traverse into the turntable control. A hydraulic motor
                    whined beneath me.
                     The van rolled onto its right side in a crunch of glass,
                    then up on its wheels again as my friends shouted their
                    triumph. The motor was still snorting. The diesel must
                    have been a two-stroke or it would have seized by now
                    for being run upside down.
                     The manual firing switch was a red handle mounted on
                    the gun carriage itself, rather than part of the keyboard.
                    I threw it home against a strong spring, then locked it in
                    place with the sliding bolt.
     J1 i
                     Flux hundreds of times more concentrated than that of
                    Stephen's flashgun pulsed from the six barrels in turn as
                    the array slowly rotated its fury along the Yellowknife's
                    hull. I jumped from the gun carriage and ran to the van as
                    Stephen tossed Loomis into the back. He piled in besidle
                    Lightbody in the driver's seat.
                     Metal curled from the Yellowknife in dazzling w1lite
                    streamers. The pulses hammering the hull would make
                    her interior ring like a bell.
     RE              The laser array was a defense against the organic ves
                    sels of the Chay. No hostile human ship would dar;
                    land with its thrusters exposed to the port's fire, but
                    the Yellowknife was too solidly constructed for the flux
     E              to penetrate her broadside.          am,

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     279
    
     The line of blazing metal slid a handbreadth beneath
    the open gunports instead of through them. I'd aimed too
    hastily or the Fed gunners hadn't properly bore-sighted
    their weapon.
     We accelerated toward the captured freighter. A wheel
    was. badly out of alignment. The studded tire screamed
    against its fender, throwing sparks out behind us. Another
    ship lit its thrusters to the north edge of the field.
     The Yellowknife fired a plasma cannon. The intense
    rainbow flash shadowed my bones through the flesh of
    my hand. The laser array erupted in white fire. The fusion
    plant continued to discharge in a blue corona from the
    fused power cable.
     Part of the slug of charged particles missed the gun
    mechanism and blew out the walls of a building across
    the street. The wooden roof collapsed on the wreckage
    and began to bum.
     A cutter-our cutter-lifted from the edge of the field.
    It sailed toward the Yellowknife at the speed of a man
    running. Loomis screamed in terror as he realized the
    vessel was in an arc only five meters high at the point
    it would intersect our track.
     Stephen grabbed the steering wheel with his left hand
    and spun it clockwise. The van skidded in a right-hand
    turn. The rubbing tire blew and we fishtailed.
     The cutter passed ahead of us in the iridescent glare of
    its thruster. Its skids touched the concrete and bounced the
    vessel up again. A human figure leaped from the dorsal
    batch, tumbling like a rag doll.
     Riflemen in the Yellowknife's open hatch shot vainly
    at the oncoming cutter. The siren continued to scream.
    A plasma cannon fired, but the weapon didn't bear on
    anything: the bolt punished the sky with a flood of rav-
    ening ions,
     Stephen thrust his flashgun into the backseat. I grabbed
    it. He opened his door and hung out, gripping the frame
    with his huge left hand as Lightbody fought to brake
    the van.
     Stephen straightened, jerking Piet off the pavement and
    into the van with us by the belt of his trousers. A wisp of

    




                 280            David Drake
                 exhaust had singed Piet's tunic as he bailed out.
                   The cutter slanted into the bow of the Yellowknife. The
                 light ceramic hull shattered like the shell of an egg flung
                 to the ground, but the Federation warship rocked back
                 on its landing skids from the impact. Steam gushed from
                 gunports and a started seam, enveloping the Yellowknife's
                 stem.
    pill,"                      "A feedline broke!" Tuching, an engine crewman,
                 shouted.
                   Lightbody steered toward the captured freighter again.
                 He had to struggle with the shredded tire and Piet squirming
                 to sit up on Stephen's lap beside him.
                   The wreckage of the cutter fell back from the Yellow-
                 knife. The warship's bow was dished in and blackened;
                 smoky flames shot from an open gunport.
       4t          A green-white flash lifted the Yellowknife's stern cen-
                 timeters off the ground. The CRACK! of the explosion
                 was lightning-sharp and as loud as the end of the world.
                 The van spun a three-sixty, either from the shock wave or
                 because Lightbody twitched convulsively in surprise.
                   We straightened and wobbled the last hundred meters
                 to the freighter waiting for us with the main hatch open.
                 "Not a feedline," Piet said in rich satisfaction. "An injector
                 came adrift and they tried to run their auxiliary power plant
                 without cooling. They'll play hell getting that ship in
                 shape to chase usl"
                   I suppose Guillermo was at the controls of the captured
                 vessel, for she started to lift while Piet and the rest of us
                 were still in the entry hold.
                   If the three remaining laser batteries had human crie
                                                    w'
                 they might have shot us out of the sky. Molts  dni
                 assume in a crisis that anything moving was an enemy.
                   Therefore we survived.

    




             ST. LAWRENCE
    
    Day 319
    
    We watched the double line of prisoners dragging the
    thruster nozzle on a sledge from the captured freighter,
    the 17Abraxis, to the gully where Salomon had landed the
    Oriflamme. The Molts-there were thirty-one of them-
    chanted a tuneless, rhythmic phrase.
     Two of the freighter's human crew had been wounded
    during the capture. The remaining ten were silent, but they
    at least gave the impression of putting their weight against
    the ropes. Lightbody and Loomis, watching with shotguns,
    wouldn't have killed a captured Fed for slacking; but at
    least in Lightbody's case, that's because Piet had given
    strict orders about how to treat the prisoners.
     Lightbody's perfect universe would contain no living
    idolators; Jeude's death had made him even less tolerant
    than he was at the start of the voyage. The Fed captives
    were wise not to try his forbearance.
     "Rakoscy says the communications officer is going to
    pull through," Piet remarked. I was worried about that."
     "That Fed worried me about other things than him tak-
    ing a bullet through the chest," I said. I wasn't angry-
    or frightened, now. Neither had I forgotten driving across
    the spaceport under fire because the commo officer of 17
    Abraxis had gotten off an alarm message before Dole shot
    him out of his console.
     The gully contained vegetation and a little standing
    water, and the defilade location saved the Oriflamme from
    exhaust battering when Piet brought our prize in close by.
    Though the air was only warm, the sun was a huge red
    
                    281
    
                            ----------

    




                    282            David Drake
                    curtain on the eastern sky. That sight wouldn't change
                    until the stellar corona engulfed St. Lawrence: the planet
                    had stopped rotating on its axis millions of years before.
                      "He was doing his job," Stephen said mildly. "Pretty
                    good at it, too. There aren't so many men like that around
                    that I'd want to lose one more."
                      "Fortunately," Piet added with a smile, "the staff of
                    the Yellowknife hadn't plotted the vessels on the ground
                    at Corpus Christi, so they didn't have any idea which ship
                    was under attack."
                      We were in the permanent shade of four stone pillars,
                    the fossilized thighbones of a creature that must in life
                    have weighed twenty tonnes if not twice that. The bones
                    had weathered out of the softer matrix rock, but they too
                    were beginning to crumble away from the top.
                      I turned my head to gaze at the tower of black stone.
                    "Hard to imagine anything so big roaming this place," I
    U               said. Vegetation now grew only in low points like the
                    arroyo, and we hadn't found any animal larger than a
                    fingernail.
                      "A long time ago," Stephen said with emphasis. "Who
                    knows? Maybe they developed space travel and emigrated
                    ten million years back."
                      "Put your backs in it, you cocksucking whoresons,"
                    came the faint fury of Winger's voice from the underside
                    of 17 Abraxis, "or as Christ is my witness, you'll still be
                    here when your fucking beards are down to your knees!"
                      Piet frowned at the blasphemy (obscenity didn't bother
                    him), but the men were far enough away that he must have
                    decided he could overlook it. The job of removing thrust-
                    er nozzles-without dockyard tools-after they'd been
                    torqued into place by use was just as difficult as Winger
                    had grumbled it would be when we were on Clapperton.
                      "They've got seven," Stephen said quietly. "This last
                    one and we're out of here."
                      "If we don't take spares," I said, deliberately turning
                    my head toward the Oriflamme to avoid Piet's eyes.
                      He glared at me anyway. "The prisoners can get back to
                    Riel on four out of twelve thrusters," he said. "They can't
                    get back on two. We aren't going to leave forty-three rnen~

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     283
    
    here on the chance that somebody will come by before
    they all starve."
     Twelve humans and thirty-one Molts. All of them "men"
    to Piet, and you'd best remember it when you spoke in his
    hearing.
     "You could manage on two, Piet," Stephen said with a
    grin. "I'll bet you could take her home on one, though I
    guess we'd have to gut the hull to get her out of the gravity
    well to begin with."
     I knew Stephen was joking to take the sting out of Piet's
    rebuke to me. I'd promised Winger that I'd try to get him
    a spare nozzle, though.
     Piet chuckled and squeezed my hand. "All things are
    possible with the Lord, Stephen," he said, "but I wouldn't
    care to put him to that test. And, Jeremy-"
     He sobered.
     "-I appreciate what you've tried to do. I know the
    motor crew is concerned about the wear we'll get from
    tungsten, and they have a right to be. But if these nozzles
    don't last us, we'll find further replacements along the
    way. We won't leave men to die."
     I nodded. I looked up at the femur of a creature more
    ancient than mankind and just possibly more ancient than
    Earth. Black stone, waiting for the sun to devour it.
     A tiny, intense spark shone in the sky where the thigh
    pointed. I jumped to my feet.
     "There's a-"
     "Incoming vessel!" Piet bellowed as he rose from a
    seated position to a dead run in a single fluid motion.
    "Don't shoot! Don't shoot! If she crashes, it could be
                                                                                             P
    anywhere!"
     Stephen and I followed at our best speed, but Piet was
    aboard the Oriflamme while we were still meters from the
    cockpit steps.
    
    "This is close enough," Stephen ordered, dropping into a
    squat a hundred meters from the strange vessel's starboard
    side. "This swale doesn't look like much, but it'll deflect
    their exhaust if they try to fry us. Can't imagine anything
    else we need to worry about, but don't get cocky."

    




    771
    
                   284,           David Drake
                     Piet and the rest of us knelt beside him. Stephen, com-
                   mander of his county's militia before he ever set foot on
                   a starship, was giving the orders for the moment.
                     Dole's ten men were still jogging to where they'd have
                   an angle on the stranger's bow. Fifty-tonne freighters built
                   like this one on the Back Worlds weren't likely to have
                   hatches both port and starboard, but we weren't taking
                   the risk.
                     Stampfer was half a kilometer behind us, aligning the
       H           4-cm plasma weapon 17 Abraxis carried for use against
                   Chay raiders. The Oriflamme's guns were useless while
                   she was in the gully. Salomon, Winger, and the bulk of
                   the crew weren't going to be ready her to lift for an hour
                   or more despite desperate measures.
                     "You'd think," I said, "that they'd have signaled they
                   were coming in."
                     Stephen shrugged. "Maybe they don't have commo," he
                   said. "The Feds'd leave the air tanks off to save money if
                   they could get away with it."
                     "Southerns, sir," Lightbody said unexpectedly-
                     Stephen and I looked at him; Piet grinned and continued
                   to watch the strange vessel. "This one's Southern Cross
                   construction, sir," Lightbody amplified. "Not Fed. The
                   pairs of thrusters are too far apart for Feds."
                     The vessel's hatch clanged twice as those inside jerked
                   it sideways by hand rather than hydraulic pressure. Six
                   figures got out. They jumped as far as they could to clear
                   the patch of thruster-heated ground.
                     One of the newcomers was a woman; common enough
                                                          Ir
                   for a Terran crew, though I heard Lightbody growl. None
                   of the strangers was armed, and their assorted clothing was
                   entirely civilian.
                     Piet got up and strode to meet them.
                     "Guide a little left, Piet," Stephen said as he trotted to
                   Piet's right side. Stephen's left index finger indicated a
                   30' angle. I moved over to give Piet room but he ignored
                   the direction.
        11           "Piet," Stephen said calmly, "Stampfer will have that
                   plasma cannon trained on the open hatchway. I trust
                   Stampfer, but I don't much trust junk he crabbed

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     285
    
    out of a Federation freighter. I'd really rather you
    didn't take the chance of something unlikely happen-
    ing."
     From the tone of Stephen's voice, he could have been
    asking where to place a piece of furniture.
     Piet clicked his tongue, but he bore to the left as directed.
    "Where would you be without me to fuss over, Stephen?"
    he murmured.
     Possible answers to that falsely light question rang
    through my head like hammerblows.
     "Sirs?" the leader of the newcomers asked. "Are you
    from the North American Federation?"
     He spoke Trade English with a distinct Southern accent,
    A good dozen additional people, including a few more
    women, climbed from the vessel behind him. They moved
    with greater circumspection than the initial party.
     The ten of us spread slightly as we bore down on the
    strangers. We weren't being deliberately threatening, but a
    group of grim, armed men must have looked as dangerous
    as an avalanche.
     "We are not," Piet said in a proud, ringing voice. "We
    are citizens of the Free State of Venus."
     "Oh, thank God!" cried the woman at the leader's side.
    She knelt and kissed a crucifix folded in both her hands.
     I grabbed Lightbody by the front collar and jerked him
    around to face me. "No!" I shouted.
     I held the spacer till the light eased back into his eyes
    and he began to breathe normally again. "Sorry, sit," he
    muttered, bobbing his head in contrition.
     Everyone was staring at us. I flushed and lowered the
    cutting bar in my right hand. Lightbody hadn't done any-
    thing overt.
     I think Piet understood. I know Stephen did, because
    he gave me a slow smile and said, "If you ever change
    sides, friend, I'm not going to let you get in arm's length
    alive. Hey?"
     In context, that was high praise.
     The newcomer's leader embraced Piet. "Sir," he said,
    "I am Nicolas Rodrigo and these are my people, twenty
    of us."

    




    286           David Drake
    
     I eyed the group quickly. If there were only twenty, then
    they were all in plain sight by now. There were no Molts
    in the group, surprisingly.
     "Until forty days ago, we maintained the colony on
    Santos," Rodrigo said. "Then two Federation warships,
    the Yellowknife and Keys to the Kingdom, arrived under
    a beast named Prothero. He-"
     The woman had risen again. At Prothero's name, she
    spat. Our eyes meshed, then slid sideways. Quite an attrac-
    tive little thing in a plump, dark-haired fashion. Young; 18
    or 20 at the outside, as compared with Rodrigo's 35 or so.
     "-told us that the Southern Cross had been placed
    under President Pleyal's protection, and that he was taking
    control of Santos on behalf of the Federation. He-"
     "What do you have aboard your ship?" Stephen inter-
    jected abruptly.
     "What?" Rodrigo said. "Nothing, only food. Ah-we
    took back the Hercules, this ship, on Corpus Christi.
    There was confusion when a freighter crashed into the
    Yellowknife."
     Kiley chuckled. "I wonder if them poor bastards'll ever
    figure out quite what happened," he said.
     "Come along back to our ships, then," Piet said. "We'll
    be more comfortable there, and I don't want my men I've
    left there to be concerned."
     The bosun's party was moving toward us, slowed by
    their weight of weapons and, for a few of them, armor.
    "Mister Dole?" Piet called. "Set five of your men to secure
    the ship, if you will."
     Stampfer must have realized the situation was peaceful;
    he tilted the muzzle of the light cannon up like an excla-
    mation point above the hasty barricade of crates across
    the hold of 17 Abraxis. Maybe the gesture helped the
    others relax.
     Me, I was still trembling in reaction to a few minutes
    before, when I stopped Lightbody from blowing a pretty
    woman's head off.
    
    "Prothero put his own men on Santos as overseers,"
    Rodrigo explained, drinking a thimble glass of slash cut

    




                     THROUGH THE BREACH     287
    
         three to one with water. "The plantations are worked by
         Molts, of course. We don't-we didn't export, we just sup-
         plied convoys in the Back Worlds trade stopping over."
           The Southerns mixed freely with the Oriflamme's crew.
         A joint party had -gone back to the Hercules, for supplies
         including Santos wine. The Federation prisoners watched
         sullenly as they resumed hauling heavy thruster nozzles.
           Piet, Stephen, Lacaille, and I sat with the Southern
         leaders at a trestle table on the shaded side of the gully.
         Rodrigo's wife, Carmen, was at his side across the table,
         occasionally eyeing me as she raised the glass to her lips.
         She wasn't actually drinking.
           "I know Prothero," Lacaille said. "I don't know any- 4
         body who likes or trusts him, but he's ... Able enough.
         In his way."
         The Southerns watched the Fed castaway sidelong,
         uncertain about his status. I guess we all were uncertain,
         Lacaille himself included.
         "The Hercules was on Santos when the Federation
         ships arrived," Rodrigo continued. "Captain Cinpeda
         commanded."
         A short, dark Southern nodded. He'd drunk his slash
         neat. His eyes never left the carafe I'd deliberately slid
         out of his reach.
         "Prothero filled the Hercules with food and put his
         own crew aboard," Rodrigo said. "It was no more than
         piracy. But how could we fight with no warships of our
         own?"
         Stephen's lips smiled; his eyes did not. Ships don't
         fight: men do. And Rodrigo wasn't that sort of man.
         "Prothero took us with him on the Yellowknife," Rodrigo
         said. "The Keys to the Kingdom was his flagship, but she
         heeded repairs. He left her on Santos while he went ahead
         to Riel."
         "She's a great, cranky tub of eight hundred tonnes, the
         Keys," Lacaille said. "I'm not surprised she broke down.
         Her water pumps again?"
           Cinpeda nodded to Lacaille with respect.
         "They can't be depopulating all the Southern colonies,"
         I said. "Can they?"
    
                                         M
                                        Amr
                                      
    
    




    V I
              288           David Drake
    
             "I think," Carmen Rodrigo said with her eyes lowered,
             "that the decision was Commander Prothero's. I believe
             his intentions toward me were ... not proper. Though he
             already has a mistress!"
             "Prothero's always operated as though the Middle Ways
             were his own kingdom," Lacaille said. "I doubt he was
             acting completely on orders."
             "We took our chance when the emergency siren
             sounded," Rodrigo said. "We thought it was a Chay raid.
             The prize crew had left the Hercules, so we went aboard
             and lifted as soon as the computer gave us a course."
             "To home," Carmen said. "We're going back to Rio.
             Better Pleyal a continent away than Prothero in the next
             cabin."
             There was an edge in her tone that I thought I under-'
             stood. Carmen Rodrigo might or might not be a virtuous
             wife; I had my doubts. But she certainly intended to make
             any decisions of that sort on her own.
             "Why this course, to St. Lawrence?" Piet asked sud-
             denly. "It's a week's transit in the wrong direction if you
             intend to return to the Solar System."
             "Reaction mass," Cinpeda grunted. "I wonder, master,
             could you. .
               He extended his tiny glass. I filled it from the carafe.
             "Ali, thank you, thank you indeed, master," the South-
             ern captain said. He shuddered as he tossed the shot
             down, but his eyes gained a focus that had been missing
             a moment before.
             "Reaction mass," Cinpeda repeated. "Prothero's crew,
             they'd refilled the air tanks when they landed on Riel, but
             they hadn't hooked up to the water yet. Food we had, air
             we had, but there wasn't water for ten days under power."
             "There is water here, isn't there?" Rodrigo asked in sud-
             den concern as he gazed around him. The planet must have
             looked like a desert from orbit, and the slight greenery of
             this arroyo wasn't much more inviting.
             "We've bored a well," Piet said. "You can draw from
             it, now that we've topped off."
             "If you were trying to escape," Stephen asked, "why
             did you land by us-and without- signaling?"

    




                                            meow,
    
               THROUGH THE BREACH     289
    
     "Fucking collimator's out," Cinpeda said with a scowl.
    "On the laser communicator. Fucking thing drifts. And the
    VHF transmitter, it's been wonky since they installed it."
     He looked as though he was going to ask for another
    drink. I shook my head minutely.
     "We thought you'd done the same thing we did,"
    Rodrigo said, answering the first part of the question.
    "Come here to get away from Prothero. We knew other
    ships escaped when we did."
     "Didn't even notice this one before we landed," Cinpeda
    said with a nod toward the Orifiamme. "What is it-don't
    you reflect radar?"
     I shrugged. Ceramic hulls did reflect radar, but not as
    strongly as a similar expanse of metal. -The Oriflamme was
    an outcrop in the gully to a radar operator unless the fellow
    was actively looking for a Venerian ship here.
     "And there was no reason to come to this place," Car-
    mien added, "except to avoid being on Riel. So we thought
    Y(
    ou might be from the Southern Cross too, until we saw
    your guns."
     "Does your vessel carry guns?" Stephen said. There was
    no challenge in his tone, only the certainty of a man who
    will be answered.
     "A small cannon," Rodrigo said. "For the Chay, and
    perhaps not much use against them. We can't defend
    ourselves against you, sirs."
     Piet stood up with a nod. "Nor do you need to," he said.
    "We have our own needs and can be of little help to you,
    but we certainly won't hinder."
     "How long will you remain on this planet?" Carmen
    asked without looking-pointedly without looking-at
    me.
     "No longer than it takes to mount two more thruster
    nozzles, madam," Piet said with a wry grin. "Which is
    some hours longer than I wish it would be, now that
    you've arrived."
     "Are we so terrible?" Carmen said in surprise.
     "The people who may follow you are," I explained
    gently. "The Feds know how much reaction mass they
    left on your ship, and they've got the same pilotry data

    




                    290            David Drake
                    as you do to pick the possible landfalls."
                      "But we'll deal with them, if it comes to that," Stephen
                    said, hefting his flashgun. His eyes had no life and no
                    color, and his voice was as dry as the wind.
                      No Federation force would be half so terrible as we
                    ourselves were.
                      "Piet?" I said as I stood up. "The Abraxis has a first-rate
                    commo suite. If you'll let Guillermo help me, I can swap
                    it into the Hercules in less time than~ it takes Winger to
                    fit the nozzles."
                      "That leaves the Abraxis without. . ." Piet said. He
                    smiled. "Ali. One ship or the other."
    q                 "And the choice to the men with the guns," Stephen
                    said. He was smiling also, though his expression and Piet's
                    had little in common. "As usual."
                      "Yes," Piet said. "Go ahead."
                      "Guillermo!" I shouted as I ran for the forward hatch
                    and my tool kit. "We've got a job!"
                    The Oriflamme's siren shut off as Guillermo and I clam-
                    bered aboard the 17 Abraxis. Piet had held the switch
                    down for thirty seconds to call the crew aboard. Me
                    were scattered from here to the Hercules. Hell, some had
                    probably wandered off in the other direction for reasons
      .4              best known to themselves.
                      When the alarm sounded, Fed prisoners returning the
     D4'                                                  sledge to the 17 Abraxis slacked the drag ropes to see what
                    was happening. The Molts continued to pace forward.
                    Maher, one of the pair on guard this watch, punched a
                    Fed between the shoulder blades with his rifle butt.
                      The prisoner yelped. He turned. Maher prodded his face
                    with the gun muzzle. The Feds resumed the duties they'd
                    been set.
       ~Ihl           "We don't want to screw up the navigational equipment
                    when we lift this," I said to Guillermo as I tapped the
                    freighter's communications module. "Do you know if any
                    of the hardware or software is common?"
                      "No, Jeremy," the Molt said. "I could build it from
                    parts, of course, since one of my ancestors did that a
                    thousand years ago."
    J0

    




                                                 J .
               THROUGH THE BREACH     291
    
     Guillermo's thorax clicked his race's equivalent of
    laughter. His three-fingered hands played across the
    navigation console. "What we can do, though, is to
    bring up the Al and keep it running while we separate
    the communications module and attempt to run it."
     "Right," I said. Molts were supposed to operate by
    rote memory while humans displayed true, innovative
    intelligence. That's what made us superior to them. You
    bet.
     I bent to check the join between the module and the
    main console. The speaker snapped, "Presidential-
     I jumped upright, grabbing my cutting bar with both
    hands to unhook it. The only reason I carried the weapon
    was I hadn't thought to remove it after we returned from
    the Hercules.
     "-Vessel Keys to the Kingdom calling ships on St.
    Lawrence! Do not attempt to lift. You will be boarded
    by Federation personnel. Any attempt at resistance will
    cause you both to be destroyed by gunfire. Respond at
    once! Over."
     The commo screen was blanked by a nacreous overlay:
    the caller could, but chose not to, broadcast video.
     "Stay in the image!" I said to Guillermo. Venerian ships
    didn't have Molt crew members.
     The voice had said, ". . . you both. . ." The Feds had
    made the same mistake as Captain Cinpeda: they'd seen
    the metal-hulled vessels, but they'd missed the Oriflamme
    in her gully.
     My fingers clicked over the module's keyboard. It was
    an excellent unit, far superior to the normal run of commo
    gear we produced on Venus. I careted a box in the upper
    left corner of the pearly field for the Oriflamme.
     pie looked at me, opening his mouth. I ignored him and
    said, Freighter David out of Clapperton to Presidential
    Vessel, we're laid up here replacing a feedline and our
    consort's commo is screwed up. What the hell's got into
    you, over?"
     Guillermo stood with his plastron bowed outward. He
    scratched.the grooves between belly plates with a finger
    from either hand. I'd never seen him do anything of the

    




                      292            David Drake
    
                      sort before. The activity looked slightly disgusting-and
                      innocent, like a man picking his nose.,
                      "Who are you?" demanded the voice from the module.
                      "Who is this speaking? Over!"
                      Piet nodded approvingly. At least he thought we looked
                      like the sort of folks you'd find on the bridge of a Feder-
                      ation merchantman ...
                      "This is Captain Jeremy Moore!" I said, tapping my
                      chest with the point of my thumb. "Who are you, boyo?
                      Some bleeding Molt, or just so pig-faced ugly that you're
                      afraid to let us see you? Over!"
                      Through the open hatch I saw men staggering aboard
                      the Oriflamme. Sailors' lives involved both danger and
                      hard work, but their normal activities didn't prepare them
                      to run half a klick when the alarm sounded.
                      The sledge sat beside the 17 Abraxis, ready to receive
                      the eighth and final thruster nozzle. It had taken an hour,
                      minimum, to transport each previous nozzle, and another
                      hour to fit the tungsten forging into place beneath the
                      Oriflamme.
                      Guillermo balanced on one leg and stuck the other in the
                      a r. He poked at his crotch. I noticed that he'd dropped his
                      sash onto my cutting bar on the deck, out of the module's
                      camera angle.
                      The pearl-tinged static dissolved into the face of a man
                      who'd been handsome, some twenty years and twenty
                      kilograms ago. At the moment he was mad enough to
                      chew hull plates, exactly what I'd intended. Angry people
                      lose perspective and miss details.
                      "I'll tell you who I am!" he shouted. "I'm Commodore
                      Richard Prothero, officer commanding the Middle Ways,
                      and I'm going to have your guts for garters, boyo! My
                      landing party will be down in twenty minutes. If there's
                      so much as a burp from you, I'll blast a crater so deep
                      it goes right on out the other side of the planet! Do you
                      understand, civilian? Out!"
                      Prothero's three quarters of the screen blanked-com-
                      pletely, to the black of dead air rather than a carrier wave's
                      pearly luminescence. Piet nodded again and crooked his-
                      index finger to Guillermo and me.
    
    Abul.,

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH    293
    
    id          I didn't imagine that Prothero could intercept the laser
               link I'd formed between us and the Oriflamme, but we
               needn't take unnecessary risks. The necessary ones were
               bad enough.
    -d         "You'll need more than your helmet," Stephen said in a
    r-         voice as if waking from a dream. "Put the rest of your
               armor on, Jeremy."
                "When we lift, I'll put my suit on," I said. I wondered
               what I sounded like. Nothing human, I supposed. Very
               little of me was human when I slipped into this state.
                "The Federation warship orbiting St. Lawrence is an
    rd         eight-hundred-tonner mounting twenty carriage guns."
               Piet's voice rang calmly through the tannoy in the ceiling
               of the forward hold. "We'll be lifting on seven engines, so
               we won't be as handy as I'd like. In order to return home,
    Ve         we must engage and destroy this enemy. With the Lord's
               help, my friends, we will destroy them and destroy every
       r
               enemy of Venus!"
                Twelve of us waited in the hold. Kiley, Loomis, and
    he         Li ' ghtbody carried flasliguns, but Stephen alone held his
    lis         with the ease of a man drawing on an old glove.
    ~'s                                              We'd had time to rig for action, but it would be tight
    I I         working the big guns with everybody in hard suits. They
      an       were probably cheering Piet in the main hull. None of
               us did. For myself, I didn't feel much of anything, not
     ity       even fear.
      to        "They must've landed on Riel just after we left," Maher
     )le       said. "The Keys must. Pity they weren't another month
               putting their pumps to rights."
     )re        "We'll lift as soon as the enemy ship is below the
    ~,S,       horizon," Piet continued, "and our marksmen have dealt
      Ay       with the Federation cutters. The enemy is in a hundred-
       s       and-six-minute orbit, so we'll have sufficient time to reach
      ep       altitude before joining battle."
                Even on seven thrusters? Well, I'd take Piet's word for
      m_       it. Aloud I said, "Lacaille says that the Keys is falling
    C' s       apart. You've seen the sort, older than your gramps and
     his       Fed-maintained as well. We'll give her the last push,
               is all."

    




                     294            David Drake
    
                     "Too right, sir!" Kiley said, nodding enthusiastically.
                     He knew I was just cheering them up before we fought a
                     ship with enough guns, men and tonnage to make six of
                     US. All the sailors knew that-and appreciated it, maybe
          1h i       more than they appreciated me standing beside them now.
                     They expected courage of a gentleman, but not empathy.
                     Two exhaust flares winked in the sky. I lowered my
                     visor. For the moment, the riflemen and I were present to
                     protect the flashgunners from Feds who managed to get
                     out of the landing vessels. I'd wear my suit when it was
                     that or breathe vacuum; but I wouldn't put on that jointed
                     ceramic coffin before I had to.
                     "I'll take the right-hand one," Stephen said in a husky,
                     horrid whisper. He clicked his faceshield down. "Wait for
                     me to shoot. If anyone jumps the gun-if you survive the
                     battle, my friend, you won't survive it long. On my oath
                     as a gentleman."
                     "Almighty God," said Piet. "May Thy hand strengthen
                     ours in Thy service today. Amen."
                     Lacaille was suited up aboard the Oriflamme. He'd
                     repeated that he wouldn't fight his own people; but he'd
                     asked not to be left on the ground, either.
                     We owed him that much. The prisoners locked for the
                     moment in the hold of the 17 Abraxis would identify him
                     quickly enough to survivors of the Federation landing
                     party. Besides, Lacaille,was one of us now-whatever
                     he said, wherever he was born.
                     "Easy, gentlemen," Stephen said as he lifted his flashgun
                     to his shoulder.
                     The Fed boats leveled out from their descent and cruised
                     toward the 17 Abraxis a hundred meters in the air. They
                     were bigger than our cutter, almost the size of featherboats.
                     They didn't act like they saw us. Small-craft optics are
                     crude, and the Feds weren't expecting to find anything in
                     the shadow of the arroyo.
                     The nearer vessel slowed to a crawl while five meters
                     in the air. It began to settle beside the freighter. Its plasma
                     exhaust flared in an oval pattern that swept stones as big
                     as my fist from the ground.
    er I

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     295
    
     Stephen fired. His bolt struck the side of the boat's
    thruster nozzle, close to the white-hot lip. The exhaust
    already sublimed tungsten from the nozzle's throat and
    left a black smear on the ground where the metal redepos
    ited.
     The laser pulse heated the point it hit to a fractionally
    greater degree than the metal casing around it. The noz-
    zle lost cohesion. The side blew toward us in a bubble
    of green vapor as intense as the plasma that drove it.
    The rash! of metal exploding was more dazzling than
    I C
    the flash.
     The vessel rolled clockwise on its axis and nosed in
    almost upside down. The dorsal hatch flew off. Members
    of the landing party flew out in a confusion of weapons
    and white tunics.
     The second craft was thirty meters in the air and a
    hundred meters beyond the first. Our three remaining
    flasligunners fired in near unison. Two of the bolts glanced
    from the cutter's hull, leaving deep scars in the metal and
    puffs of aluminum vapor in the air. The third man aimed
    better but to even less effect: his flux stabbed toward
    the nozzle but was smothered in the cloud of ionized
    exhaust.
     The boat rotated toward us. A port in its blunt bow
    gaped open. The riflemen beside me volleyed at the little
    vessel, flecking the hull when they hit.
     Stephen clacked the battery compartment closed and
    raised his reloaded flashgun. The muzzle of a twin-tube
    laser thrust from the Feds' gunport. Even pumped by the
    thruster, it couldn't seriously damage the Oriflamme's
    hull; but it could kill all of us in the hold, hard suits or no.
     The vessel slid toward us in a shallow dive. Stephen
    fired.
     T~e thruster nozzle was only a corona beneath the
    craft s oncoming bow. A cataclysmic green flash lifted
    the vessel in what would have been a fatal loop if the
    pilot hadn't been incredibly good or incredibly lucky. The
    cutter screamed overhead and skidded along the ground
    on its belly for two hundred meters beyond the arroyo,

    




                       296            David Drake
    
                       strewing fragments of hull behind it.
                       The Oriflamme's engines roared. The deck vibrated
                       fiercely, but it would be a moment before thrust rose
                       beyond equilibrium with our mass and we started to lift.
                       Men started for the companionway to the main deck,
                       cheering and clapping one another's shoulders with their
        I'A
                       gauntleted hands.
                       My hard suit waited for me in a comer of the hold.
                       I began to put it on, trying not to get rattled as I per-
                       formed the unfamiliar, unpleasant task of locking myself
                       into armor. Because Stephen and Lightbody helped me, I
                       was suited up within a minute or two of when the hatch
                       sealed out the buffeting of the atmosphere the Oriflamme
                       was fast leaving.
    
     ILI
    1AL

    




         ABOVE ST. LAWRENCE
    
    Day 319
    
    Oriflamme's guns were run out to starboard. Stampfer
    was amidships with the fire director, but the Long Tom's
    six-man crew stood close about their massive gun.
     Gaiters did a halfhearted job of sealing the gun tube
    to the inner bulkhead. The pleated barriers kept the cabin
    air pressure high enough to scatter light and even carry
    sound, but we were breathing bottled air behind lowered
    faceshields.
     The Keys to the Kingdom hung on Guillermo's display.
    It wasn't a real-time image. We viewed one frozen aspect
    of the spherical vessel, and even portions of that had the
    glossiness of an electronic construct rather than the rough,
    tarnished surfaces of physical reality.
     There was nothing for scale in the image, but "800
    tonnes" meant something to me now as it had not at
    the start of this voyage. It meant the Keys was signifi-
    cantly larger than Our Lady of Montreal; and unlike the
    Montreal, she was first and foremost a warship.
     God knew, so was the Oriflamme, and we of her crew
    were men of war.
     The Keys' bridge, indicated by sensor and antenna con-
    centrations, was in the usual place at the top deck. The
    generally globular design was flattened on the underside
    so that the thrusters could be grouped in the same plane.
     Ramps on the deck above the thrusters served for load-
    ing and unloading the vessel on the ground. Because the
    Keys was so large, she was also configured to load in
    orbit through large rectangular hatches at her horizontal
    
                    297

    




                  298           David Drake
    
                  centerline. Her gun decks, indicated by a line of ports
                  that were still closed when our optics drew the image on
                  display, were above and below the central deck.
                  About twenty guns Lacaille had said. They'd be smal-
                  ler than ours and less efficient; but ... twenty guns.
                    The usual digital information filled Salomon's screen.
                  I glanced at Piet's display and found, to my surprise, that
                  I understood its analogue data to a degree.
                    The gray central ball was St. Lawrence. The bead on
                  the slightly elliptical green line circling the planet was
                  the Keys to the Kingdom in orbit, while we were the
                  indigo-to-blue line arcing up the surface. The difference in
                  color indicated relative velocities: the Keys, in her higher
                  orbit, moved slower than we did as we circled toward the
                  Feds from below under power.
                    The image on Guillermo's display suddenly shifted into
                  motion, as though a paused recording had been switched
                  back on. We'd come out of the planet's shadow; our
                  sensors were getting direct images of the Keys to the
                  Kingdom again.
                    Our approach was from the Keys'underside. Her twenty-
                  four thruster nozzles were arranged four/six/four/six/four.
                  A faint glow still illuminated their heavy-metal casings.
                    I put my helmet against Stephen's and said, "Don't they
         V        see us?"
                    Plasma flooded from the Keys' thrusters. The cloud
                  expanded to hundreds of times the volume of the starship
                  from which it sprang. A moment later, attitude jets spurted
    01111           lesser quantities of gas which swiftly dissipated. The sphere
                  shuddered and began to rotate so that its main engines
                  weren't exposed to our fire.
                    "Now they see us!" Stephen replied. Even thinned by
                  conduction through his helmet and mine, his voice was
                  starkly gleeful.
                    The bubble of exhaust separated from the Keys to the
                  Kingdom. It drifted away, cooling and still expanding
                  until it was only a faint shimmer across the starscape.
                  The Fed commander was putting his ship in a postureof
                  defense, because he'd realized that he couldn't escape us.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     299
    
     Even on seven thrusters, the Oriflamme had a much
    higher power-to-mass ratio than the huge Keys did. We
    could literally run circles around the Feds in the sidereal
    universe. If they attempted to transit, we would jump with
    them: two Als with identical parameters would always
    pick the same "best" solution.
     And that would be the end of the Keys to the Kingdom.
    Piet would bring us up beneath the Feds at point-blank
    range-and Stampfer would blow the Keys' thrusters out, 6a,
    leaving the vessel to drift powerless in interstellar space.
     The need to protect our thrusters was behind Piet's
    decision to disable the Fed landing boats before we lifted.
    The Oriflamme's hull could take a considerable battering
    from heavy guns and still be repaired. Laser bolts or light
    plasma cannon could destroy our main engines, however.
    We couldn't risk being encircled by three hostile vessels,
    even if two of them were small by comparison with the
    Oriflamme.
     Piet shut off our engines. I grasped a stanchion with
    my left gauntlet as I started to drift up from the deck.
    The bead that was the Oriflamme drove silently across
    the main display on a course that would intersect the Keys
    to the Kingdom in two minutes, or at most three. The arc
    marking our past course was now turquoise.
     The carriage of the 17-cm gun crawled slowly side-
    ways, making the deck tremble. The fire director was
    keeping the muzzle pointed at the target Stampfer had
    chosen.
     "All weapons bear on the enemy, sir!" the master gun-
    ner announced over the radio intercom. Motors in the gun
    training apparatus crackled across Stampfer's voice, but so
    long as the main engines were shut down the whole crew
    could hear him over the helmet radios.
     "Thank you, Mister Stampfer," Piet said in a tone that
    was so calm he sounded bored. "I trust your aim, but I
    think we'll close further so that the charges will dissi-
    pate less."
     Static roared on the intercom. My hair stood on end
    from a jolt of static, and the hull beside me rocked to a
    white-hot hammerblow.

    




                  300            David Drake
                    There was enough atmosphere at this altitude to light
                  the tracks of the Keys' plasma bolts across our optical
                  screen. The Feds had salvoed ten guns. Only one round
                  had hit squarely. It was powerful enough to shatter our
    A             tough outer hull and craze the inner one in a meter-
                  diameter circle between the gunport and the navigation
                  consoles.
                    The Oriflamme rocked with the impact of ions moving
                  at light speed. Attitude jets snorted, returning us to our
                  former alignment. The Long Tom's gear motors tracked
                  and tracked back, holding a calculated point of impact.
                    The Keys to the Kingdom filled Guillermo's screen.
                  Our green bead and the chartreuse bead of the Feder-,
                  ation vessel were on the verge of contact on the analogue
                  display.
                    "Fire as you bear, Mist-" Piet's voice ordered befo
                                                      re
                  static and the ringing CRASH! of five heavy guns recoiling
                  blotted out all other sound.
                    Two of the directed thermonuclear explosions struck
                  the Keys' upper gun deck, two struck the mid-line deck,
                  and the last ripped a collop out of the lower gun deck
                  in a grazing blow. Eight cargo hatches blew out along
                  the centerline. Our plasma charges expanded the deck's
                  atmosphere explosively, pistoning the Fed vessel open
                  from the inside.
                    Bolts that hit the Keys' gun decks ripped huge, glowing
                  ulcers in the hull plating. White-hot metal blew inward,
                  mixed with the residual atmosphere, and burned in see-
                  ondary pulses. The initial impacts wracked the Keys' inter-
                  nal subdivisions. These follow-up blasts penetrated deep
     Ell          into the vessel, spreading pain and panic among those
                  who'd thought themselves out of immediate danger.
                    Attitude jets puffed, rotating the Oriflamme on her axis
                  so that our spine rather than our starboard was presented to
                  our enemy. We'd taken one hit and were likely to take oth-
                  ers. Piet was adjusting our aspect so that the Feds couldn't
                  concentrate on ewe ned portion of our hull.
                    The Long Tom had recoiled two meters on its carriage.
                  Efflux from the plasma bolt had blown the gaiters inward -
                  so that a rectangle of hard vacuum surrounded the barrel.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     301
    
    A crewman spun the locking mechanism and swung the
    breechblock open.
     The thermonuclear explosion had heated the gun's
    ceramic bore to a throbbing white glow. In the absence
    of an atmosphere, cooling had to be by radiation rather
    than convection, but even so an open tube would return to
    safe temperature much sooner than closed-breech weapons
    of the sort the Feds used. A few wisps of plasma twinkled
    within the bore like forlorn will-o'-the-wisps.
     I caught a momentary glimpse of a sunlit object through
    the gunport: the Keys to the Kingdom. In astronomical
    terms, we and our enemies were almost touching, but the
    human reality was that kilometers separated our vessels.
    The Fed warship was a glint, not a shape.
     A four-man damage-control team covered the crazed
    portion of our hull with a flexible patch. The men moved
    smoothly, despite weightlessness and their hard suits. Glue
    kept the patch in place, though positive internal air pres-
    sure would be a more important factor when we really
    needed it. The refractory fabric didn't provide structural
    strength, but it would block the influx of friction-heated
    atmosphere during a fast reentry.
     Our thrusters roared for twenty seconds to kick us into
    a diverging orbit. The Federation vessel rotated slowly on
    -line cargo hatches
    Guillermo's screen. All the Keys' mid
    were gone.
     Additional gunports swung to bear on us. I expected the
    Feds to fire, but for now they held their peace. Prothero
    r( li
    el
     a zed that we could reload faster than his gunners dared
    to. If the Feds fired their ready guns now, they would have
    no response if we closed to point-blank range and raked
    them again.
     A figure anonymous in his hard suit came from the
    midships compartment and pushed by me with as little   J
    concern as if I'd been the stanchion I held. I thought it
    was someone bringing Piet a message that couldn't be
    trusted to the intercom. Instead the man stooped to view
    the bore of the Long Tom.
     The ceramic was yellow-orange at the breech end. Its
    color faded through red to a gray at the muzzle which only

    




    302           David Drake
    
    wriggled slightly to indicate it was still radiating heat.
     I saw the man's face as he rose: Stampfer, personally
    checking the condition of his guns rather than trusting the
    assessment to men he had trained.
     "Sir," he said over the intercom, "the broadside guns
    are ready any time you want them. The big boy here
    forward, he'll be another three minutes, I'm sorry but
    there it fucking is."
     "Thank you, Mister Stampfer," Piet said. I watched his
    hands engage a preset program on his console. He still
    sounded like he was checking the dinner menu. "We'll hit
    them with four, I think. Load your guns."
     Stampfer swooped through the internal hatch in a sin-,
    gle movement, touching nothing in the crowded forward
    compartment. Our attitude jets burped; I locked my left
    leg to keep from swinging around the stanchion. The
    main thrusters fired another short, hammering pulse. The
    curve our course had drawn across that of the Keys to the
    Kingdom began to reconverge.
     Stampfer was a lucky man to have a job to do. The
    cutting bar trembled vainly in my gauntleted hand.
     The Federation vessel grew on Guillermo's screen.
    Black rectangles where the hatches were missing crossed
    her mid-line like a belt. Apart from that, her appearance
    was identical to that of the ship we'd first engaged: the
    damage we'd done, like the guns that had fired on us, was
    turned away.
                                      Keys
     We were already closer than we'd been when the
    loosed her opening broadside. This time she held her
    fire.
     "Come on," somebody muttered over the
                                                         intercom.
    "Come on, come-"
     Guillermo's left hand depressed a switch, cutting off
    general access to the net. His six digits moved together,
    reconnecting certain channels-Stampfer, Winger, Dole;
    the navigation consoles. I could have done that ...
     "It would make our job easier if Commodore Prothero
    was stupid as well as the brute I'm told he is," Piet
    announced calmly, "but we'll work with the material the,
    Lord has given us. Mister Stampfer, we'll roll at two

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     303
    
              degrees per second. Fire when you bear."
                Thump of the jets, the torque of my armored body trying
              to retain its attitude as my grip on the stanchionforces it
              instead to the ship's rotation 
                Chaos. The 15-cm guns firing amidships and-so sud-
              den it seemed to be a part of the broadside-the smashing
    t         impacts of two, maybe three Federation bolts.
                Residual air within the Oriflamme's hull fluoresced a
              momentary pink. The normal interior lights went out; the
              constant tremble of pumps and drive motors through the
              ship's fabric stilled.
                The navigation consoles were still lighted. Salomon
              lifted himself in his couch to look back. Piet did not.
              His armored fingers touched switches in a precise series,
              looking for the pattern that would restore control.
                The Oriflamme's axial rotation continued, modified by
              the recoil of our broadside guns and the hits the Feds
              had scored. What size guns did the Keys mount: 10-cm?
              Perhaps bigger; that last impact rang through our hull as if
              the Oriflamme had been dropped ten meters to the ground.
                The attitude jets fired, then fired again in a different
              sequence. Piet damped first the planned component of
              our rotation, then brought the plasma-induced yaw under
              control.
                Red emergency lights came on. Because there wasn't
              enough atmosphere to diffuse their illumination normally,
              they merely marked points on the inner hull.
                A man bowled forward from amidships: Stampfer again.
              He snatched a spherical shell from Long Tom's ready
              magazine and settled it into the weapon's breech, using
              his fingertips rather than the alignment tool shaped like a
              long-handled cookie-cutter.
                The Keys to the Kingdom was turning slowly on at
              least two axes. Our broadside had struck in a concentrated
              pattern on the huge vessel's lower gun deck and the deck
              immediately below that. Three of the bolts had burned a
              single glowing crater that could have passed a featherboat
              sideways. The fourth was a close satellite to the merged
              trio. Vapor spurted from it, indicating that we'd holed
              either an air or a water tank.
    
                              ..................

    




    Jw_
    
                     304            David Drake
                       A crewman swung the Long Tom's breech shut and
                     turned the locking wheel. Bracing themselves against the
                     steps cut into the deck for the purpose, the men ran their
                     weapon out. Emergency power wasn't sufficient to oper-
                     ate the hydraulics, but Stampfer's crew knew its job.
                       The master gunner himself crouched beside the individ-
                     ual gunsight set into the Long Tom's trunnion. He had to
                     edge sideways as his men shifted the gun to battery. The
                     fire director must have gone out. At least one of the Fed
                     bolts hit us amidships. We might have lost a gun or even
                     all the broadside guns.
                       A team ran cable sternward from a manhole in the deck
                     behind me. The auxiliary power unit was amidships, in the
                     bulkhead between our fore and aft cargo holds. These men
                     were tapping one of the main thrusters for power.
                       "Steady, Captain!" Stampfer's voice demanded. He
                     sounded like he was trying to pull a planet out of its
                     orbit. Up to now, he'd been speaking on a net limited
                     to his gunners. "Stead-"
     7                 The Long Tom flashed its horrid rainbow glare as it
                     recoiled into the compartment. There was no air to com-
                     press, but the massive cannon drove back with a crushing
                      psychic ambience.
                       The 17-cm bolt pierced the blurred crater the triplet of
                      broadside guns had melted in the Federation vessel's hull.
                      Because the Keys was slowly rotating, the angle of the'
                      impact was different. More important, this bolt released
                      all its energy within the spherical hull instead of on the
                      exterior plating.
                       Silvery vapor geysered from the Keys' lower gun deck:
                      metal heated to gas. It slammed outward at a velocity
                      that chemical explosives couldn't have imparted. In the
                      shock wave tumbled shredded bulkheads, dismounted can-
                      non, and the bodies of personnel stationed on the deck our
       le             guns had ravaged.
                       Our internal lights came on; I felt vibration through the
                      stanchion I held as the great pumps begin to tremble again.
                      Stampfer moved amidships, toward his broadside guns.
                      The Long Tom's bore was a cylinder of hellish white,
                      breech to muzzle.
       N

    




         W,
    
                          THROUGH THE BREACH     305
    
    !d"Holy Jesus preserve us," Salomon said. I looked around.
    ieThe digital information on his screen meant nothing to me,
              but I could understand the third track rising from the
              planetary surface on Piet's display.
              Guillermo split his optical screen, setting the Keys'
              image to the right. On the left half was the Hercules,
              rising to higher orbit to join the battle.
                The freighter's hatch was open. The 5-cm plasma can- "M
              non we'd left the Southerns was mounted on a swivel in
              the center of the hatchway. Our optics and the software
              enhancing them were so good that I could make out at
              least a dozen armored figures within the freighter's hold.
    C
              The Southern refugees didn't have hard suits. The
              Hercules was crewed by survivors from the Keys' landing
              party, and perhaps by prisoners released from 17 Abraxis
              as well.
              The two Federation ships were the jaws of a nutcracker,
              and the Oriflamme was their nut. One hit, even by the
              swivel gun, on our thrusters and we would no longer
              be able to maneuver with the Keys to the Kingdom. One
              hit. .                                          A
              "Piet," Stephen said, "bring us in tight to the Keys. I'll
              take a party aboard and we'll clear her."
              "Prothero's holding his fire," Piet replied. I didn't know
              whether Guillermo had included me in the command chan-
              nel, or if the whole crew was hearing the debate. "He'll
              salvo into our hold if we come within boarding distance.
              That's what he wants!"
              I couldn't command, I couldn't even talk. I trembled in
              my hard suit. There was a red haze over my vision and
              I wanted to kill someone, I wanted to kill more than I'd
              ever before in my life wanted anything ...
               Jesus Christ will you bring us close?" Stephen
               shouted. "Will you have those whoresons peck us to
               death and no answer? Bring us close, damn you, bring
               us close!"
              It wasn't anger in his tone. It was white fluorescent
              rage, and I knew because the same need surged through
              me, ruling me, would I never swing my arm and see faces
              dissolve in blood again?
    
          j W,

    




                    306           David Drake
    
                     "We--2' Piet shouted.
                    The Hercules was on an intersecting but not parallel
                    path to the paired orbits of the Keys and the Oriflamme.
                    Cinpeda had told us-and would tell anybody at gun-
                    point-that the reticle of the Hercules' laser communica-
                    tor wasn't aligned properly. The Federation crew had to
                    make a close approach to the Keys in order to coordinate
                    their aI knew that. Until the Keys to the Kingdom fired all her
                                                      t
                    loaded guns into the Hercules, it didn't occur to me hat
                    Commodore Prothero knew nothing of the sort.
                    The freighter burst into a ball of opalescent vapor. Her
                    own thrusters ruptured, adding their ionized fur to the
                    y
                    directed jolts of the Federation cannon. The Hercules'
    Aill!          light-alloy hull couldn't contain or even slow the cata-
                    clysm.
                    "All personnel except those with immediate gunnery or
                    engineering tasks, assemble in the holds," Piet ordered in a
                    voice as thin as a child's. "Starboard watch to the forward
                    hold, port watch aft. Over."
                    I followed Stephen toward the compartment bulkhead.
                    Because we hadn't yet loaded the 17 Abraxis' cutter to
                    replace the one we'd lost on Riel, there was room in both
                    holds for boarding parties.
                    I noticed that the Long Tom's crew was headed aft with
                    us. They'd apparently interpreted "immediate tasks" t'
                    mean tasks more immediate than the six to eight minute
                    the 17-cm gun would take to cool for the next shot.
    21111i           The midships compartment looked like the remains o
                    a lobster dinner. Fragments of flesh and ceramic armor
    111F            floated in the air. Much of the blood had spread across
                    the bulkheads in viscous blotches. Sufficient droplets,
                    wobbling as they tried to remain spherical, still floated
                    in the compartment to paint the suits of us coming from
                    the bow.
                    The bolt had entered through Number Two gunport at
                    a severe angle, taking an oval bite from the coaming. The
                    main charge had struck Number Three gun, vaporizing the
                    left side of the carriage, much of the gun tube behind the
                    second reinforce, and parts of-

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     307
    
     Three men, maybe five. It was hard to say. There
    were so many body parts drifting in the compartment,
    rebounding from the bulkheads in slow curves, that my
    first reaction was that everyone amidships was dead.
     Rakoscy was working on an armless man in a trans-
    parent cocoon meant as emergency shelter if the ship
    lost its atmosphere. The bubble was a tight fit for two
    men wearing most of their hard suits. Another crewman,
    anonymous in his armor, stood over the cocoon to illumi-
    nate Rakoscy's work with a handlight. There wasn't room
    for an aide within the distended fabric.
     It didn't look to me as if the victim had a prayer. I
    don't suppose Rakoscy could afford to let himself think
    that way, though.
     The forward hold was crowded. Stephen pushed to the
    front. A Fed bolt had struck near the cross-bulkhead. It
    hadn't penetrated, but the upper aft comer of the hatch was
    fractured in a conchoidal pattern. I wondered if Winger
    would be able to bring the APU back on line ...
     Dole, his helmet marked with three fluorescent bars,
    stood beside the hatch controls. Lightbody and Maher
    were at the arms locker beside the bosun. They gave us
    room as they recognized Stephen, Stephen and me.
     "I'll take the line, Mister Dole," Stephen announced,
    reaching for the magnetic grapnel in the bosun's left hand.
    "Gentlemen to the front."
     "Yessir," Dole said, giving up the grapnel. "If you'd
    really rather."
     Lightbody hooked the line onto one of Stephen's equip-
    ment studs. The grapnel had permanent magnets on its
    gripping surface, but unless something went wrong, its
    electromagnets would be powered through the line itself.
     There was also a suction device to grip nonferrous
    surfaces. From the way the Keys to the Kingdom had
    resisted our plasma bolts, there was no doubt that her
    hull was steel, and thick steel besides.
     "I'm next," I said to Lightbody. There was movement in
    the hold, men entering and shifting position. My eyes were
    focused on the back of Stephen's helmet, and I wasn't
    seeing even that.
    
                                  ----- ---- -

    




                   308            David Drake
                     "Sir, will you take a rifle?" a voice said.
                     The intercom worked with only the usual amount of
     oil'
                   static. Neither we nor the Feds were burning thrusters
                   Occasionally an attitude jet fired. For the most part, bein~
                   weightless in a windowless hold had the feeling of being
                   motionless.
                     Someone jogged my left hand. Maher was looking at
    A              me, offering a falling-block rifle. The side lever was delib-
                   erately oversized so that it was easier for a man wearing
                   gauntlets to work.
                     "What?" I said. I shook my head. I wasn't sure he could
                   see me behind the reflection from my faceplate. "No, no.
                   I have to get closer to do any good."
                     I blinked, trying to remember things. "You can give
                   me another bar," I said. "Hang it on my suit opposite
                   the line."
                     I felt clicks against my hard suit. The suit wasn't trap-
    AII:
                   ping me this time. My mind was in a much straiter prison
                   than that of my ceramic armor.
                     "Prepare to board," a voice ordered. Salomon or Guil-
                   lermo, I couldn't tell which; not Piet.
                     Dole turned the control wheel and stepped out of my
                   range of sight as he moved to take his own place on the
                   boarding line. Six of our attitude jets fired together in
                   a ten-second pulse, braking the Oriflamme's momentum
                   with perfect delicacy.
                     The hatch unlocked and began to lower. The fractured
                   comer in front of me flaked off in a slow-motion snow-
                   storm. Shards glittered as their complex surfaces caught
                   the sunlight.
                     The Keys to the Kingdom hung twenty meters away,
                   filling the sky.
                     The Oriflamme wasn't aligned on quite the same hori-
                   zontal axis as the Federation vessel. I was staring straight
                   into the Keys' upper gun deck, but men at the rear of our
                   aft hold would enter through the Feds' centerline if they -low
                   boarded directly.
                     The hatch carnmed itself down with gear-driven cer-
                   tainty. Stephen gathered himself to jump. One of our
       BE          plasma bolts had ripped the Keys' hull open between

    




               THROUGH THE BREAcH     309
    
    two gunports. The compartment beyond was dark, save
    for the glint of armored shadows.
     Fed gunners thrust main battery guns from the ports to
    either side of the large hole. The muzzles glowed red;
    their breeches must be yellow-white. The Fed gunners
    had taken the desperate chance of reloading their weapons
    while the barrels still shimmered with the heat of previous
    discharges; taken the chance and succeeded.
     The bore of the gun trained on me looked large enough
    to swallow a man whole, as the plasma it gouted would
    surely do.
     White light with overtones of green and purple blazed
    through every opening in the Keys' gun deck. The shell
    in the gun aimed at me had cooked off before it could be
    triggered in proper sequence. The deuterium pellet fused
    into helium and a gush of misdirected energy, blowing
    the cannon's stellite breech across its crew and the Fed
    personnel nearby.
     The second cannon fired normally. The bolt hit the
    forward edge of our hatch. Dense ceramic shattered in
    fragments ranging in size from dust motes to glassy
    spearpoints a meter long. One of the latter gutted the
    man to my right.
     I felt the shock through my boots; a film of grit and ions
    slapped my armor. Stephen leaped. I leaped behind him.
     If the Fed gunners had waited another second or two,
    their plasma bolt would have loosed its devastation in the
    packed hold instead of shattering the ramp as it lowered.
    The slug of ions would have killed a dozen of us, may-
    be more. That wouldn't have slowed the survivors, nor
    the men still climbing into the hold to join the board-
    ing party.
     Stephen sailed forward, his body as rigid as a statue. I
    twisted slowly around the line clockwise. In one sense it
    didn't matter, since the Keys wasn't under way. We'd be
    operating without any formal up or down. I couldn't judge
    where I was going to land, though.
     A group of Feds wrestled a multibarreled weapon on
    the Keys' open cargo deck to bear. The human leader was
    in metal armor. His five Molt crewmen wore transparent
                                 - ---------
                                                   14

    




                 310           David Drake
                 helmets and suits of shiny fabric stiffened at intervals by
                 metal rings.
                  A jet of plasma from one of our midships ports struck
                 the gun carriage. The bolt was small by the standards of
                 the broadside guns firing moments before, but it and the
                 Feds' own munitions blew the weapon and crew apart.
                  I'd forgotten about the swivel gun Stampfer took from
                 17 Abraxis. Stampfer hadn't forgotten.
                  Stephen bent as he approached the Keys to the King-
                 dom. He held the grapnel forward in his left hand. His
                 arm compressed, taking the shock.
                  My left boot struck flat on the hull; my right speared
    J            through the crater our guns had torn. Swaths of rust and
                 recrystallized steel vapor overlaid the Keys' plating. The
                 light was too flat to wake colors, but reflection gave the
                 surfaces different textures.
                  I hooked my right foreleg into the hole and unlatched
                 myself from the line. A crewman in metal armor loomed
                 from the darkness within the Fed vessel and fired a shot-
                 gun into my chest.
                  My breastplate survived the shock. The crashing impact
                 blew me back out of the hole. My leg lost its grip, and my
                 flailing arms touched nothing.
                  Piet Ricimer caught my right wrist in his left hand.
                 He fired his carbine into the hole. The Fed shotgunner
                 was pirouetting from his weapon's recoil. His breastplate
                 sparked as the rifle bullet dimpled it. The Fed continued to
                 spin slowly, but the shotgun drifted out of his hands and a
                 smoky trail of blood froze in the vacuum around him.
                  I grabbed the rim of the opening and jerked myself
                 aboard the Keys to the Kingdom again. Icicles of refrozen
                 steel broke off in my grip.
                  The Fed constructors had used light alloys for most of
                 the internal subdivisions. Our fire and the exploding can-
                 non had blown them to tatters, leaving the gun deck open
                 except for throughshafts and a pair of parallel hull-metal
                 bulkheads that supported the upper decks when the vessel
    U1           was on the ground.
                  Scores of bodies drifted in light that flickered through
                 the hull openings. Most of the corpses were Molts. Their

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     311
    
    flexible suits were no protection against plasma or against
    the fragments of bulkhead, weapons, and bodies which the
    blasts turned into shrapnel.
     Figures moved twenty meters from us, near a compan-
    ionway shaft. A bolt from Stephen's flashgun sent one
    corpse toward the far hull, shedding limbs.
     That corpse was a Molt. Riflefire winked, puncturing
    two other Molts whom the laser had lighted. A last Molt     AW
    and an armored human vanished back into the shaft.
     Men sailed toward the companionway from behind me.
    I headed for the freight elevator near the Keys' vertical
    axis. My initial jump was too high. I had to dab along
    the deck's scarred ceiling to redirect myself. There were
    no points for gracefulness today.
     The circular shaft was of hull metal, but the outer
    doors were alloy. Blasts had bowed them into the shaft,
    springing the juncture between the leaves wide enough
    that I could probably have crawled through it as is.
     I thrust my bar into the opening to cut outward and
    down. The blade almost bound, but I jerked it back across
    to complete the cut, doubling the size of the gap.
     It was the first action I'd taken since I'd run from the
    17 Abraxis to the Oriflamme.
     I didn't know where the elevator cage was. If it was
    below me, the bulged doors would keep it from rising. If
    not-I'd take my chances on being able to carve through
    the cage floor before it crushed me into those same jag-
    ged doors.
     I was thinking very clearly. I wasn't sane, but that's a
    different question; and the situation wasn't sane either.
     The dim ambience of the elevator shaft helped me
    when my eyes adapted to it. Actually, the light may not
    have been that dim. Although my faceshield filtered the
    quick succession of plasma bolts, they'd leached the visual
    purple from my retinas.
     I rose three decks, using my left gauntlet on one of the
    elevator cables to control my speed and guide me. The
    sills and paired shaft doors told me where I was. I was
    pretty sure that the bridge was a deck or two higher yet,
    but this was as far as the cargo elevator went.

    




                    312            David Drake
    
                    Holding the upper rim of the shaft opening, I cut an
                    ellipse from the panel's inner sheathing. The pieces drifted
                    away from the bar's last contact, tumbling across the shaft.
                    There was no gravity to make them fall.
                    I should have brought a light ... but I didn't have a
                    hand for it, and I couldn't hold it in my teeth with the
                    helmet on. The present illumination was good enough,
                    because I knew what I was looking for.
                    The shaft doors were locked closed by pins under spring
                    pressure. Electromagnets raised the pins when the cage
                    and safeties were in the proper position. If the power was
                    off-as it seemed to be now-the doors could be unlocked
                    as I did, by pulling the mechanism out from the back.
                    I could have cut through the doors, but that would
                    have warned the Feds on the other side that I was com-
                    ing.
                    I wedged the side of a boot into the door seam, then
                    forced the fingers of my left gauntlet in and levered the
                    valves in opposite directions. Faces looked up in terror
                    as I sailed into what had been a circular lounge giving
                    access to individual suites against the hull.
                    This deck had atmosphere before it flooded past me
                    and down the elevator shaft. Most of the personnel I saw
                    as the light faded to the flatness of direct illumination
                    wore suits, but their helmets were open. Hands groped
                    to slam faceshields closed, instead of swinging weapons
                    toward me.
                      A team of twenty Molts was hauling a carriage gun
                    across the lounge on four drag ropes. The 10-cm cannon
                    was no less massive for being weightless. It slid on with
                    the certainty of a falling boulder when the crewmen
    ti,             dropped their harness.
                    I let the impetus of my leap from the shaft take me
                    into the crowd of aliens trying to close their helmets. I
                    swung my cutting bar with no aim but to hit something,
                    anything.
                    Ripping the Molts' fabric suits was good enough for
                    my purposes. The limbs and gouts of fluid sweeping
                    past me on the last of the deck's atmosphere were a
                    bonus.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     313
    
     A rifle fired, its yellow powderflash huge for expand-
    ing in near vacuum. I was through the Molts within my
    immediate reach. I pushed off from the plagma cannon
    traveling relentlessly past me.
     I couldn't have executed so complex a weightless
    maneuver if I'd practiced for weeks. Chance or murderer's
    luck took me on a vector to the Fed trying to lever another
    shell into his rifle's chamber as my bar jerked and sparked
    through the neck of his armor.
     I spun and pushed myself toward the next large con-
    centration of the enemy, the group fronting the compan-
    ionway hatches. Some of the humans were screaming
    -behind their faceshields. God knows I gave them reason
    to scream.
     I grabbed a woman with my left gauntlet. She pounded
    the side of her riflebutt on my helmet, then tried to short-
    grip the weapon to shoot me. Her mass anchored my
    sweeping right-hand cut through her fellows.
     The stiffeners in Molt suits were under tension. When
    my blade sheared a ring, the severed ends sprang apart
    and dragged the rip in the fabric wider. A bad design for
    combat ...
     I cut the line of a backpack laser and a corona of high-
    amperage blue sparks shorted through the metal armor
    of the man holding it. The Fed's body should have been
    insulated from the outer shell, but his liner had worn or
    frayed. The suit stiffened as his flesh burned, raising the
    internal pressure to several times normal.
     I was shaking the woman in my left hand, but I didn't
    have time to finish her until I'd taken care of the laser and
    by then she was limp within her articulated armor. She'd
    lost her rifle; a bullet hole starred her faceshield.
     Someone aiming at me, someone shooting at random;
    her own bullet, triggered at the wrong instant. I held her
    close as I scanned for living targets.
     The 10-cm cannon continued its course into the par-
    tition bulkhead surrounding the lounge. This deck was
    given over to suites for powerful passengers and the Keys'
    command staff. Nonetheless, the hull was pierced with
    gunports and a few plasma cannon were placed here for

    




    314           David Drake
    
    emergencies. I'd interrupted a crew shifting an unfired
    weapon across the lounge to a compartment from which
    it bore on the Oriflamme.
     The cannon's stellite muzzle hit the flimsy bulkhead at
    a skew angle and ground another meter forward, driven by
    the inertia of tonnes of metal in the gun and its carriage.
    The wall split at the point of impact and buckled inward
    across all four edges.
     The door popped open like the cork from an over-
    charged bottle. The suite had still been under normal air
    pressure. Two Molts and a female servant spurted into
    the lounge. The servant tried to scream and she shouldn't
    have, though it didn't make more than a minute's dif-
    ference since neither she nor the Molts had breathing
    apparatus.
     The suite's main occupant was a plump woman of fifty,
    wearing a glittering array of jewelry and light-scattering
    fabrics cut too tight for her build. A transparent emergency
    bubble protected her. She stared transfixed at the cloud of
    lung tissue protruding from her servant's mouth.
     Feds edged toward me around the right-hand curve of
    the lounge. There were half a dozen armored humans and
    as many Molts in the group. I flung away the corpse to
    drive me toward them.
     The Feds hadn't identified me in the carnage and tricky
    illumination, but they, noticed the movement. Muzzle
    flashes and the sparks of ricocheting projectiles bright-
    ened the lounge. The corpse spun as several rounds hit her,
    and the bullet that punched through my left shoulderguard
    flipped me ass over teacup.
     My left shoulder was cold. Some of that would be the
    sealant oozing from between the armor's laminae to close
    the hole. I tried to wriggle my fingers. I couldn't tell if
    they moved.
     My figure somersaulted five meters from the Feds. The
    Molts were less awkward in their flexible pressure suits,
    but only a few of them carried firearms. The humans
    aimed for another volley, and I couldn't do a damned
    thing but spin since I wasn't touching anything I could
    push off from.

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     315
    
    d           I hurled my cutting bar at the Fed in a parcel-gilt hard
    h         suit pointing a rifle at me. A flashgun pulse flickered
              through his faceshield and ruptured his skull within. The
              bolt might have reflected harmlessly if it had struck his
              metal armor.
                I unhooked the spare bar from my waist. Feds turned,
              flailing and throwing equipment in order to get behind the
              central shaft again.
                Piet floated in the companionway hatch. His knees
              clasped the coaming to steady him against his car-
              bine's recoil. He stripped a fresh clip into the maga-
              zine. Stephen's reloaded flashgun exploded a Molt who
              came on with a cutting bar when his human officers
              fled.
                I tried to brake myself against the ceiling with my left
              hand. The arm moved, but not properly. My field of
              view spread into a line of infinite length and no height
              or width.
                Consuming fire shrank to no more than normal pain.
              Stephen caught my elbow and pulled me to his side. He'd
              wedged a boot into the plumbing beneath an ornamental
              wall fountain.
                Piet had backed within the companionway. I heard him
              on the intercom, calling, "Oriflammes to Deck Eight! Ori-
              flammes to Deck Eight! We hold the stairhead, but they'll
              regroup in a moment!"
                Each deck of the Keys to the Kingdom was a Faraday
              cage. The metal construction acted as a barrier impene-
              trable to radio propagation. If any Venerians happened to
              be in the companionway shaft-also a metal enclosure-
              they could hear Piet's summons. Perhaps they'd even be
              able to answer it; though not, I thought, in time to make
              a difference.
                "Christ's blood, Jeremy," Stephen said in a tone of
              laughing wonder. "Did you do all this yourself?"
                My vision had wobbled in and out of focus since I tried
              to use my left an-n. Until Stephen spoke, I hadn't really
              looked at anything. The lounge was-
                The lounge was very like what I'd passed through in
              the Oriflamme's midships compartment a lifetime ago.

    




                 316            David Drake
    
                 The bodies floating here were whole, or nearly whole.
                 The head, arm, and torso-with-legs of a Molt had floated
                 back together in a monstrous juxtaposition.
                 There may have been twenty corpses. It was impossible
                 to be sure. I didn't remember killing that many.
                   "I suppose," I said.
                 There was so much blood. I dragged the back of my
                 right gauntlet across my visor. Again, I suppose. I didn't
                 remember doing that before either, though I must have.
                 The ceramic dragged fresh furrows across the brown-red
                 haze that dimmed my sight. I needed a wiping rag.
                 "Well, it's time to do some more," Stephen said. He
                 aimed his flashgun toward a barricade of mattresses float-
                 ing around the right-hand curve of the central column.
                 "That's mine," I said and launched myself toward the
                 Feds.
                 They were coming from, both directions this time. Three
                 Molts wearing breastplates and carrying rifles swept out
                 from the left. The flashgun lit the walls behind me as I
                 slid blade-first toward the bedding from nearby suites.
                 Out of the comer of my eye I caught Piet's figure diving
                 across the lounge. To get an angle from which to shoot,
                 I supposed, but I had enough to occupy me.
                 The Feds had stacked three mattresses like a layer cake
                 on end. The spun-cellulose filling wouldn't stop a bullet,
                 but we couldn't see through it and it would absorb the
                 bolt of a monopulse laser like Stephen's without any fuss
                 or bother.
                 I ripped the mattresses and the pair of Molts pushing
                 them with a deliberately shallow stroke. The bedding
                 didn't affect my cutting blade, but it would've bound my
                 arm if I'd let it.
                 The Molts sprang away. One of them was trying to hold
                 the segments of his plastron together; the other didn't have
                 arms below the second joint.
                 Two human officers in hard suits, and a gunner wearing
                 quilted asbestos with an air helmet, followed the Molts.
    91 1W        They'd been poised for attack over or around their bar-
                 ricade. I came through the middle of it with a backhand
                 stroke and a cloud of severed fiber.

    




                            OPP-
    
               THROUGH THE BREACH     317
    
     The gunner shot at me and missed, though the muzzle
    blast punched the side of my helmet. I stabbed him where
    his collarbone met the breastbone, then cut toward the
    officer on my right. She got her rifle up to block me.
    My edge showered sparks from where the barrel mated
    with the receiver.
     The second officer put the muzzle of his rifle to my
    head. Everything was white light because Piet fired the
    carriage gun wedged into the bulkhead nearby.
     This deck was sealed except for the shafts in the center.
    If the 10-cm cannon had been fired perpendicularly into
    the hull at this range, it would have blown a hole in the
    plating; but the Keys' hull was thick, and the gun's muzzle
    was caught at an acute angle to the curve.
     The slug of ions glanced around the inner surface of
    the hull: expanding, dissipating, and vaporizing everything
    in its immediate path into a dense, silvery shock wave.
    None of the internal bulkheads survived. Those closest to
    the muzzle became a gaseous secondary projectile which
    flattened partitions farther away.
     The cannon wasn't clamped into deck mountings. It
    recoiled freely against the thrust of ions accelerated to
    light speed, tumbling muzzle over cascabel to meet the
    shock wave plasma-driven in the opposite direction.
     The barrel finally came to rest not far from where Piet
    had fired the gun. Bits of the carriage still tumbled in
    complex trajectories. Dents from the tonnes of stellite
    pocked the hull plating.
     Stephen had dodged back into the armored compan-
    ionway. He lost his flashgun and the satchels of spare
    batteries he'd worn, but otherwise he was uninjured.
     Piet survived because he was as far as possible from
    the ricocheting course of the plasma slug. The shock wave
    tumbled him, but the Oriflamme's gunners had taken a
    worse battering and survived-most of them-when a
    similar bolt pierced our hull.
     And I survived. I was out of the direct line of the plasma
    and swathed in mattresses besides. Everything went white;
    then I was drifting free on a deck from which all the
    internal lighting had been scoured. A Venerian focused a

    




                  318            David Drake
    
                  miniflood on me. Piet Ricimer caught me by the ankle and
                  pulled me with him back to the companionway. I hadn't
                  even lost my cutting bar.
                  I can't imagine the Lord wanted me to survive after
                  what I'd done, but I survived.
                  Maybe some Feds in full hard suits were still alive.
                  Bulkheads, furniture, weapons, and bodies-all the matter
                  that had existed on Deck Eight was still there in the form
                  of tumbled debris that could conceal a regiment. If there
                  were any survivors, they were too stunned to call attention
                  to themselves.
                  There were six of us now. Stephen led the way up the
                  helical stairs, holding a cutting bar of Federation manu-
                  facture. Strip lights in the shaft still functioned. The sharp
                  shadows they threw without a scattering atmosphere acted
                  as disruptive camouflage.
                  A fireball burped into the shaft from a lower deck, then
                  vanished as suddenly. Fighting was still going on below.
                  The companionway opened into a circular room on
                  the bridge deck. There were four shafts in all. A bullet
                  ricocheted up one, hit the domed ceiling, and fell back
                  down another as a shimmer of silver.
                  Two inward-opening hatches on opposite sides of the
                  antechamber gave onto the bridge proper. Against the
                  bulkhead were lockers and, at the cardinal points between
                  the hatches, communications consoles with meter-square
                  displays.
                  A sailor pulled open a locker. Emergency stores spilled
                  out: first-aid kits, emergency bubbles, flares.
                  Dole tried a hatch. It was locked from the other side.
                  The left half of the bosun's armor was dull black, as
                  though the surfaces had been sprayed with soot.
                  "Jeremy, can you get us through-" Stephen said, bobb-
                  ing his helmet toward the hatch.
                    "Yes," I said, kneeling. The bulkhead was of hull metal,
                  not duraluminum, but it couldn't be solid and still contain
    oil           the necessary conduits.
                  Wait,"-said Piet. He stepped to a console and toggled
                  it live. The screen brightened with a two-level panorama
    jit           of the circular bridge. Inside-
     mill

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     319
    
     Four heavily-armed figures sexless in plated armor;
    five human sailors without weapons, armor, or breathing
    apparatus; three Molts, also unprotected and seated at
    navigation consoles; and a startlingly beautiful blonde
    woman in a sweep of fabric patterned like snakeskin,
    with jeweled combs in her hair.
     Piet pressed his faceplate to the console's input micro-
    phone. "Commodore Prothero!" he said, shouting to be
    heard through the jury-rigged vocal pathway. "We're sea]-
    ing this deck. Put down your weapons and surrender.
    There's no need for more people to die."
     With time I could have linked the console to our inter-
    com channel. There wasn't time; and besides, I couldn't
    see very well. I tried to wipe my visor again, but neither
    of my hands moved.
     Dole and two other spacers were closing the compan-
    ionway shafts. The hatches were supposed to rotate out
    of the deck, but long disuse had warped them into their
    housings. The bosun cursed and hammered the lip of a
    panel with his bootheel to free it.
     Prothero would be the squat figure in gilded armor.
    Impervious to laser flux, but Stephen didn't have his
    flashgun any more. Prothero and his three henchmen
    spoke among themselves.
     They must have been using external speakers instead of
    radio. We couldn't hear them through the bulkhead, but
    the blonde screamed and one of the unprotected spacers
    launched himself at Prothero when he heard the plan.
     Prothero clubbed the man aside with a steel forearm.
    "Get us through!" Piet shouted.
     1 drew the tip of my bar down the bulkhead, cutting
    a centimeter deep. The sparkling metal roostertail was
    heated yellow but unable to oxidize in a vacuum.
     Two more Fed spacers grappled with their officers. One
    of Prothero's henchmen blew them clear of his fellows
    with shotgun blasts, and Prothero himself pulled open the
    hatch beside me.
     I rose, thrusting. Prothero fired a weapon with a needle
    bore and a detachable magazine for cartridges the size of
    bananas. The flechette struck the blade of my cutting bar.

    




    320           David Drake
    
    Bar and projectile disintegrated in a white-hot osmium/ce-
    ramic spray.
     I smashed the bar's grip into Prothero's faceshield.
    Red and saffron muzzle flashes shocked the corners of
    my vision. I could hear the shots as muffled drumbeats
    while the atmosphere flooded from the bridge to the open
    antechamber.
     I couldn't hold Prothero with my left hand, but I wrapped
    my legs around his waist and I kept hitting him, even after
    the faceshield collapsed and the mist of blood dissipated
    and nothing was moving but my gauntlet, pumping up and
    down like the blade of a metronome. They say after that
    I tried to inflate an emergency bubble around one of the
    Fed spacers. I couldn't manage that, because my left arm
    didn't work and anyway, it was too late.
     I don't remember that. I don't remember anything but
    the red mist

    




                  LIMBO
    
    A Place Out of Time
    
    I lay at the edge of existence, and the demons wheeled
    above my soul.
     "The controls weren't damaged," said the first demon.
    "Guillermo's interviewing the surviving Molts for a sup-
    port crew. When he's done, I'll set her down on St.
    Lawrence."
     "Rakoscy's on his way over. Stampfer's setting up an
    infirmary for him on Deck Two," said the second demon.
    "They're dumping cargo into space to make room." Then
    he said, "So much blood."
     "What we did was necessary!" said the first demon in
    a voice like trumpets. "If we're to stop tyrants like Pleyal
    and butchers like his Commodore Prothero, then there was
    no choice. When the Oriflamme gets home, she'll bring
    freedom a step closer for the whole universe."
      We're not home yet," said the second demon, though
    he"didn't sound as if he cared.
     "We'll get back," said the first demon. "It's a long run,
    another ninety days or more. But there's nothing between
    here and Betaport to fear, save the will of God."
     "I figured we'd seal the prisoners on Deck Six once
    we've swept it for weapons," the second demon said. "I
    suppose I ought to go take charge, but I'm so tired."
     "Dole has it under control," said the first demon. I felt
    his shadow pass over me. "I wish Rakoscy would get here.
    I'm afraid to take his suit off myself."
     "There's enough treasure on the Oriflamme," said the
    second demon, "to run the Federation government for a
    
                     321
    
                      ........    ...

    




               322            David Drake
    
               decade. Governor Halys will never give it up ... but when
               she doesn't, there'll be all-out war between Venus and the
               Federation."
                 "It will be as the Lord wills," said the first demon.
               My mind drifted from limbo to absolute blackness.
               Sinking into the embracing dark, I knew that I'd been
               listening to Piet and Stephen on the bridge of the ship
               we'd captured. They were no more demons than I was.
               and no less.
                 The black turned red as blood.
    
    JU

    




           BETAPORT, VENUS
    
    122 Days After Landing
    
    "Ah, Cedric," said Councilor Duneen. "Let me introduce
    you to Jeremy Moore. Moore of Rhadicund. Jeremy, this
    is Factor Read, a businessman who understands the value
    of a strong navy."
     I shook hands with a man younger than me. His eyes
    never stopped moving. They flicked over the withered arm
    strapped to my side, then back to my face without even a
    pause. Read's grip was firm.
     "Jeremy will be marrying my sister Melinda this fall,
    as you may have heard," Duneen continued. "I've found
    him a townhouse near ours in the capital."
     "The Moore who. . ." Read said, nodding toward the
    Oriflamme in her storage berth. Though he was shouting,
    I had to watch his lips to be sure of the words. None of
    the heavy machinery was operating today, but the big dock
    rang with laughter and hawkers' calls.
     "Yes, as it happens," I said. I've seen snakes with more
    warmth in their eyes than Read had, but if reports were
    true he was the richest man in the Ishtar Highlands. The
    sort of fellow I'd need to cultivate in my new position as
    aide to Councilor Duneen, but for now ...
     "Councilor," I said, "Factor Read? Pardon me if you
    would, because I see some shipmates."
     Duneen clapped me on the shoulder. "You can do any-
    thing you like here, my boy. You're the stars here today!"
     It was the politic thing for the Councilor to say, since he
    didn't want a row in front of Read and Read's entourage.
    I had the feeling that he meant it, though.
    
                     323

    




             324            David Drake
    
     There were as many folk around Piet and Stephen as
    there were with Read and Duneen, but some of those
    pressing for contact with the General Commander were
    magnates themselves. Mere money couldn't earn the sort
    d
             of fawning adulation Piet had now.
             Though he had the money as well, of course. The
             lowliest member of the Oriflamme's crew had enough
             wealth to amaze, for example, a Betaport ship-chandler
             in a comfortable way of business.
             Folk made way for me. Some of them recognized me-
             "Factor Moore," with a nod; broad, smiling, "Jeremy,
             good to see you again!"-and some did not, only knew
             what they saw on my face, but they all made way.
    j          I came up behind a man named Brush. He controlled
             his niece's estate until she married; an event he was
             determined should not be before its time. A court toady,
             not as young as he wished he was, who pitched schemes
             to the unwary. "You know, Gregg," he said to Stephen,
             "a friend of mine has a business opportunity that might
             be the sort of thing that you want -now that, you know,
             you're back."
             Stephen looked past Brush to me, then back to the
             courtier. "Well, Brush," he said in a bantering voice. "It's
             like this. I'm young, I'm rich, I'm well born. I can do
             absolutely anything that I want to do. So that means-"
             He smiled. Brush stepped back, then bounced forward
             from my chest like a steel ball shuttling between electro-
             magnets.
             -that the thing I've been doing is what I really want."
             Brush vanished into the crowd. I touched Stephen's
             arm. I've never heard anything more stark than his words
             of a moment before.
             Piet waved himself clear with both hands and a broad
             grin, turning to us. He was dressed in a suit of crimson silk
             slashed with a natural fiber from Mantichore. It looked
             like copper or shimmering gold depending on the angle
             of the light.
             Piet touched the miniature oriflamme on my collar.
             "Well enough for now," he said with a grin, "but Duneen
             will be wearing your colors before long, Jeremy."
    
                                                   Am

    




                 Now-
    
               THROUGH THE BREACH     325
    
     "The Councilor could do worse," Stephen said in the
    light tone that made strangers think he was joking.
    "Jeremy has a way of finding routes through unfamiliar
    systems."
     I've heard Stephen's jokes, and they're not the sort of
    thing that others smile at.
     There was a stir at the entrance to the storage dock.
    Governor Halys was entering with over a hundred courti-
    ers afid attendants. Her spot in the assemblage was marked
    by six members of the Governor's Guard in black hard
    suits, though the governor herself was hidden.
     "Won't be long now," Piet said. For a moment we three
    were in a reverie, walled off by memories from the voices
    clamoring around us, at us.
     "Hard to believe the ship made it home," said Stephen.
    "Or that we did either, of course."
     I followed his eyes to the Oriflamme and for the first
    time saw her as she'd become on our voyage. Her bow and
    stem were twisted onto slightly different axes. I remem-
    bered Winger complaining about thruster alignment.
     We hadn't replaced the forward ramp. The hull was
    daubed with a dozen muddy colors, remnants of refur-
    bishing with the materials available on as many worlds.
    We'd had to recoat completely on St. Lawrence after the
    battle, but the russet sand hadn't bonded well to some of
    the earlier patches. On Tres Palmas we'd taken much of
    the stern down to the frames and tried again.
     The Oriflamme leaked. Air through the hull, water from
    two of the reaction-mass tanks. All the living spaces were
    damp during the last three weeks of the voyage. Winger
    was afraid to run the nozzles from 17 Abraxis on more
    than eighty percent thrust, but they were better than the
    replacements we found on Fowler, so we switched them
    back again for the last leg.
     I think Piet must have had the same revelation. "To
    God, all things are possible," he said. "But some aren't-"
     He squeezed us by opposite shoulders.
     "-as probable as others, I agree."
     The Governor's entourage paused while Councilor Du-
    neen and other high dignitaries joined it. When the court

    




    Bit         326            David Drake
    
                resumed its progress, attendants began herding a group
                of bizarrely-dressed, worried-lookin sailors aboard the
                9
                Oriflamme. Money hadn't given them either taste or con-
                fidence in a setting like this one.
                "I think it's unfair that a mob of scruffs should be given
                places and T be refused!" said a slender, perfectly-dressed
                woman, as straight as a rifle barrel and as gray.
                I moved and Stephen grabbed me because he knew what
                I knew, and what the other sixty-odd survivors knew; and
                what nobody else in the universe would ever know.
                "They were good enough to accompany me through
                the Breach, madame," Piet said. "They will accompany
                me now."
                He didn't shout, but he spoke in a tone that cut this
                clamor as it had that of so many battles. Everyone for
                twenty meters heard, and the woman melted away from
                his eyes.
                Piet laughed. "Stephen, Jeremy," he said. "I need to
                take my place, I suppose. See you soon."
                He arrowed through the mob, heading for the Gover-
                nor's Guard.
                Stephen said, "Piet believes that God is aiding us to
                do His will. I don't know what God's will is. But I don't
                suppose what I know matters."
                e oo at me and added, "I thought we might see
                your fianc6e here, Jeremy."
                I shrugged with adrenaline nervousness and smiled.
                "No," I said, "no. I asked Melinda not to come. I don't
                want to connect her-in my mind. With this. I'd as soon
                the Councilor weren't here, but he had to be, of course."
                  I smiled again. The lip muscles didn't work any better
                the second time. I gripped Stephen's shoulder. "Stephen,
                listen," I said. "It happened, it can't ever not have hap-
     Eli        pened now. But it's over. We can go on!"
                "I'm glad it's over for you, Jeremy," Stephen said.
                He plucked gently at my sleeve, filling the fabric he'd
                crumpled when he kept me from breaking a woman's
                neck with my one good hand. "I was afraid for a time
                that you were one of those it wouldn't be over for."
                  He smiled. "I'm responsible for you, you know."

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     327
    
              I blinked so that I wouldn't cry. "Let's get aboard," I
              said loudly, turning toward the ship.
              The crowd cheered as it parted to let us board the
              Oriflamme. There in a few minutes we would watch the
              governor's investiture of a potter's whelp from Bahama
              District as Factor Ricimer of Porcelain.
    
    S
    I'
    
    t

    




    fill

    




                         __4
    
                            0
    
     David Drakes many previous books in-
    clude Surface Action, Birds of Prey, and
    the Northworld series-not to overlook
    his collaborations with Janet Morris and
    S. M.' Stirling, his contributions to the
    Thieves' World' universe, and to The Fleet
    and Battlestation series. He is probably
    best known for his novel Hammer's Slam-
    mers, one of the classics of military
    science fiction, and the acclaimed 1994
    novel, Igniting the Reaches.
     Widely praised for his knowledge and
    understanding of military operations,
    Drake is a veteran of the only indepen-
    dent armored regiment assigned to Viet-
    nam. Equally at home in fantasy or
    science fiction, an enthusiastic student of
    ancient history and classical literature,
    David Drake is one of today's most popu-
    lar and versatile writers. He lives in North
    Carolina, where he walks his dogs and
    feeds sunflower seeds to the birds.
    
                       Jacket design by DAVID S. RHEINHARDT
                         Jacket painting by BRUCE JENSEN
                                Copyright OP 1995
    
                              AN ACE SCIENCE FICTION
                                 AND FANTASY BOOK
                           The Berkley Publishing Group
                                200 Madison Avenue
                                New York, NY 10016
                                       4/95
                                     
    
    




                  NEWCASTLE REGION LIBRARY
    
                   3 2300 00329181 8
                     L.f LA v i LA U I U &V
    
       "One of the most gifted users of military raw material at work
              today in science fiction. "
                   -Chicago Sun-Times
    
             "One of those rare authors who seem capable of switching
            from one mode of writing to another, hard science to near
         future political thriller to high fantasy with a smooth meshing
                                    of gears."
                            -Science Fiction Chronicle
    
                             Praise for David Drake's
                              Igniting the Reaches:
  'A cleverly set up, Poul Anderson-style reprise of the early Elizabethan
          period, when 'tradd and 'piracy' were synonymous...
          Enormously entertaining!"
                                   -Detroit News
      "Drake uses military language fluently to create vivid combat scenes."
                                -Publishers Weekly
    "Hard-hitting adventure ... a tale that will appeal to fans of military SF."
                                 -Library Journal
    
                                5 19 9 5 >
    
                  9 780441 001712
    
                   ISBN 0-441-001?1-8
    

    




    7
    
                      BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF HAMMER'S SLAMMERS
                              AND IGNITING THE REACHES
                                       GH
             BRfAcff
    
         DAVID 0 BAK[

    




                     ISBN 0-441-00171-8
                               > $19.95
                         (> *25.95 CAN)
              THROUGH
                    T R E
               RRfACH
         David Drake's acclaimed novel Hammer's
         Slarnmers is considered one of the classics
         of military science fiction. In his 1994
         novel, Igniting the Reaches, he took us on
         an epic journey to. the farthest reaches of
         space where pirates ruled a new age of
        *expansion and opportunity. Now, Drake
         returns to that world, a universe of untold
         possibility, wealth, and danger..
    
         Their mission is called the Venus Asteroid
         Expedition, but it has little to do with legiti-
         mate trade. General Commander Piet
         Ricimer and Stephen Gregg are leading an
         armada of four ships from the relatively
         civilized clouds of Venus out beyond the
         orbit of Pluto, deep into the Reaches where
         trade and piracy are one and the some-
         and expedited with a gun.
    
         Their destination is the Mirror, an impene-
         trable membrane covering another universe
         -0 universe where all the riches of the
         Federation are held in ports, ripe for plun-
         dering. There is only one place where the
         expedition can cross the Mirror, a weak-
         ened point known as LandolpHs Breach. The
         last one to pass through was Landolph
         himself ... over eighty years ago. And most
         of his men never returned...
  MENIMMut the war with the Federation. is raging,
          and the glory of Venus is at hand. Ricimer
          and Gregg are going forward into the
          hands of fate, going to claim the wealth and
          glory that is theirs to take ... going hell-bent
          and full speed ahead through the Breach...

    




           TT It E
    HROUGH
    BRfAulff

    




    Aw
                         Ace Books by David Drake
    
                                HAMMER'S SLAMMERS
                                      DAGGER
                                  SURFACE ACTION
                                   NORTHWORLD,
                             NORTHWORLD 2: VENGEANCE
                              NORTHWORLD 3: JUSTICE
                               IGNITING THE REACHES
                                THROUGH THE BREACH
    
                   Ace Books by David Drake and Janet Morris
    
                                    KILL RATIO
                                      TARGET
    
                 Ace Books Edited by David Drake and Bill Fawcett
    
                            The Fleet Series
    
                                    THE FLEET
                                  COUNTERATTACK
                                   BREAKTHROUGH
                                   SWORN ALLIES
                                    TOTAL WAR
                                      CRISIS
    
                          The BattleStation Series
    
                                  BATTLESTATION
                                     VANGUARD
                                     
    
    




                              T If E
    
    tt
    
                    DAVID DRAK[
    
                                N E V! f, S Ir L 77.
    
                                    MAY 1995
    
                             ACE BOOKS, NEW YORK
             THROUGH
                     BRfArlff

    




                     -Nunn--
    
    THROUGH THE BREACH
    
    An Ace Book
    Published by The Berkley Publishing Group
    200 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    
    Copyright (D 1995 by David Drake.
    
    All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced
    in any form without permission.
    First Edition: April 1995
    Library of Congress Catalogi ng-i n-Publ i cation Data
    Drake, David.
     Through the breach / David Drake.-Ist ed.
      P. cm.
     ISBN 0-441-00171-8 : $19.95
     1. Title.
    PS3554.RI96T47 1995             94-25744
    813'.54---dc2O                      CIP
    
    Printed in the United States of America
    
    10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 21

    




                           To Allyn Vogel
    
                     Most of my friends are smart, competent,
                        and unfailingly helpful to me when
                      I need it. Allyn is all those things.
                 She is also a gentle and genuinely good person,
                    which puts her in a much smaller category.
    
    ed
    
    144
     IP
 
    
    





    




           BETAPORT, VENUS
    
    7 Days Before Sailing
    
    "Mister Jeremy Moore," announced the alien slave as he
    ushered me into the private chamber of the Blue Rose
    Tavern. The public bar served as a waiting room and
    hiring hall for the Venus Asteroid Expedition, while Gen-
    eral Commander Piet Ricimer used the back room as an
    office.
     I'd heard that the aide now with Ricimer, Stephen
    Gregg, was a conscienceless killer. My first glimpse of
    the man was both a relief and a disappointment. Gregg
    was big, true; but he looked empty, no more dangerous
    than a suit of ceramic armor waiting for someone to put
    it on. Blond and pale, Gregg could have been handsome
    if his features were more animated.
     Whereas General Commander Ricimer wasn't ...
    pretty, say, the way women enough have found me, but
    the fire in the man's soul gleamed through every atom of
    his physical person. Ricimer's glance and quick smile
    were genuinely friendly, while Gregg's more lingering
    appraisal was ...
     Maybe Stephen Gregg wasn't as empty as I'd first
    thought.
     "Thank you, Guillermo," said Ricimer. "Has Captain
    Macquerie arrived?"
     Not yet," the slave replied. "I'll alert you when he
    does." Guillermo's diction was excellent, though his
    tongueless mouth clipped the sibilant. He closed the
    door behind him, shutting out the bustle of the pub-
    lic bar.

    




    2             David Drake
    
     Guillermo was a chitinous biped with a triangular face
    and a pink sash-of-office worn bandolier fashion over one
    shoulder. I'd never been so close to a Molt slave before.
    There weren't many in the Solar System and fewer still
    on Venus. Their planet of origin was unknown, but their
    present province was the entire region of space mankind
    had colonized before the Collapse.
     Molts remained and prospered on worlds from which
    men had vanished. Now, with man's return to the stars, the
    aliens' racial memory made them additionally valuable:
    Molts could operate the pre-Collapse machinery which
    survived on some outworlds.
     "Well, Mister Moore," Ricimer said. "What are your
    qualifications for the Asteroid Expedition?"
     "Well, I've not myself been involved in off-planet trade,
    sir," I said, trying to look earnest and superior, "but I'm a
    gentleman, you see, and thus an asset to any proposal. My
    father-may he continue well-is Moore of Rhadicund.
    Ah-"
     The two spacemen watched me: Ricimer with amuse-
    ment, Gregg with no amusement at all. I didn't understand
    their coolness. I'd thought this was the way to build
    rapport, since Gregg was a gentleman also, member of a
    factorial family, and Ricimer at least claimed the status.
     "Ah . . ." I repeated. Carefully, because the subject could
    easily become a can of worms, I went on, "I've been a
    member of the household of Councilor Duneen--chief
    advisor to the Governor of the Free State of Venus."
     "We know who Councilor Duneen is, Mister Moore,"
    Ricimer said dryly. "We'd probably know of him even if
    he weren't a major backer of the expedition."
     The walls of the room were covered to shoulder height
    in tilework. The color blurred upward from near black at
    floor level to smoky gray shot with wisps of silver. The
    ceiling and upper walls were coated with beige sealant that
    might well date from the tavern's construction.
     The table behind which Ricimer and Gregg sat-they
    hadn't offered me a chair-was probably part of the tayern
    furnishings. The communications console in a back corner
    was brand-new. The cera m-ic chassis marked the console

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH       3
    
              as of Venerian manufacture, since an off-planet unit would
              have been made. of metal or organic resin instead, but its
              electronics were built from chips stockpiled on distant
              worlds where automated factories continued to produce
              even after the human colonies perished.
               Very probably, Piet Ricimer himself had brought those
              chips to Venus on an earlier voyage. Earth, with a popula-
              tion of twenty millions after the Collapse, had returned to
              space earlier than tiny Venus. Now that all planets outside
              the Solar System were claimed by the largest pair of ram-
              shackle Terran states, the North American Federation and
              the Southern Cross, other men traded beyond Pluto only
              with one hand on their guns.
               Piet Ricimer and his cohorts had kept both hands on
              their guns, and they traded very well indeed. Whatever
              the cover story-Venus and the Federation weren't techni-
              cally at war-the present expedition wasn't headed for the
              Asteroid Belt to bring back metals that Venus had learned
              to do without during the Collapse.
               I changed tack. I'd prepared for this interview by trad-
              ing my floridly expensive best suit for clothing of more
              sober cut and material, though I'd have stayed with the
              former's purple silk plush and gold lace if the garments
              had fit my spare frame just a little better. The suit had
              been a gift from a friend whose husband was much more
              portly, and there's a limit to what alterations can accom-
              plish.
               "I believe it's the duty of every man on Venus," I said
              loudly, "to expand our planet's trade beyond the orbit
              of Pluto. We owe this to Venus and to God. The duty
              is particularly upon those like the three of us who are
    t         members of factorial families."
               I struck the defiant pose of a man ashamed of the
              strength of his principles. I'd polished the expression over
              years of explaining-to women-why honor forbade me
              to accept money from my father, the factor. In truth, the
    Y         little factory of Rhadicund in Beta Regio had been aban-
    n         doned three generations before, and the family certainly
    ,r
              hadn't prospered in the governor's court the way my
    ,e        grandfather had hoped.

    




    4             David Drake
    
     Piet Ricimer's face stilled. It took me a moment to
    realize how serious a mistake I'd made in falsely claiming
    an opinion which Ricimer felt as strongly as he hoped for
    salvation.
     Stephen Gregg stretched his arm out on the table before
    Ricimer, interposing himself between his friend and a
    problem that the friend needn't deal with. Gregg wasn't
    angry. Perhaps Gregg no longer had the capacity for anger
    or any other human emotion.
     "About the manner of your leaving Councilor Duneen's
    service, Moore," Gregg said. He spoke quietly, his voice
    cat-playful. "A problem with the accounts, was there?"
     I met the bigger man's eyes. What I saw there shocked
    me out of all my poses, my calculations. "My worst
    enemies have never denied that their purse would be safe
    in my keeping," I said flatly. "There was a misunderstand-
    ing about a woman of the household. As a gentleman---2'
     My normal attitudes were reasserting themselves. I
    couldn't help it.
         can say no more."
     The Molt's three-fingered hand tapped on the door.
    "Captain Macquerie has arrived, sir."
     "You have no business here, Mister Jeremy Moore,"
    Gregg said. He rose. to his feet. Gregg moved with a
    slight stiffness which suggested that more than his soul
    had been scarred beyond Pluto; but surely his soul as
    well. "There'll be no women where we're going. While
    there may be opportunities for wealth, it won't be what
    one would call easy money."
     "Good luck in your further occupations, Mister Moore,"
    Ricimer said. "Guillermo, please show in Captain Mac-
    querie."
     Ricimer and his aide were no more than my own age,
    27 Earth years. In this moment they seemed to be from a
    different generation.
     "Good day, gentlemen," I said. I bowed and stepped
    quickly from the room as a squat fellow wearing coveralls
    and a striped neckerchief entered. Macquerie moved N~ith
    the gimballed grace of a spacer who expects the deck to
    shift beneath him at any moment.

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH       5
    
                I knew that arguing with Ricimer and Gregg wouldn't
               have gained me anything. I knew also that Mister Stephen
               Gregg would literally just as soon kill me as look at me.
               There were more than thirty men in the tavern's public
    [a         room-and one woman, a spacer's wife engaged in a
    It         low-voiced but obviously acrimonious attempt to drag her
               husband away. The noise of the crowd blurred whenever
               the outer door opened onto Dock Street and its heavy
    Is         traffic.
    ~e          I pushed my way to one comer of the bar, my prog-
               ress aided somewhat by the fact I was a gentleman-
    , ~d       but only somewhat. Betaport was more egalitarian than
    rst        Ishtar City, the capital; and spacers are a rough lot any-
    ~e         where.
                The tapster drew beer and took payment with an effi-
               ciency that seemed more fluid than mechanical. His eyes
               were sleepy, but the fashion in which he chalked a tab
               or held out his free hand in a silent demand for scrip
               before he offered the glass showed he was fully aware
               of his surroundings.
                I opened my purse and took out the 10-Mapleleaf coin.
    e,5)       That left me only twenty Venerian consols to live on for
    i a        the next week, but I'd find a way. Eloise, I supposed. I
    oul        hadn't planned to see her again after the problem with her
               maid, but she'd come around.
    as
    lile        "Barman," I said crisply. "I want the unrestricted use
               of your phone, immediately and for the whole of the
    ,hat       afternoon."
    re,"        I rang the coin on the rippling blue translucence of the
    Iac-       bar's ceramic surface.
                The barman's expression sharpened into focus. He took
    age,       the edges of the coin between the thumb and index fingers
    rn a       of his right hand, turning it to view both sides. "Where'd
               you get Fed money?" he demanded.
    )ped        "Gambling with an in-system trader on the New Troy
    ralls      run," I said truthfully. "Now, if you don't want the  IF.
    with       coin. .
    .k to       That was a bluff-I needed this particular phone for
               what I intended to do.

    




    6             David Drake
    
     The tapster shrugged. He had neither cause nor inten-
    tion to refuse, merely a general distaste for strangers; and
    perhaps for gentlemen as well. He flipped up the gate in
    the bar so that I could slip through to the one-piece phone
    against the wall.
     "It's local net only," the tapster warned. "I'm not con-
    nected to the planetary grid."
     "Local's what I want," I said.
     Very local indeed. The tool kit on my belt looked like a
    merchant's papersafe. I took from it a device of my own
    design and construction.
     The poker game three weeks before had been with
    a merchant/captain and three of his officers, in a sail-
    ors' tavern in Ishtar City. The four spacers were using
    a marked deck. If I'd complained or even tried to leave
    the game, they would have beaten me within an inch of
    my life.
     The would-be sharpers had thought I was wealthy and
    a fool; and were wrong on both counts, They let me win
    for the first two hours. The money I'd lived on since the
    game came from that pump priming. Much of it was in
    Federation coin.
     The captain and his henchmen ran the betting up and
    cold-decked me, their pigeon. I weepingly threw down a
    huge roll of Venerian scrip and staggered out of the tavern.
    I'd left Ishtar City for Betaport before the spacers realized
    that I'd paid them in counterfeit-and except for the top
    bill, very poor counterfeit.
     I attached to the phone module's speaker a contact
    transducer which fed a separate keypad and an earpiece.
    The tapster looked at me and said, "Hey! What d'ye think
    you're doing?"
     "What I paid you for the right to do," I said. I pivoted
    deliberately so that my body blocked the tapster's view of
    what I was typing on the keypad-not that it would have
    meant anything to the fellow.
     On my third attempt at the combination, the plug in
    my ear said in Piet Ricimer's voice, " . . . not just as a
    Venerian patriot, Captain Macquerie. All mankind needs
    you.

    




       RL
    
                               THROUGH THE BREACH 7
    The communications console in the private room was
    patched into the tavem's existing phone line. The com
    mands I sent through the line converted Ricimer's own
    electronics into a listening device. I could have accessed
    the console from anywhere in Betaport, but not as quickly
    as I needed to hear the interview with Macquerie.
    "Look, Captain Ricimer," said an unfamiliar voice that
    must by elimination be Macquerie, "I'm flattered that
    you'd call for me the way you have, but I gave up voy
    aging to the Reaches when I married the daughter of my
    supplier on Cls Sertoes. Long runs are no life for a married
    man. From here on out, I'm shuttling my Bahia between
    Betaport and Buenos Aires."
    "We mean no harm to the Southern Cross," said Stephen
     Gregg. "Your wife's family won't be affected."
    With Macquerie, there was obviously no pretense that
    -the expedition had anything to do with asteroids. Cls Sertoes
    was little more than a name to me. I vaguely thought that it
    was one of the most distant Southern colonies, uninterest
    ing and without exports of any particular value.
    n"Look," said Macquerie, "you gentlemen've been to the
    Reaches yourself. You don't need me to pilot you-except
    dto Os Sertoes, and who'd want to go there? It's stuffed
    fight in the neck of the Breach, so the transit gradients
    won't let you go anywhere but back."
    "Captain," said Ricimer, "I wouldn't ask you if I didn't
    pbelieve I needed you. Venus must take her place in the
    greater universe. If most of the wealth of the outworlds
    ctcontinues to funnel into the Federation, President Pleyal
    e.will use it to impose his will on all men. VvFhether Pleyal
    succeeds or fails, the attempt will lead to a second Col
    lapse-one from which there'll be no returning. The Lord
    dcan't want that, nor can any man who fears Him."
    ofA chair scraped. "I'm sorry, gentlemen," Macquerie
    vesaid. His voice was subdued, but firm. Ricimer's enthu
    siasm had touched but not won the man. "If you really
    inneed a pilot for the Reaches, well-you can pick one up
    a on Punta Verde or Decades. But not me."
    dsThe door opened at the corner of my eye. The Molt
    standing there stepped aside as noise from the public

    




    8             David Drake
    
    bar boomed through the pickup on my earpiece. Captain
    Macquerie strode past, his face forming into a scowl of
    concern as he left the Blue Rose.
     "No one just yet, Guillermo," called Piet Ricimer, his
    words slightly out of synchrony as they reached my ears
    through different media.
     The door closed.
     "I could bring him along, you know," Gregg said calmly
    in the relative silence.
     "No," said Ricimer. "We won't use force against our
    own citizens, Stephen."
     "Then you'll have to feel your way into the Breach
    without help," Gregg said. "You know we won't find
    a pilot for Os Sertoes at any of the probable stopovers.
    There's not that much trade to the place."
     "Captain Macquerie may change his mind, Stephen,"
    Ricimer replied. "There's still a week before we lift."
     :'He won't," snapped Gregg. "He feels guilty, sure; but
    he s not going to give up all he has on a mad risk. And
    if he doesn't-what? The Lord will provide?"
     "Yes, Stephen," said Piet Ricimer. "I rather think He
    will. Though perhaps not for us as individuals, I'll admit."
     In a brighter, apparently careless voice, Ricimer went
    on, "Now, Guillermo has the three bidders for dried rations
    waiting outside. Shall we-"
     I quickly disconnected my listening device and slipped
    from behind the bar, keeping low. If Ricimer-or worse,
    Gregg-saw me through the open door, they might won-
    der why I'd stayed in the tavern after they dismissed me.
     "Hey!" called the barman to my back. "What is it you
    think you're doing, anyway?"
     I only wished I knew the answer myself.

    




           BETAPORT, VENUS
    
    6 Days Before Sailing
    
    The brimstone smell of Venus's atmosphere clung to the
    starships' ceramic hulls.
     Betaport's storage dock held over a hundred vessels,
    ranging in size from featherboats of under 20 tonnes to
    a bulk freighter of nearly 150. The latter vessel was as
    large as Betaport's domed transfer docks on the surface
    could accommodate for landings and launches.
     Many of the ships were laid up, awaiting parts or con-
    signment to the breakers' yard, but four vessels at one
    end of the cavernous dock bustled with the imminence of
    departure. The cylindrical hulls of two were already on
    roller-equipped cradles so that tractors could drag them
    to the transfer docks.
     I eyed the vessels morosely, knowing there was nothing
    in the sight to help me make up my mind. I'd familiarized
    myself with the vessels' statistics, but I wasn't a spacer
    whose technical expertise could judge the risks of an
    expedition by viewing the ships detailed for it.
     I supposed as much as anything I was forcing myself
    to think about what I intended to do. I rubbed my palms
    together with the fingers splayed and out of contact.
     A lowboy rumbled slowly past. It was carrying cannon
    to the expedition's flagship, the 100-tonne Porcelain. The
    hull of Ricimer's vessel gleamed white, unstained by the
    sulphur compounds which would bake on at first exposure
    to the Venerian atmosphere. She was brand-new, purpose-
    built for distant exploration. Her frames and hull plating
    were of unusual thickness for her burden.
    
                     9
    W,

    




    10            David Drake
    
     The four 15-cm plasma cannon on the lowboy were
    heavy guns for a 100-tonne vessel, and the Long Tom
    which pivoted to fire through any of five ports in the
    bow was a still-larger 17-cm weapon. The Porcelain's
    hull could take the shock of the cannons' powerful ther-
    monuclear explosions, but the guns' bulk filled much of
    the ship's internal volume. The most casual observer could
    see that the Porcelain wasn't fitting out for a normal trad-
    ing voyage.
     I ambled along the quay. Pillars of living rock supported
    the ceiling of the storage dock, but the huge volume wasn't
    subdivided by bulkheads. The sounds of men, machinery,
    and the working of the planetary mantle merged as a low-
    frequency hum that buffered me from my surroundings.
     The Absalom 231 was a cargo hulk: a ceramic box with
    a carrying capacity as great as that of the flagship. She
    was already in a transport cradle. Food and drink for
    the expedition filled the vessel's single cavernous hold.
    Lightly and cheaply built, the Absalom 231 could be
    stripped and abandoned when the supplies aboard her
    were exhausted.
     The expedition's personnel complement was set at a
    hundred and eighty men. I wondered how many of them,
    like the hulk, would be used up on the voyage.
     A bowser circled on the quay, heading back to the water
    point. Its huge tank had filled the Porcelain with reaction
    mass. I moved closer to the vessels to avoid the big ground
    vehicle. I walked on.
     The Kinsolving was a sharp-looking vessel of 80 tonnes.
    A combination of sailors and ground crew were loading
    sections of three knocked-down featherboats into her cen-
    tral bay. Though equipped with star drive, a 15-tonne
    featherboat's cramped quarters made it a hellish prison on
    a long voyage. The little vessels were ideal for short-range
    exploration from a central base, and they were far handier
    in an atmosphere than ships of greater size.
     What would it be like to stand on a world other than
    Venus? The open volume of the Betaport storage dock
    made me uncomfortable. What would it be like to walk
    under an open sky?

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH
    
     Why in God's name was I thinking of doing this?
     The last of the expedition's four vessels was the 80-
    tonne Mizpah, also in a transport cradle. She was much
    older than the Porcelain and the Kinsolving. Clearly-
    even to a layman like me-the Mizpah wasn't in peak
    condition.
     The Mizpah's main lock and boarding ramp amidships
    couldn't be used because of the transport cradle, but her
    personnel hatch forward stood open. On the hatch's inner
    surface, safe from reentry friction and corrosive atmos-
    pheres, were the painted blazons of her co-owners: the
    pearl roundel of Governor Halys, and the bright orange
    banderol-the oriflamme-of Councilor Frederic Duneen.
     The Mizpah wasn't an impressive ship in many ways,
    but she brought with her the overt support of the two
    most important investors on the planet. If nothing else,
    the Mizpah's participation meant the survivors wouldn't
    be hanged as pirates when they returned to Venus.
     If anyone survived. When I eavesdropped on the private
    discussion between Ricimer and Gregg, I'd heard enough
    to frighten off anyone sane.
     Thomas Hawtry-Factor Hawtry of Hawtry-stepped
    from the Mizpah's personnel hatch. Two generations
    before, Hawtry had been a name to reckon with. Thomas,
    active and ambitious to a fault, had mortgaged what
    remained of the estate in an attempt to recoup his
    family's influence by attaching himself to the great of
    the present day.
     He was a man I wanted to meet as little as I did any
    human being on Venus.
     Hawtry was large and floridly handsome, dressed now
    in a tunic of electric blue with silver lam6 trousers and
    calf-high boots to match the tunic. On his collar was a
    tiny oriflamme to indicate his membership in Councilor
    Duneen's household.
     Hawtry's belt and holster were plated. The pistol was
    for show, but I didn't doubt that it was functional none-
    theless.
     "Moore!" Hawtry cried, framed by the hatch coaming
    two paces away. Hawtry's face was blank for an instant

    




                 12            David Drake
    
    AW,         as the brain worked behind it. The Factor of Hawtry was
                a thorough politician; though not, in my opinion, subtle
                enough to be a very effective one.
                  "Jeremy!" Hawtry decided aloud, reforming his visage
                in a smile. "Say, I haven't had an opportunity to thank you
                for the way you covered me in the little awkwardness with.
                Lady Melinda."
                  He stepped close and punched me playfully on the
                shoulder, a pair of ladies' men sharing a risque memory.
                "Could have been ve-ry difficult for me. Say, I told my
    i4N         steward to pass you a little something to take the sting
                out. Did he. ' 1 9"
                  Lady Melinda was an attractive widow of 29 who lived
                with her brother-Councilor Duneen. Hawtry'd thought to
                use me as his go-between in the lady's seduction. 1, on the
                other hand-,
                  I would never have claimed I was perfect, but I liked
                women too much to lure one into the clutches of Thomas
                Hawtry. And as it turned out, I liked the Lady Melinda a
                great deal more than was sensible for a destitute member
                of the lesser gentry.
                  "Regrettably, I d ' idn't hear from your steward, Thom,",
                I said. No point in missing a target of opportunity. "And
                you know, I'm feeling a bit of a pinch right now. If-_2'
                  Not much of a target. "Aren't we all, Jeremy, aren't we
                all!" Hawtry boomed. "After I bring my expedition back,
                though, all my friends will live like kings! Say, you know
                about the so-called 'asteroids expedition,' don't you?"
                  He waved an arm toward the docked ships. A hydraulic
                pump began to squeal as it shifted the Absalom 231 in its
                cradle.
                  "Captain Ricimer's. . ." I said, hiding my puzzlement.
                  "And mine," said Hawtry, tapping himself on the breast
                significantly. "I'm co-leader, though we're keeping it quiet
                for the time being. A very political matter, someone of my
                stature in charge of a voyage like this."
                  Hawtry linked his arm familiarly with mine and began
                pacing back along the line of expedition vessels. His
                friendliness wasn't sincere. In the ten months I knew
                Hawtry intimately in the Duneen household, the man had

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH      13
    
    never been sincere about anything except his ambition and
    his self-love.
     But neither did Hawtry seem to be dissembling the hatred
    I'd expected. Irritated at his go-between's lack of progress
    and very drunk, Hawtry had forced the Lady Melinda's
    door on a night when her brother was out of the house.
    The racket brought the servants to the scene in numbers.
     1, the gentleman who was sharing the lady's bed that
    night, escaped in the confusion-but my presence hadn't
    gone unremarked. The greater scandal saved Hawtry from
    the consequences of his brutal folly, but I scarcely expected
    the fellow to feel grateful. Apparently Hawtry's embarrass-
    ment was so great that he'd recast the incident completely
    in his own mind.
     "I'm going to take the war to the Federation," Hawtry
    said, speaking loudly to be heard over the noise in the stor-
    age dock. He accompanied the words with broad gestures
    of his free hand. "And it is a war, you know. Nothing less
    than that!"
     A dozen common sailors examined the Porcelain's hull
    and thruster nozzles, shouting comments to one another.
    The men weren't on duty; several of them carried liquor
    bottles in pockets of their loose garments. They might
    simply be spectators. Ricimer's flagship was an unusual
    vessel, and the expedition had been the only subject of
    conversation in Betaport for a standard month.
     "Asteroids!" Hawtry snorted. "The Feds bring their
    microchips and pre-Collapse artifacts into the system in
    powerful convoys, Jeremy ... but I'm going to hit them
    where they aren't prepared for it. They don't defend the
    ports on the other side of the Mirror where the wealth
    is gathered. I'll go through the Breach and take them
    unawares!"
     Hawtry wasn't drunk, and he didn't have a hidden rea-
    son to blurt this secret plan. Because I was a gentleman
    of sorts and an acquaintance, I was someone for Hawtry
    to brag to; it was as simple as that.
     Of course, the proposal was so unlikely that I would
    have discounted it completely if I hadn't heard Ricimer
    and Gregg discussing the same thing.
                                                  J
    
    




    14            David Drake
    
     "I didn't think it was practical to transit the Breach,"
    I said truthfully. "Landolph got through with only one
    ship of seven, and nobody has succeeded again in the
    past eighty years. It's simpler to voyage the long way,
    even though that's a year and a half either way."
     Interstellar travel involved slipping from the sidereal*
    universe into other bubbles of sponge space where the
    constants for matter and energy differed. Because a vessel
    which crossed a dimensional membrane retained its rela-
    tive motion, acceleration under varied constants translated
    into great changes in speed and distance when the vessel
    returned to the human universe.
     No other bubble universe was habitable or even con-
    tained matter as humans understood the term. The sidereal
    universe itself had partially mitosed during the process of
    creation, however, and it was along that boundary-the
    Mirror-that the most valuable pre-Collapse remains were
    to be found.
     Populations across the Mirror had still been small when
    the Revolt smashed the delicate fabric of civilization.
    Often a colony's death throes weren't massive enough
    to complete the destruction of the automated factories,
    as had happened on the larger outworlds and in the Solar
    System itself.
     For the most part the Mirror was permeable only to
    objects of less than about a hundred kilograms. Three
    generations before, Landolph had found a point at which it
    was possible to transit the Mirror through sponge space.
     Landolph's Breach wasn't of practical value, since ener-
    gy gradients between the bubble universes were higher
    than ships could easily withstand. Perhaps it - had been
    different for navigators of the civilization before the Col-
    lapse.
     "Oh, the Breach," Hawtry said dismissively. "Say, that's
    a matter for sailors. Our Venus lads can do things that
    cowards from Earth never dreamed of. If they were real
    men, they wouldn't kiss the feet of a tyrant like Pleyal!"
     "I see," I said in a neutral voice.
     I supposed there was truth in what Hawtry said. The
    ships of today were more rugged than Landolph's, and

    




                             THROUGH THE BREACH      15
    
    reach,"        if half of Captain Ricimer's reputation was founded on
    Ily one        fact, he was a sailor like no one bom to woman before
    in the         him. But the notion that a snap of the fingers would send
    g way,         a squadron through the Breach was-
                   Well, Hawtry's reality testing had always been notable
    ;idereal       for its absence. His notion of using the Lady Melinda as
                 a shortcut to power, for example 
    ,ere the                                            The Porcelain's crew was shifting the first of the plasma
    a vessel       cannon from the lowboy. A crane lifted the gun tube onto
    its rela-      a trolley in the hold, but from there on the weapon would
    inslated       be manhandled into position.
    vessel                                              The Porcelain's ceramic hull was pierced with more
    en con-        than a score of shuttered gunports, but like most vessels
                 she canied only one gun for every four or more ports.
    sidereal
                 The crew would shift the weapons according to need.
    Deess of                                            "They'll get their use soon!" Hawtry said, eyeing the
    wy-the         guns with smirking enthusiasm. "And when I come back,
    ins were       well-it'll be Councilor Hawtry, see if it isn't, Moore. Say,
    ill when       there'll be nothing too good for the leader of the Breach
    lization.      Expedition!"
    enough                                              I felt the way I had the night I let the spacers inveigle
    actories,      me into the crooked card game, where there was a great
    he Solar       deal to gain and my life to lose. I said, "I can see that you
                 and Captain Ricimer-"
    only to        "Ricimer!" Hawtry snorted. "That man, that artisan's
    s. Three       son? Surely you don't think that a project of this magnitude
    which it     wouldn't have a gentleman as its real head!"
                   "There's Mister Stephen Gregg, of course," I said judi-
    r space.       ciously.
    ace ener-                                           "The younger son of a smallholder in the Atalanta
    .e higher      Plains!" Hawtry said. "Good God, man! As well have
    iad been       you commander of the expedition as that yokel!"
    the Col-       "I take your point," I said. "Well, I have to get back
    ay, that's   now, Thom. Need to dress for dinner, you see."
    ings that      "Yes, say, look me up when I return, Moore," Hawtry
    were real    said. "I'll be expanding my household, and I shouldn't
    Pleyal!"     wonder that I'd have a place for a clever bugger like
                 YOU."
                   Hawtry turned and stared at the ships which he claimed
    said. The
    ph's, and    to command. He stood arms akimbo and with his feet

    




        . .............
        ........16            David Drake
    IF          spread wide, a bold and possessive posture.
                I walked on quickly, more to escape Hawtry than for
                any need of haste. Dinner was part of Eloise's agenda,
                though dressing was not. Quite the contrary.
                In an odd way, the conversation had helped settle my
                mind. I wasn't a spacer: I couldn't judge the risks of thi&
                expedition.
                 But I could judge men.
                Hawtry was a fool if he thought he could brush asidc
                Piet Ricimer. And if Hawtry thought he could ride rough,
                shod over Stephen Gregg, he was a dead man.
    
                     I 0i

    




    for                      BETAPORT, VENUS
    nda,
    e my
    f this
    aside        The Night Before Sailing
    ough-
                 Three sailors guarded the city side of Dock 22. Two of the
                 men carried powered cutting bars. The third had stuck for-
                 ty centimeters of high-pressure tubing under his belt, and
                 a double-barreled shotgun leaned against the wall behind
                 him.
                   On the other side of the airlock, a tubular personnel
                 bridge stretched to the Porcelain's hatch. Though Dock
                 22 was closed and the interior had been purged, too much
                 of the hellish Venerian atmosphere leaked past the domed
                 clamshell doors for the dock to be open onto the city
                 proper.
                   Traffic on Dock Street was sparse at this hour. The
                 airlock guards watched me with mild interest. That turned
                 to sharp concern when they realized that I was guiding
                 directly toward them the drunk I supported. The sailor
                 with the length of tubing closed the pocket Bible he'd
                 been reading and threw his shoulders back twice to loosen
                 the muscles.
                   "My name doesn't matter," I said. "But I've an impor-
                 tant message for Mister Gregg. I need to see him in per-
                 son."
                   "Piss off," said one of the sailors. He touched the trig-
                 ger of his cutting bar. The ceramic teeth whined a bitter
                 sneer.
                   "This the Bahia?" mumbled the drunk.
                   I held a flask to the lips of the man draped against me.
                 "Here you go, my friend," I said reassuringly. "We'll be
                 aboard shortly."
                                   17

    




    18            David Drake
    
     "Gotta lift shipthe drunk said. He began to cough
    rackingly.
     "I wouldn't mind a sip of that," said one of the guards.
     "Shut up, Pinter," said the man with the tubing. "You
    know better than that."
     He turned his attention to me and my charge. "No one
    boards the Porcelain now, sir," he said. "Why don't you
    and your friend go about your business?"
     "This is our business," I said. "Call Mister Gregg. Tell
    him there's a man here with information necessary to the
    success of the expedition."
     Pinter frowned, leaned forward, and sniffed at the neck
    of the open flask. "Hey, buddy," he said. "What d'ye have
    in that bottle, anyhow?"
     "You wouldn't like the vintage," I said. "Call Mister
    Gregg now. We need to get this gentleman in a bunk as
    soon as possible."
     The sailor who'd initially ordered me away looked
    uncertain. "What's going on, Lightbody?" he asked the
    man with the tubing. "He's a gentleman, isn't he?"
     "All right, Pinter," Lightbody said in sudden decision.
    He gestured to the wired communicator which was built
    into the personnel bridge. "Call him."
     He smiled with a grim sort of humor. "Nobody asks for
    Mister Gregg because, they want to waste his time."
    
    Gregg arrived less than two minutes after the summons.
    His blue trousers and blue-gray tunic were old and worn.
    Both garments were of heavy cloth and fitted with many
    pockets.
     Gregg didn't wear a protective suit, though the air that
    puffed out when he opened the lock was hot and stank
    of hellfire. He didn't carry a weapon, either; but Stephen
    Gregg was a weapon.
     Sulphurous gases leaking into the personnel bridge had
    brought tears to Gregg's eyes. He blinked to control them.
    "Mister Jeremy Moore," he said softly. The catch in his
    voice might also have been a result of the corrosive atmos-
    phere.
     I lifted the face of the man I supported so that the light

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH      19
    
    gh         fell fully on it. "I'm bringing,Captain Macquerie aboard,"
               I said. "We're together. 1, ah, thought it would be wise
    S.         not to trouble the general commander."
                 "Where's 'a Bahfa?" Macquerie mumbled. "Gotta lift
               tonight. . ."
                 "Ali," said Gregg. I couldn't see any change in his
               expression; the three common sailors, who knew Gregg
    ou
               better, visibly relaxed. "Yes, that was good of you. Piet's
               resting now. The two of us can get our pilot aboard quietly,
    ell        I think."
    the          He lifted the shanghaied captain out of my grip. "Piet's
               too good a man for this existence, I- sometimes think. But
               he's got friends."
                 Gregg cycled the airlock open. The inner chamber was
    ister      large enough to hold six men in hard suits. He paused.
    as         "Lightbody? Pinter and Davies, all of you. You did well
               here, but don't report the-arrival-until after we've lifted
    ed         in the morning. Do you understand?"
    the          "Whatever you say, Mister Gregg," Lightbody replied;
               the other two sailors nodded agreement. The men treated
    sion.      Gregg with respect due to affection, but they were also
    built      quite clearly afraid of him.
                 As the airlock's outer door closed behind us, Gregg
    s for        looked over the head of the slumping Macquerie and said,
               "You say you want to come with us, Moore. I'd rather
               pay you. I've got more money than I know what to do
    ons.         with, now."
    worn.                                             The inner door undogged and began to open even as
               the outer panel latched. The atmosphere of the personnel
    inany        bridge struck me like the heart of a furnace.
     that        The bridge was a 3-meter tube of flexible material,
    stank        stiffened by a helix of glass fiber which also acted as a
     phen      light guide. The reinforcement was a green spiral spin-
               ning dizzily outward until the arc of the sagging bridge
               began to rise again. A meter-wide floor provided a flat
    ge had     walkway.
    them.        I sneezed violently. My nose began to run. I rubbed it
    in his     angrily with the back of my hand.
    atmos-       "I'll come, thank you," I said. My voice was already
    e light    hoarse from the harshness of the air. "I'll find my own
    ou
    
    ne

    




                              -3-
    
    20            David Drake
    
    wealth in the Reaches, where you found yours."
     "Oh, you're a smart one, aren't you?" Gregg said harsh-
    ly. "You think you know where we're really going . . and
    perhaps you do, Mister Moore, perhaps you do. Buto you
    don't know what it is that the Reaches cost, Take the
    money. I'll give you three hundred Mapleleaf dollars for
    this night's work."
     The big man paced himself to walk along the bridge
    beside me. The walkway was barely wide enough for two,
    but Gregg held Macquerie out to the side where the tube's
    bulge provided room.
     "I'm not afraid," I said. I was terribly afraid. The per-
    sonnel bridge quivered sickeningly underfoot, and the air
    that filled it was a foretaste of Hell. "I'm a gentleman of
    Venus. I'll willing to take risks to liberate the outworlds
    from President Pleyal's tyranny!"
     The effect of my words was like triggering a detonator.
    Stephen Gregg turned fast and gripped me by the throat
    with his free left hand. He lifted me and slammed me
    against the side of the bridge.
     "I wasn't much for social graces even before I shipped
    out to the Reaches for the first time," Gregg said softly.,
    "And I never liked wormThe wall of the bridge seared my back thro gh the
                                    u' ~ I
    clothing. The spiral of reinforcing fiber felt like a hite
    slash against the general scarlet pain.
     Macquerie, somnolent from the drugged liquor, dangled
    limply from Gregg's right arm. "Now," Gregg said in the
    same quiet, terrible voice. "This expedition is important
    to my friend Piet, do you understand? Perhaps to Venus,
    perhaps to mankind, perhaps to God-but certainly to my
    friend."
     I nodded. I wasn't sure I could speak. Gregg wasn't
    deliberately choking me, but the grip required to keep my
    feet above the walkway also cut off most of my air.
     "I don't especially want to kill you right now," Gregg
    continued. "But I certainly feel no need to let you live.
    Why do you insist on coming with us, Mister Moore?",,
     "You can let me down now," I croaked.
     The words were an inaudible rasp. Gregg either read MA

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH      21
    
                lips or took the meaning from my expression. He lowered
    sh-         me to the walkway and released me.
    and          I shrugged my shoulders. I didn't reach up to rub my
                throat. I am a gentleman!
                 1-" 1 said. I paused, not because I was afraid to go
                on, but because I'd never articulated the reason driving
                me. Not even to myself, in the dead of night.
    dge          "I have a talent for electronics," I continued. I fought
    0,          the need to blink, lest Gregg think I was afraid to meet
                his gaze. "I couldn't work at that, of course. Only arti-
                sans work with their hands. And there was no money; the
    per-         Moores have never really had money."
    e air                                              "Go on," Gregg said. He wiped the palm of his left hand
    of          on the breast of his tunic.
    orlds                                              "So I've had to find ways to live," I continued, "and I've
                done so. Mostly women. And the problem with that is that
    ator.        when I found a woman I really cared about-there was no
    oat         place the relationship could go except the way they've all
    d me         gone, to bed and then nowhere. Because there's no me!
                Doesn't that make you want to laugh, Mister Gregg?"
    pped                                               "I'm not judging you, Moore," Gregg said. He shifted
    oftly.       Macquerie, not for his own comfort but for that of the
                snoring captain. Gregg's effortless strength would have
    h -the       been the most striking thing about him, were it not for
    white        his eyes.
                 "I'm twenty-seven," I said. My bitterness surprised me.
    ngled        "I want to put myself in a place where I have to play the
    in the       man. I pretended it was the money that was pulling me,
    ortant       but that was a lie. A lie for myself"
    enus,        "Let's walk on," Gregg said, suiting his action to his
    to my        words. "The air in this tube isn't the worst I've breathed,
                but that's not a reason to hang around out here either."
    wasn't       I managed a half smile as I fell into step beside the
    ep my       bigger man. Now I massaged the bruises on my throat.
                 "You don't have to play the man when you're out beyond
    Gregg       Pluto, Moore," Gregg said reflectively. "You can become a
    u live.     beast-or die. Plenty do. But if you're detennined to come,
    ore?"        I won't stop you."
                 He looked over his shoulder at me. His expression could
    ead my      be called a smile. "Besides, you might be useful."
                                                             IF7
    
                b
                b

    




                 22            David Drake
    
                  The Porcelain's airlock was directly ahead of us. I
    W            dropped back a step to let Gregg open the hatch.
                  I thought about the cold emptiness of Stephen Gregg's
                 eyes. I had an idea now what Gregg meant when he spoke
                 of what the Reaches cost.
    
           MW

    




              VENUS ORBIT
    
    Day 1
    
    I'd never been weightless before. My stomach was already
    queasy from the shaking the Porcelain took from the 500
    kph winds of the upper Venerian atmosphere. I hadn't
    eaten since early the night before, but I wasn't sure that
    would keep me from spewing yellow bile across the men
    working nonchalantly around me.
     I clung to the tubular railing around the attitude-control
    console. The starship's three navigational consoles were in
    the extreme bow; the heavy plasma cannon was shipped
    in traveling position between the consoles and the attitude
    controls.
     Guillermo was at the right-hand console. Ricimer,
    Hawtry, and the vessel's navigator, Salomon, stood behind
    the Molt, discussing the course.
     "We need to blood the force, blood it," Hawtry said.
    He was the only member of the group speaking loudly
    enough for me to hear.
     Hawtry wore a rubidium-plated revolver and the silver
    brassard which identified him as an officer in the Gover-
    nor's Squadron. He had at least enough naval experience
    to keep his place without clutching desperately at a support
    the way I did.
     A sailor carrying a tool kit slid along the axis of the ship,
    dabbing effortlessly at stanchions for control. "Careful,
    sir!" he warned in a bored voice before he batted my
    legs-which had drifted upward--out of his way.
     Because the sailor balanced his motion by swinging the
    heavy tools, his course didn't change. My feet hit the shell
    locker and rebounded in a wild arc.
    
                    23

    




    24            David Drake
    
     Stephen Gregg stood in the center of the three-faced
    attitude-control console. He reached out a long arm over
    Lightbody, reading placidly in one of the bays, caught my
    ankle, and tugged. I released my own grip and thumped
    to the deck beside Gregg.
     Gregg's right boot was thrust under one of three 20-cm
    staples in the deck. I hooked my toes through both of the
    others. My hands hurt from the force with which I'd been
    holding on since liftoff. ,
     "Want to go home now, Moore?" Gregg asked dryly.
     "Would it matter if I did?" I said. The spacer who'd
    pushed past me was working on the Long Tom's traversing
    mechanism. A hydraulic fitting spit tiny iridescent drops
    which would shortly settle and spread over the Porcelain's
    inner bulkheads.
     "Not in the least," said Gregg. His voice was calm, but
    his head turned as he spoke and his gaze rippled across
    everything, everything in his field of view.
     "Then I'm happy where I am," I said. I glanced, then
    stared, at the controls around me. "These are fully
    automated units," I said in surprise. "Is that normal?"
     "It will be," Gregg said, "if Piet has his way-and if
    we start bringing back enough chips from the outworlds
    to make the price more attractive than paying sailors tc
    do the work."
     "What we should be doing," I said bitterly, "is setting
    up large-scale microchip production ourselves."
     Gregg looked at me. "Perhaps," he said. "But that's i
    long-term proposition. For now it's cheaper to use th(
    stockpiles-and the operating factories, there are some-
    on the outworlds. And it's important that men return t(
    the stars, too, Piet thinks."
     In a normal starship installation, there was a three-mal
    console for each band of attitude jets-up to six band
    in a particularly large vessel. The crewmen fired the jet
    on command to change the ship's heading and attitudc
    while the main thrusters, plasma motors, supplied powe
    for propulsion.
     On the Porcelain, a separate artificial intelligenc6 cor
    trolled the jets. The Al's direction was both faster an

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      25
    a         more subtle than that of even the best-trained crew-but
    ; Ir       spacers are conservative men, those who survive, and they
    y         tend to confuse. purpose-built attitude Als with attitude
    d         control through the main navigational unit.
               The latter could be rough because the equipment wasn't
              configured for the purpose. Even so, I believed machine
    ie         control was better nine times out of ten than anything
              humans could manage.
               "You do know something about electronics, then,"
              Gregg said, though he wasn't looking at me when he
    ;d         spoke.
    1g,              "Do people often lie to you?" I snapped.
    Ps               "Not often, no," the bigger man agreed, unperturbed.
    I is             "Usually there's an officer to command each control
              bank," Gregg continued mildly. "Here, I'm just to keep
    iut        the crew from being bothered by-gentlemen who feel a
    )SS        need to give orders. Lightbody, Jeude, Dole."
               The sailors looked up as Gregg called their names.
               "Dole's our bosun," Gregg said. "These three have been
    ien
              with Piet since before I met him, when he had a little
    Ily                                                     1 1~
              intrasystem trader. He put them on the controls because
     if       they can be trusted not to get in the way of the elec-
    Ids        tronics."
     to        Jeude, a baby-faced man (and he certainly wasn't very
              old to begin with), wore a blue-and-white striped stocking
    ing       cap. He doffed it in an ironic salute.
               "Boys, meet Mister Jeremy Moore," Gregg went on. "I
              think you'll find him a resourceful gentleman."
               "A friend of yours, Mister Gregg?" Jeude asked.
    the
      e-       Gregg snorted. Instead of answering the question, he
    I to
      0       said, "Do you have any friends, Moore?"
               "A few women, I suppose," I said. "Not like he means,
               15
    man        no.
    inds                                            My guts no longer roiled, but they'd knotted themselves
    jets      tightly in my lower abdomen. I focused my eyes on the
    ude,      viewscreen above the navigational console. Half the field
    )wer      was bright with stars, two of which were circled with
              blue overlays. A three-quarter view of Venus, opalescent
    con-      with the dense, bubbling atmosphere, filled the rest of the
    and       screen.

    




    26            David Drake
    
     "That's a very high resolution unit," I said aloud. 1'~
    amazed at the clarit~."
     "Piet doesn't skimp on the tools he needs," Gregg sai
    "It's a perfect view of the hell that wraps the world th
    bore us, that's certainly true."
     He paused, staring at the lustrous, lethal surface
    gas. "Does your family have records from the Collap-,;
    Moore?" he asked.
     "No," I said, "no. My grandfather sold the factory nine
    years ago and moved to Ishtar City. If there were ai
    records, they were lost then."
     "My family does," Gregg said. "The histories say it vy
    the atmosphere that protected Venus during the Revolt, y
    know. Outworld raiders knew that our defenses wouldi
    stop them, but they couldn't escape our winds. The Had]
    Cells take control from any unfamiliar pilot and, fling I
    ship as apt as not into the ground. The raiders learned
    hit softer targets that only men protected."
     "Isn't it true, then?" I said, responding to the bittemi
    in Gregg's voice. "That's how I'd already heard it."
     "Oh, the atmosphere saved us from the rebels, that nit
    was true," Gregg said. "But when the histories go i
    'Many died because off-planet trade was disrupted. .
    That's not the same as reading your own ancestors' chrc
    cle of those days. Venus produced twenty percent of
    own food before'the Collapse. Afterwards, well, the f(
    supply couldn't expand that fast, so the populat
    dropped. Since the distribution system was disrupted a]
    the drop was closer to nine in ten than eight in ten."
     "We're past that now," I said. "That was a thou&
    years ago. A thousand Earth years."
     A third spark in a blue highlight snapped into place
    the star chart. "The Kinsolving," said Dole, ostensibli
    the sailors to either side of him at the console. "And at
    fucking time."
     Lightbody sniffed.
     Piet Ricinier raised a handset and began speaking
    it, his eyes fixed on a separate navigational tank ben(
    the viewscreen.                I
     "Bet they just now got around to turning on their loc

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH      27
    
            beacon," Jeude said. "Though they'll claim it was equip-
            Iment failure."
            "Right," said Gregg, his eyes so fixedly on the pearly
            orb of Venus that they drew my gaze with them. "At Eryx,
            that's the family seat, there was a pilot hydroponics farm.
            They figured what the yield would support and drew lots
            for those who could enter the section of the factory where
            the farm was."
            Gregg's face lost all expression."The others . . ." he
            continued. "Some of the others tried to break into the farm
            and get their share of the food. My ancestor's younger
            brother led a team of volunteers that held off the mob
            as long as they could. When they were out of arnmuni-
            tion, they checked the door seals and then blew the roof
            of their own tunnel open to the surface. That's what the
            atmosphere of Venus means to me."
            "It was worse on Earth," I said. "When the centralized
            production plants were disrupted,only one person in a
            thousand survived. There were billions of people on Earth
            before the Revolt, but they almost all died."
            Gregg rubbed his face hard with both hands, as if he
            were massaging life back into his features. He looked at
            me and smiled. "As you say, a thousand years," he said.
            "But in all that time,the Greggs of Eryx have always
    s       named the second son Stephen. In memory of the brother
            who didn't leave descendants."
            "That wasthe past," I said. "There's enough in the
            future to worry about."
            "You'll get along well with Piet," Gregg said. His voice
            was half-mocking, but only half "You're right, of course.
            I shouldn't think about the past the way I do."
            It occurred to me that Gregg wasn't only referring to
            the early history of Eryx Hold.
    Ut      The bisected viewscreen above Ricimer shivered into
            three parts, each the face of a ship's captain: Blakey of
            the Mizpah; Winter of the Kinsolving; and Moschelitz, the
    to      bovine man who oversaw Absalom 231's six crewmen and
    th      automated systems.
            Blakey's features had a glassy, simplified sheen which
    or      I diagnosed as a result of the Mizpah's transmission being
    
              Ki
    n
    to
    
            I U
            U

    




    28            David Drake
    
    static-laden to the point of unintelligibility. The Al control-
    ling the Porcelain's first-rate electronics processed both
    the audio and visual portions of the signal into a false
    clarity. The image of Blakey's black-mustached face was
    in effect the icon of a virtual reality.
     Ricimer raised the handset again. Guillermo switched a
    setting on the control console. The Molt's wrists couldn't
    rotate, but each limb had two more offset joints than a
    human's, permitting the alien the same range of move-
    ment.
     "Gentlemen," Ricimer said. "Fellow venturers. You're
    all brave men, or you wouldn't have joined me, and all
    God-fearing and patriots or I wouldn't have chosen you."
     The general commander's words boomed through the
    tannoy in the ceiling above the attitude-control console;
    muted echoes rustled through the open hatchways to com-
    partments farther aft. No doubt the transmission was being
    piped through the other vessels as well, though I wondered
    whether anybody aboard the Mizpah would be able tc
    understand the words over the static.
     "I regret," Ricimer continued, "that I could not tell yot
    all our real destination before we lifted off, though I don"
    suppose many of you-or many of President Pleyal'!
    spies-will have thought we were setting out for th(
    asteroids. The first stop on our mission to free Venu
    and mankind from Federation tyranny will be Decades."
     "We'll make men out of you there!" Hawtry said ii
    guttural glee. The pickup on Ricimer's handset was eithe
    highly di-ectional or keyed to his voice alone. Not a whis
    per of Hawtry's words was broadcast.
     "A Fed watering station six days out," Jeude said, sped
    ing to me. As an obvious landsman, I was a perfect recipi
    ent for the sort of information that every specialist love
    to retail.
     "They wouldn't need a landfall so close if their shir
    were better found," Dole put in. "Fed ships leak lik
    sieves."
     On the screen, Captain Winter's lips formed an angi
    protest which I thought contained the word p
    racy?"

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      29
    
               This was Ricimer's moment; the equipment Guillermo
              controlled brooked no interruption. Blakey tugged at his
              mustache worriedly-he looked to be a man who would
              worry about the color of his socks in the morning-while
              Moschelitz couldn't have been more stolid in his sleep.
    a          "Our endeavors, with the help of the Lord," Ricimer
    ~t         continued, "will decide the fate of Venus and of man-
    a         kind." He seemed to grow as he spoke, or-it was as
    e-         if Piet Ricimer were the only spot of color in existence.
              His enthusiasm, his belief, turned everything around him
    re         gray.
               "We must be resolute," he said. His eyes swept those
              of us watching him in the flagship's bow compartment,
    e         but the faces on the viewscreen also stiffened. Though his
    e;         back was toward the images, Ricimer was looking straight
              into the camera feeding his transmission.
    ng                                                         "I expect the company of every vessel in the expedition
    ed         to serve God once a day with its prayers," Ricimer said.
    to         "Love one another: we are few against the might of tyr-
              anny. Preserve your supplies, and make all efforts to keep
    ou         the squadron together throughout the voyage."
    n't                                                        The general commander stared out at his dream for a
    al's       future in which mankind populated all the universe under
    the        God. Even Thomas Hawtry looked muted by the blazing
              personality of the man beside whom he stood.
    BUS
    S. 11                                                      "In the name of God, sirs, do your duty!"
     in
    01cl
    his
    eak
    ipl
    oves                                                       "Ti
    
    hips
    like
    
    gry
     pi-
                                                               lq
                                                           ij7f,"

    




    W,
    
                          ABOVE DECADES
    
                  Day 7
    
                  The Porcelain made nineteen individual transits in the
                  final approach series; that is, she slipped nineteen times
                  in rapid succession from the sidereal universe to another
                  bubble of sponge space and back.
                  At each transit, as during every transit of the past sev-
                  en days, my stomach knotted and flapped inside out. I
                  clung to the staple in the attitude-control station, holding
                  a sponge across my open mouth and wishing I were dead.
                  Or perhaps I was dead, and this was the Hell to which so
                  many people over the years had consigned me ...
                  "Oh, God," I moaned into the sponge. My eyes were
                  shut. "Oh, God, please save me." I hadn't prayed in
                  real earnest since the night I found myself trapped in
                  Melinda's room.
                  The transit series ended. Only the vibration of the ves-
                  sel's plasma motors maintaining a normal I-g acceleration
                  indicated that I wasn't standing on solid ground. I opened
                  my eyes.
                  A planet, gray beneath a cloud-streaked atmosphere,
                  filled the forward viewscreen. "Most times the Feds've
                  got women on the staff," Jeude was saying as he and his
                  fellows at the console eyed Decades for the first time.
                  "And they aren't all of them that hostile."
                  I released the staple I was holding and rose to my feet"I
                  I smiled ruefully at Gregg and said, "I'll get used to it, I
                  suppose."
                  Gregg's mouth quirked. "For your sake I hope so," he
                  said. "But I haven't, and I've been doing this for some
                  years now."
    
                                   30

    




        ~k,
    
                              THROUGH THE BREACH 31
    Besides the ship's officers, the forward compart
    ment was crowded by Hawtry and the nine gentlemen
    adventurers who, like him, stood fully equipped with
    firearms and body armor.
    The ceramic chestplates added considerably to the
    men's bulk and awkwardness. Many of them had per
    sonal blazons painted on their armor. Hawtry's own
    chestplate bore a gryphon, the marking of his house,
    and on the upper right clamp the oriflamme of the
    e Duneens.
    s"Now that's navigation!" said Captain-former cap
    rtain-Macquerie with enthusiasm. "We can orbit without
    needing to transit again."
    It had taken Macquerie a few days to come to terms
    Iwith his situation, but since then he'd been an asset to the
    9project. Macquerie was too good a sailor not to be pleased
    with a ship as fine as the Porcelain and a commander as
    famous as Piet Ricimer.
    so
    "The Kinsolving's nowhere to be seen," said Salomon
    reas he leaned toward the three-dimensional navigation tank.
    in"As usual. The Mizpah can keep station, the cargo hulk
    incan keep station, more or less. Winter couldn't find his
    ass with both hands."
    s-"There they are," Ricimer said mildly. He pointed to
    onsomething in the tank that I couldn't see from where I
    edstood. It probably wouldn't have meant anything to me
    anyway. "One, maybe two transits out. It's my fault for
    re,not making sure the Kinsolving's equipment was calibrated
    Ive to the same standards as the rest of ours."
    "If the Absalom can keep station," Salomon muttered,
    his"so could the Kinsolving-if she had a navigator aboard."
    e.
    "Enough of this nonsense," said Thomas Hawtry. Sever
    et.al of the gentlemen about him looked as green as I felt, but
    it, IHawtry was clearly unaffected by the multiple eversions
    of transit. "We don't need a third vessel anyway. Lay us
    healongsi0e the Mizpah, Ricimer, so that I can go aboard
    me and take charge."
    Guillermo looked up from his console. "The cutter
    should be launched in the next three minutes," he said to
    Ricimer in his mechanically perfect speech. "Otherwise

    




    32            David Drake
    
    we'll need to brake now rather than proceeding directly
    into planetary orbit."
     "You'd best get aft to Hold Two, Mister Hawtry,"
    Ricimer said. If he'd reacted to the gentleman's peremp-
    tory tone, there was no sign of it in his voice. "The cutter
    is standing by with two men to ferry you."
     Hawtry grunted. "Come along, men," he ordered as he
    led his fellows shuffling sternward. Watching the sicker-
    looking of the gentlemen helped to settle my stomach.
     "Sure you don't want to go with them?" Gregg said
    archly, "When they transfer to the Mizpah, there won'l
    be any proper gentlemen aboard. Just spacers."
     "I'm a proper gentleman," I snapped. "I just have littl(
    interest in weapons and no training whatever with their.
    If you please, I'll stay close to you and Mister Ricim(
    and do what you direct me."
     "Mister Hawtry?" Ricimer called as the last of Hawtry
    contingent were ducking through the hatchway to the ce
    tral compartment. "Please remember: there'll be no fightii
    if things go as they should. We'll simply march on the be
    from opposite directions and summon them to surrende
     Hawtry's response was a muted grunt.
     Salomon and Macquerie lowered their heads over
    navigation tank and murmured to one another. The N/
    Guillermo touched a control. His viewscreen split ag;
    the right half retaining the orb of Decades, three-quar
    in sunlight, while the left jumped by logarithmic ma
    fications down onto the planetary surface.
     A fenced rectangle enclosed a mixture of green fol
    and soil baked to brick by the exhaust of starships Ian(
    In close-up, the natural vegetation beyond the perir
    had the iridescence of oil on water.
     There were two ships with bright metal hulls ii
    landing area, and a scatter of buildings against the opl
    fence. The morning sun slanted across the Federation
    Obvious gun towers threw stark, black shadows fro
    corners and from the center of both long sides.
     I licked my lips. I didn't know what I was sur
    to do. The Porcelain shuddered like a dog drying
    Lights on the attitude-control panels pulsed in near t

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     33
    
              balancing the shock. The three sailors looked alert but not
    AY        concerned.
                "That's the cutter with Hawtry aboard casting off,"
              Gregg said. He glanced at the bosun. "How long before
    kp-       we begin atmospheric braking, Dole?" he asked.
    ter
                Dole, a stocky, dark man with a beard trimmed to three
    he        centimeters, pursed his lips as he considered the images
              on the viewscreen. "About two hours, sir," he said.
                Jeude, beside him, nodded agreement. "We could go
    aid       into orbit quicker," he said, "but it'll take them that long to
    ~nl t       transfer the fine gentlemen to the Mizpah-good riddance
              to them."
                "Watch your tongue, Aaron Jeude," the bosun said.
    ttle
                Jeude's smile flashed toward Gregg, taking in me beside
    aler        the bigger man as well.
                "What do we do, Gregg?" I asked. My voice was col-
    ry's        orless because of my effort to conceal my fear of the
    ,en-        unfamiliar.
    ting                                                         "We wait," Gregg said. "Ten minutes before landing,
    )ase        we'll put our equipment on. And then we'll march a klick
    [er."       through what Macquerie says is swamp, even on the rela-
              five highlands where the Feds built their base."
    the         "I don't have any equipment," I said. "If you mean
    "Olt        weapons."
    yain:                                                        "We'll find you something," Gregg said. "Never fear."
    rters       He spoke quietly, but there was a disconcerting lilt to
    igni-       his tone.
                Six sailors under Stampfer, the Porcelain's master gun-
    liage       ner, bustled around the Long Tom, opening hydraulic
    ding.       valves and locking down the seats attached to the carriage.
    neter       They were readying the big weapon for action.
                "Will there be fighting, then, Gregg?" I asked, sounding
    n the     even to myself as cool as the sweat trickling down the
              rniddle of my back.
    )osite      "At Decades, I don't know," Gregg said. "Not if they
    base.
    rn the    have any sense. But before this voyage is over-yes, Mis-
              ter Moore. There will be war."
    posed                                                        t
    itself.   The Porcelain's two cargo holds were on the underside of
    nison,    the vessel, bracketed between the pairs of plasma motors
              T
    
              Im
               v
               h
                                                            L11 ~,,J
    
         ~ha'
               tel
    
               thl

    




    34            David Drake
    
    fore and aft, and the quartet of similar thrusters amidshil
    Number Two, the after hold, had been half-emptied wh
    the cutter launched. Now it was filled by a party of twen
    men waiting for action, and it stank.
     "You bloody toad, Easton!" a sailor said to the m
    beside, him. "That warn't no fart. You've shit yourself!
     My nose agreed. Several of the men had vomited fro
    tension and atmospheric buffeting as the ship descende
    and we were all of us pretty ripe after a week on shipboar,
    I clutched the cutting bar Gregg had handed me from d
    arms locker and hoped that I wouldn't be the next to spe
    my guts up.
     The Porcelain's descent slowed to a near-hover. TI
    rapid pulsing of her motors doubled into a roar. "Surfa(
    effect!" Gregg said. "Thrust reflected from the groun
    We'll be touching down-"
     The big gentleman wore back-and-breast armor-tl
    torso of a hard suit that doubled as protection from vacuu.
    and lethal atmospheres-with the helmet locked in plac
    though his visor was raised for the moment. In his arn
    was a flashgun, a cassegrain laser which would pulse d
    entire wattage of the battery in its stock out through
    stubby ceramic barrel. Gregg was shouting, but I need(
    cues from his mouth to make out the words.
     The last word was probably "soon," but it was lo
    in still greater cacophony. The starship touched its pa
    outrigger, hesitated, and settled fully to the ground wii
    a crash of parts reaching equilibrium with gravity inste~
    of thrust.
     I relaxed. "Now what?" I asked.
     "We wait a few minutes for the ground to cool," Grej
    explained. "There was standing water, so the heat oug.
    to dissipate pretty quickly. Sufficient heat."
     It seemed like ten minutes but was probably two befo:
    a sailor spun the undogging controls at a nod from Greg
    The hatch, a section of hull the full length of Hold Tw
    cammed downward to form a ramp. Through the openir
    rushed wan sunshine and a gush of steam evaporated fra
    the soil by the plasma motors.
     It was the first time I'd been on a planet besides Venu

    




                        THROUGH THE BREACH      35
    
             "Let's go!" boomed Stephen Gregg in the sudden damp
             ening of the hold'sechoes. He strode down the ramp,
             a massive figure in his armor."Keep close, but form a
             cordon at the edge of the cleared area."
             I tried to stay near Gregg, but a dozen sailors elbowed
             me aside to exit from the center of the ramp. I realized
             why when I followed them. Though the hatchway was a
             full ten meterswide, the starship's plasma motors had
             raised the ground beneath to oven heat. The center of the
    e        ramp, farthest from where the exhaust of stripped ions
    ?V       struck, was the least uncomfortable place to depart the
             recently-landed vessel.
    ~e       I stumbled on the lip at the end of the ramp. The sur
    .e       roundings steamed like a suburb of Sheol, and the seared
             native vegetation gave off a bitter reek.
             The foliage beyond the exhaust-burned area was tissue
    ie       thin and stiffened with vesicles of gas rather than cellulose.
    m        The veins were of saturated color, with reds, blues, and pur
    e,       pies predominating. Those hues merged with the general
    [IS      pale yellow of leaf surfaces to create the appearance of
    rie      gray when viewed from a distance.
    a        I wore a neck scarf. I put it to my mouth and breathed
    ed       through it. It probably didn't filter any of the sharp poisons
             from the air, but at least it gave me the illusion that I was
    ~st      doing something useful.
    'Drt                                          Sailors clumped together at the margin of the ravaged
    kffi                                          zone instead of spreading out. The forward ramp was low
    ~ad      ered also, but men were filtering slowly down it because
             Hold One was still packed with supplies and equipment.
             "Stephen," called the man stepping from the forward
      ,gg    ramp. "I'll take the lead, if you'll make sure that no one
      ght    straggles from the rear of the line."
             The speaker wore brilliant, gilded body armor over a
     'ore    tunic with puffed magenta sleeves.The receiver of his
      99.    repeating rifle was also gold-washed.Because the garb
     VV0,    was unfamiliar and the man's face was in shadow, it was
     Ling    by his voice that I identified him as Piet Ricimer.
      'OM    Gregg broke off in the middle of an order to a pair of
             grizzled sailors. "Piet, you're not to do this!" he said. "We
    'lus.    talked-"
          4+ 4, v

    




                  36             David Drake
    
                  "You talked, Stephen," Ricimer interrupted with t1
                  crisp tone of the man who was general commander
                  the expedition. "I said I'd decide when the time can
                  Shall we proceed?"
                  Forty-odd men of the Porcelain's complement of eig]
                  now milled in the burned-off area. About seventy-f
                  percent of us had firearms. Most of the rest carried c
                  ting bars like mine, but there were two flashguns besi(
                  Gregg's own. Flashguns were heavy, unpleasant to sh
                  because they scattered actinics, and were certain to atti
                  enemy fire. I found it instructive that Stephen Gregg wc
                  carry such a weapon.
                  The sky over the Federation base to the south sudd(
                  rippled with spaced rainbow flashes. Four seconds L
                  the rumble of plasma cannon discharging shook the sw
                  about the Porcelain.
                  A ship that must have been the Mizpah dropped o'
                  the sky. The sun-hot blaze of her thrusters was v
                  by the ionized glow of their exhaust. Plasma drifte
                  and back from the vessel like the train of a lady in
                  dress.
                  "The stupid whoreson!" said Stephen Gregg. "They
                  to land together with us, not five minutes later!"
                  Ricimer jumped quickly to the ground and t
                  toward Gregg. "Stephen," he said, "you'd bes-
                  me in the lead. I think it's more important th
                  reach the base as quickly as possible than th
                  whole body arrives together. I'm very much
                  that Blakey is trying to land directly on the
                  tive."
                  As the Mizpah lurched downward at a rate mucl
                  than that of the Porcelain before her, a throbbing I
                  yellow light from the ground licked her lower hul
                  where I jogged along a step behind Ricimer and
                  the starship was barely in sight above the low veg
                  but she must have been fifty or more meters at
                  ground.
                  The plume of exhaust dissipated in a shock wa
                  onds later, we could hear a report duller than th
                  Mizpah's cannon but equally loud.
    
    ...........

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH     37
    
                Ricimer held a gyro compass in his left hand. "This
               way," he directed. Twenty meters into the forest, the Por-
               celain was out of sight.
                "The bloody whoreson!" Gregg repeated as he jogged
    ty         along beside his friend and leader.
    ve
        ut-    "How.." I said. My voice was a croaking whisper. I
    des        couldn't see for sweat between the angry passes I made
    oot        across my eyes with my sopping kerchief.
    act          " . . . do you stand this?" I finished, concluding on a
    uld        rising note that suggested panic even to me. I deliber-
               ately lowered my voice to add, "You're wearing armor,
               I mean."
    enly
    ater,                                             Piet Ricimer squeezed my shoulder. Ricimer's face was
    amp        red, and the sleeves of his gorgeous tunic were as wet as
               my kerchief. "You'll harden to it, Moore," he said. He
    t of       spoke in gasps. "A kilometer isn't far. Once you're used
    eiled        to, you know. It."
    d up         "The men won't follow. . ." Gregg said. He was a pace
    court        ahead of us, setting the trail through the flimsy, clinging
               vegetation. He didn't look back over his shoulder as he
    were       spoke. "Unless the leaders lead. So we have to."
                 "A little to the right, Stephen," Ricimer wheezed. "I think
    otted        we're drifting." Then in near anger he added, "Macquerie
    join       says the base was set on the firmest ground of the continent.
        we     What must the rest be like?"
    at the                                            Each of my boots carried what felt like ten kilos of
    afraid       mud. The hilt of the cutting bar had a textured surface,
    objec-       but despite that the weapon kept trying to slide out of my
               grip. I was sure that if I had to use the bar, it would squirt
    faster     into the hands of my opponent.
    ulse of                                           The assault force straggled behind the three of us. How
    1. From      far behind was anybody's guess. About a dozen crewmen,
    Gregg,       laden with weapons and bandoliers of ammunition, slogged
      ion,     along immediately in back of me. They were making heavy
       the     going of it. The mud had stilled their initial chatter, but they
               were obviously determined to keep up or die.
    e. See-      Three of the spacers were the regular watch from the
    of the     attitude-control consoles. I suspected the others were
               among Ricimer's long-time followers also. With their
    
                                                    .................
    e
    of

    




    38            David Drake
    
    share of the wealth from previous voyages, why in God's
    name were they undergoing this punishment and danger?
     And why had Jeremy Moore made the same choice?
    The day before sailing, Eloise had made it clear that there
    was a permanent place for me. On her terms, of course,
    but they weren't such terrible terms.
     The only thing that kept me up with the leaders was that
    I was with the leaders. I was with two undeniable heroes-
    staggering along, but present.
     "If she'd really crashed," Ricimer said, "we'd have-
    she'd shake the ground. The Mizpah."
     "Fired off all ten guns descending," Gregg muttered.
    There was a streak of blood on his right hand and forearm,
    and his sleeve was ripped. "Means they landed with them.
    empty. Feds may be cutting all their throats before we
    come up. Stupid whoresons."
     Then, in a coldly calm voice, he added, "Stop ereA I
    We've reached it."
     I knelt at the base of a spray of huge, rubbery leaves.
    My knees sank into the muck, but I didn't think I could've
    remained upright without the effort of walking to steady
    me. Ricimer halted with his left hand on Gregg's shoulder
    blade. Sailors, puffing and blowing as though they we
    coming up after deep dives, spread out to either side
    the trail we had blazed.
     The native vegetation had been burned away from
    a hundred-meter band surrounding the Federation base.
    Water gleamed in pools and sluggish rivulets a~ross the
    scabrous wasteland. The natural landscape was in2man
    and oppressive; this defensive barrier waThe perimeter fence was of loose mesh four mejershib,
             Judging from the insulators the fence was electrine
                                    t citru
    it didn't provide visual screening. Trees heavy wi h ru
    fruit grew within the enclosure.
     In the center of the fenceline were a gate and a gui
    tower, at present unoccupied. Two men were 11'
    toward the tower up a lane through the tre
    were laughing; one carried a bottle. Both
    slung.
                                  strollin
                                  es. The
                                  had rifl

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH      39
    
    Is                                                      Gregg aimed his flashgun from the concealment of a
              plantainlike growth with blue leaves the size of blankets.
                "Wait, Stephen," Ricimer ordered. He took off his gilt-
              braided beret, wiped his face in the crook of his arm,
    I         and put the beret on again. "Mister Sahagun!" he called,
              stepping out into the cleared area. "Mister Coos!"
    at                                                      At the words, I recognized the pair as two of the gentle-
    s;          men who'd transferred to the Mizpah. They'd taken off
              their heavy armor. I'd thought they were Federation sol-
              diers whose bullets might kill me in the next seconds.
                Sahagun groped in startlement for his slung weapon
    d.          before he recognized the speaker. "Ricimer, is that you?"
    I         he called. "Say, we're supposed to bring you in, but I just
    M         see that this bloody gate is locked. We'll-"
    e           Gregg had shifted infinitesimally when Sahagun touched
              his rifle. Now he moved an equally slight amount. His
    re.         flashgun fired, a pulse of light so intense that the native fo-
              liage wilted from the side-scatter. Great leaves sagged away,
    es.         fluttering in the echoes of the laser's miniature thunder.
                I tried to jump to my feet. I slipped and would have
              fallen except that a sailor I didn't know by name caught
    der         my arm.
    ere                                                     The bolt hit the crossbar where it intersected the left
     of       gatepost. Metal exploded in radiant fireballs which trailed
              smoke as they arced away. Coos and Sahagun fell flat on
    om          ground as wet as that through which we'd been tramping.
    ase.                                                    "That's all right," Gregg called as he switched the bat-
    the         tery in his weapon's stock for a fresh one. As with his
              friend and leader, there was no hint of exhaustion in his
     an
    s a       voice now. "We'll open it ourselves."
                "I think," said Piet Ricimer softly, "that we'll wait till
    igh.      our whole force has come up before any of us enter the
    but       base."
      s         There was nothing menacing in his words or tone, but
              I felt myself shiver.
    uard
    Iling     "Ah, glad you've made it, Ricirner," said Thomas Hawtry
    hey       as he rose from the porch of the operations building.
    rifles    A score of men stood about him. Many of them were
              frightened-looking and dressed in tags of white Federation  OIL
    
         AMR
                                                               11 g"11

    




    40            David Drake
    
    uniforms. "I've got some very valuable information here,
    very valuable!"
     Hawtry spoke with an enthusiasm that showed he under-
    stood how chancy the next moments were likely to be. Like
    the others of the Mizpah's gentlemen, he'd put aside his
    breastplate and rifle.
     "In a moment, Mister Hawtry," said Piet Ricimer. He
    wiped his face again with his sleeve. "Captain Blakey.
    Present yourself at once!"
     The Mizpah had come down within a hundred and fifty
    meters of the administration buildings and base housing,
    blowing sod and shrubbery out in a shallow crater. The
    multitube laser that slashed the descending vessel from a
    guard tower had shattered a port thruster nozzle.
     Yawing into the start of a tumble, the Mizpah had struck
    hard. The port outrigger fractured, though the vessel's hull:
    appeared undamaged. Our men and Molts from the basq
    labor force now surveyed the damage.
     I bubbled with relief at having gotten this far. Clouds~
    scudded across the pale sky. It felt odd to know that therel
    was no solid roof above, but it didn't bother me the way'
    I'd been warned it might.
     I wondered where I could find a hose to clean my boots..
    I glanced down. My legs. They were covered in mud from
    mid-thigh.
     Blakey broke away from the group beside the Mizpa,
    and trotted toward Ricimer. The Mizpah's plasma carm
    were still run out through the horizontal bank of gunports.
    To fire paired broadsides into the Federation base as th4
    ship descended, Blakey must have rolled the Mizpah on
    her axis, then counter-rolled.
     "There's a treasure right here on Decades," Hawtry said~l
    pretending that he didn't realize he was being ignore(~-6,,,'
    "and I've located it. The Feds here are too cowardly,11a,
                                       "M
    grab it up themselves!"           'a
     A freighter was docked at the far edge of the perimeter,A
    nearly a kilometer from the administration buil
    ship had taken much of the Mizpah gunners'
    One blast of charged particles had struck he
    vaporizing a huge hole.- The shock of exploding met9
                                  di
                                   ng.
                                 att, ntl
                                 r sqorel~

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     41
    
              dished in the light-metal hull for half its length and set
              fire to the vessel's interior. Dirty smoke billowed from
              the wreck and drifted through the nearby fenceline.
                I couldn't imagine any purpose in shooting at the freight-
    s         er beyond a general desire to terrorize the defenders. In
              all likelihood, the Feds stationed here wouldn't have
    e         been aroused to defense except for the sudden blaze of
              cannonfire.
                Blakey whipped off the broad-brimmed hat which he,
              like many experienced Venerian travelers, wore under an
              open sky. "Mister Ricimer," he blurted, "I didn't have any
    e         choice. It was Mister Hawtry who-"
    a           "May I remind you that I gave you specific direction
              to land a kilometer north of the Federation compound,
    k         Captain Blakey?" Ricimer said in a knife-edged voice.
              "No one but the Lord God Almighty takes precedence to
    se          the orders I give on this expedition!"
                "No sir, no sir," Blakey mumbled, wringing his hat up
    ds          in a tight double roll. The spacer's hair was solidly dark,
    re          but there was a salting of white hair in his beard and
    ay          mustache.
                "Now, wait a minute, Ricimer," Hawtry said. He
    ts.         remained on the porch, ten meters away. The Feder-
    M         ation personnel about him were easing away, leaving the
              gentlemen exposed like spines of basalt weathered out of
    A         softer stone.
    on                                              "The Mizpah's condition?" Ricimer snapped.
    rts.                                            "We'll jack up the port side to repair the outrigger,"
    the         Blakey said. He grimaced at his crumpled hat. "Then we'll
     on       switch the thruster nozzle, we've spares aboard, it's no-"
                "You lost only one thruster?" Ricimer demanded, his
    aid,      tongue sharp as the blade of a microtome.
    red,        "Well, maybe shock cooling from the soil took another,"
     to       Blakey admitted miserably. "We won't know till we get
              her up, but it's no more than three days' work with the
    ter,      locals to help."
    hat         I noticed that one of the Federation personnel was a
    tion.     petite woman who'd cropped her brunette hair short. She
    ely,      nervously watched the byplay among her captors, gripping
    etal      her opposite shoulders with her well-formed hands.

    




                  42             David Drake
    
    AIF             I wondered if we'd be on Decades longer than thi
                  days. Although a great deal could happen in three day
                    "Look here, Ricimer! " boomed Hawtry as he stepped
                  the porch in a determination to use bluster where cama
                  derie had failed. "The Molts that have escaped from h(
                  they loot the ships that crash into the swamps. There
                  been hundreds, over the years, and the Molts have
                  the treasure cached in one place. That's the real valu(
                  Decades!"
                    Ricimer turned his head to look at Hawtry. I couli
                  see his eyes, but the six gentlemen stepping from the p(
                  to follow lurched to a halt.
                    "The real value of Decades, Mister Hawtry," Rid
                  said in a tone without overt emotion, "was to be the tj
                  ing it gave our personnel in discipline and obedienc
                  orders."
                    Ricimer turned to the men who'd accompanied him
                  the flagship. "Dole," he said mildly, "find the commu
                  tions center here and inform the Absalom and Kinso
                  to land within the perimeter. Oh-and see if you can
                  Guillermo aboard the Porcelain to tell them that we
                  control of the base."
                    "I'll go with him," I volunteered in a light voic
                  I'm good with electronics."
                    "Yes," Ricimer said. "Do it."
                    Dole didn't move. I started toward the administ
                  building as an obvious place to look for the radios. St
                  Gregg laid a hand on the top of my shoulder A
                  looking away from Ricimer and the gentlemen bi
                  I stopped and swallowed.
                    Ricimer swiveled back to the Mizpah's captain.
                  Blakey," he said. "You'll leave repairs to the Miz
                  the charge of your navigator. You'll proceed imme
                  to the Porcelain, in company with Mister Hawtry
                  other gentlemen adventurers who were aboard the,
                  when you decided to ignore my orders."
                    "Lord take you for a fool, Ricimer!" Hawtry s
                  you think I'm going to rot in a swamp when-"
                    Gregg locked down his helmet visor with a,shar
                  The flashgun's dischar-ge was liable to blind anyoi

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH      43
    
           it without filters to protect his eyes. Dole snicked the
           bolt of his rifle back far enough to check the load, then
           closed it again. Others of Ricimer's longtime crewmen
           stood braced with ready weapons. A cutting bar whined
           as somebody made sure it was in good order.
             "There'll be no blasphemy in a force under my com-
           mand, Mister Hawtry," Ricimer said. Though his voice
           seemed calm, his face was pale with anger. "This time I
           will overlook it; and we'll hope the Lord, Who is our only
           hope for the success of these endeavors, will overlook it
           as well."
             Hawtry stepped backward, chewing on his lower lip.
           He wasn't a coward, but the muzzle of Gregg's,weapon
           was only two meters from his chest. A bolt at that range
           would spray his torso over hectares of swamp.
             Ricimer's posture eased slightly. He reached into his
           belt pouch, handed Blakey the compass from it, and re-
           sumed. "You will find the Porcelain on a reciprocal of
           this course. Tell Mister Salomon that your party will
           guard the vessel until we're ready to depart. The crew will
           be more comfortable here at the base, I'm sure."
             Hawtry let out a long, shuddering breath. "We'll need
           men to deal with the menial work," he said.
             Ricimer nodded. "If you care to pay sailors extra to act
           as servants," he said, "that's between you and them."
             Hawtry glanced over his shoulder at the accompany-
           ing gentlemen. Without speaking further, the group sidled 0
           away in the direction of the Mizpah and the gear they'd
           left aboard her.
             Gregg opened his visor. His face had no expression.
    r        Dole plucked at my sleeve. "Let's get along and find
           the radio room, sir," the bosun said. "You know, I thought
           things were going to get interesting for a moment there."
    e        I tried to smile but couldn't. I supposed I should be
           thankful that I could walk normally.
             1v
             I tr

    




                                DECADES
    
                   Day 8
    
    49":           1 turned at the console to look out the window of the com-
                   mo room. Halfway across the compound, male prisoners
                   from the Decades garrison and the damaged freighter were
                   unloading spoiled stores from the Absalom 231. With my
                   left hand I picked a section from the half orange while my
                   right fingers typed code into the numeric keypad.
                   "That's it!" said Lavonne. She'd been Officer III (Com-
                   munications) Cartier when Decades Station was under,
                   Federation control. "You've got the signal, Jeremy!"
                   "Thanks to you and this wonderful equipment," I added
                   warmly, patting my hand toward Lavonne without quite
                   touching her. I pursed my lips as I looked over the console
                   display. "Now if only the Mizpah's hardware weren't 9
                   generation past the time it should've been scrapped . . ."
                   The console showed the crew emptying the hulk, from
                   the viewpoint of the port-side optical sensors in the Mizpah's J
                   hull. Occasionally some of the Venerians and Molts replac- il
                   ing the Mizpah's damaged thrusters came in sight at the
                   lower edge of the display, oblivious of the fact they were
                   being electronically observed. Because the Mizpah's sen-
                   sors only updated the image six times a second, the picture
                   was grainy and figures moved in jerks.
                                                   - orani,
                   Lavonne stripped the fascia from one of the
                   sections I'd handed her, using her fingers and the tip of a
                   small screwdriver. "Why, we could connect all the tower
                   optics with this!" she said in pleased wonder. "Superm-
                   tendent Burr keeps worrying that one day the Molts on,
                   guard will decide to let in the wild tribes from the swamp.
    
                                     44

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      45
    
             But someone could watch what's going on in the towers
             from here."
               Several people came up the stairs from the lower level
             of the admin building, talking among themselves. I'd left
             the commo room's door ajar, though I'd made sure the
             panel could be locked if matters with Lavonne proceeded
             faster than I expected.
               "Ah-it's Molts that you're afraid of," I said, "and you
             use Molts for guards?"
               "Well, the ones who've been trained to work for humans
             are trustworthy, I suppose," the woman said defensively.
             "Freshly caught ones used to escape from the holding pens
    rs       while the ships carrying them laid over here."   Oil
    re
    iY         She bent past me to tap the screen where a comer of
    iY       the inner compound was visible past the cargo hulk. Elec-
             trified wire surrounded thatch-roofed wooden racks. If it
             hadn't been for the voices in the hallway, I'd have taken
    1-
    tr       up the offer implicit in Lavonne's posture.
               "That was years ago," she added, straightening. "They
    ~d       can't get out of the station now that the perimeter's fenced
             too."
    te         The door opened. Piet Ricimer stepped in, his head
    le
    a        turned to catch Gregg's voice:                who on Duneen's
    11       staff was paid to load us with garbage in place of the
    m        first-quality stores we were charged for."
    Is         I jumped to my feet, knocking my knees on the con-
    c-       sole. Macquerie and Guillermo entered behind Ricimer
             and his aide. I'd learned to recognize Guillermo from the
    ,ie
             yellowish highlights of his chitin and his comparatively          11E
    re
             narrow face. It was odd to think of the aliens as having
    n-
    re       personalities, though.
               "I've, ah, been connecting the squadron's optics through
             the console, here, Ricimer," I said. "Ah-save for the Por-
    ge
             celain; I'd have to be aboard her to set the handshake."
    a
    ,er        I was nervous. What I'd done here had been at my own
     .n-
              whim; and there was the matter of Lavonne, not that things
              there had come to fruition. Birth in a factorial family made
     Dn
              me the social superior of the general commander, but I
     ip.
              hadn't needed Hawtry's humiliation to teach me that the
              reality here was something else again.

    




    46            David Drake
    
     Ricimer glanced at the display. "From the Mizpah?"
    said. "I'm delighted, Moore."
     Gregg offered me a bleak grin over the general cop
    mander's shoulder. Lavonne, who'd moved toward a cc
    ner when the command group entered, eyed the big m:
    speculatively. There were things about women that I wou
    never understand.
     "I was surprised to find you aboard after we lifted of
    Ricimer commented. "Stephen explained, though; an(
    can see that you'd be an asset in any case." ,
     "I, ah, regret the inconvenience I've caused," I sai(
    nodded to the pilot. I'd tried to avoid Macquerie thus
    during the voyage, but a starship was close confinerr
    for all those aboard her. If there was going to be trot
    between us, best it happen under the eyes of Ricimc
    and more particularly Gregg.
     Macquerie smiled wryly. "My own fault not to woi
    why somebody was buying me drinks, Mister Moore,
    said. Unlike the others, Macquerie respected me for
    birth. "Anyway, Captain Ricimer says he'll put me d
    on Os Sertoes with my in-laws."
     A white asterisk pulsed at the upper comer of the s(
    as Macquerie spoke. I noticed it from the comer o
    eye. The icon might have been there for some while
    I didn't have any notion of what it meant.
     I opened my mouth to call a question to Lavonne. B
    I spoke, Guillermo reached an oddly-jointed arm pa
    and touched a sequence of keys. Captain Blakey, his i
    streaked by static, snarled, "Come in, somebody, isn'i
    anybody on watch on this God damned planet?"
     Piet Ricimer put his left hand on my shoulder, g
    me out of the way so that he could take over the cc
    The general commander's grip was like iron. If F(
    tated, he would have flung me across the radio roc
     "I'm here, Captain Blakey," Ricimer said.
     The static thinned visibly with each passing moi
    recognized the pattern. Thrusters expelled plasma,
    stripped of part or all of their electron charge. The (
    radiated across the entire radio frequency spectrui
    harmonics as it reabsorbed electrons from the surr(

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      47
    
              atmosphere. A thruster was firing in the vicinity of the
              Porcelain 
               "Mister Hawtry's taken the cutter!" Blakey said. "He
              and the others, they're sure they know where Molt treasure
              is and they've gone off to get it. They have a map!"
    in         "Do you know where-" Ricimer began.
    Id
               Blakey cut him off. "I don't know where they're going,"
              he blurted. "I wouldn't go, sir, I refused! But they got two
              of the sailors to fly the cutter for them, and now there's
              nobody aboard the ship but me and the other four sailors
              they brought. I tried to stop them, but they wouldn't even
    far       let me to the radio to warn you, sir."
    ent        "We can't call the cutter while its thruster's operating,"
              Gregg said. "Not that the damned fools would listen to
    ble
              us.
               "Outside of the plateau the station's on . . ." Captain
              Macquerie said grimly. "I know, you think it's a swamp,
    der
    'he       but it's the only solid ground on the continent. Five klicks
    MY        in any direction from the station, it's soup. It maybe won't
    )wn       swallow them, but they'll play hell unclogging their noz-
              zles to lift off again."
    Wn         My face grew still as glass; my mind considered the
    MY        capabilities of the console built to the standards of the
    and       chip-rich North American Federation. The cutter's motor
              created RF hash that would smother normal attempts at
              communication, but that meant the thruster itself was a
    ,fore     signal generator.
    t me       "The superintendent got the map years ago from an old
    nage
              drunk in the maintenance section," Lavonne volunteered.
    there
              "He really believes it, Burr does. But even if it was real,
              it'd be suicide to go so far outside the base."
    iding
    isole.     I changed displays to a menu, then changed screens
              again. A jagged line drew itself across a display gridded
    hesi-
              with kilometer squares and compass points. "There's a
              range and vector," I said to the room in general. "I don't
    lent. I   have terrain data to underlay."
    atoms      The track quivered into a tight half-circle and stopped.
              The thruster had been shut off. The terminus was a little
    (haust
              over ten kilometers from the screen's reference point-
    with      the console itself.
    inding
                                                             no

    




    48            David Drake
    
    Ricimer nodded and said crisply to Guillermo, "Alarm?"
    The Molt entered a four-stroke command without both-
    ering to call up a menu. One of Guillermo's ancestors, per-
    haps more than a thousand years before, had been trained
    to use a console of similar design. That experience, geneti-
    cally imbedded, permitted the Molt to use equipment thai
    he himself had never seen before. A four-throated hom h
    the roof of the admin building began to whoop Hoo-Hee
    Hoo-Hee!
     So long as men depended on Molts and pre-Collaps
    factories to provide their electronics, there would be n
    advance on the standards of that distant past. I was or
    of the few people---even on Venus-who believed the
    could be improvement on the designs of those bygoi
    demigods.
     I reached between Ricimer and Guillermo to key a seri
    of commands through the link I had added to the syste
    The Kinsolving's siren and the klaxon on the Mizpah add
    their tones to the Fed hooter. Absalom 231 didn't have
    alarm, or much of anything else.
     Ricimer flashed me a smile of appreciation and amu
    ment. Stephen Gregg's mouth quirked slightly also,
    the big gentleman's face was settling into planes of mu~
    over bone, and his eyes-
     I looked away.
     When Ricimer nodded to Guillermo, the Molt ent
    fresh commands into the console. The hooter and I
    on shut off, and the Kinsolving's siren began to
    down.
     "This is the general commander," Ricimer said,
    voice boomed from the alarm horns; the tannoys c
    three Venerian ships should be repeating the words as
    "All Porcelains report armed to the cargo hulk. C,
    Winter, march your Kinsolvings at once to the flal
    Other personnel, guard the station here and await f
    orders."
     Ricimer rose from the console in a smooth moti(
    swept me with him toward the door. Gregg was in th
    Guillermo and Macquerie bringing up the rear, U
    gaped at us. Her confusion was no greater than m,

    




                      THROUGH THE BREACH      49
    
           "But the Absalom,Captain?" Macquerie said. "Sure
           ly 
           "The Mizpah can't lift, the Kinsolving with the feath
           erboats aboard won't hold but thirty or forty men," said
           Stephen Gregg in a voice as high and thin as a contrail
           in the stratosphere. His boots crashed on the stair treads.
           "The hulk's half empty. This is a job for troops, not can-
           non. If it's a job for anyone at all."
           "We can't abandon them, Stephen," Piet Ricimer said,
           snatching up his breastplate from the array in the build-
           ing's entrance hall.
           The others, all but the Molt, were grabbing their own
           arms and equipment. I supposed my cutting bar was some
           where in the hardware, but I didn ' t have any recollection of
           putting it in a particular place. Guillerino wore a holstered
           pistol on hispink sash, but the weapon was merely a
           symbol.
           "Can't we, Piet?" Gregg said as he settled the visored
           helmet over his head. "Well, it doesn't matter to me."
           I thoughtI understood the implications of Gregg's
           words; and if I did, they were as bleak and terrible as
       J   the big gunman's eyes.
           "Stand by!" Piet Ricimer called from the control bench of
           the Absalom 231.
           "Stand by!" Dole shouted through a bullhorn as he stood
           at the hatch in the cockpit/hold bulkhead. The bosun braced
    d      his boots and his free hand against the hatch coaming. A
           short rifle was slung across his back.
    S      Most of the eighty-odd spacers aboard the hulk were
    e      packed into the hold,standing beside or on the pallets
    1.     of stores that hadn't yet been dumped. At least half the
    n      food we'd loaded at Betaport was moldy or contaminated.
    P.     Fortunately, the warehouses at Decades were stocked in
    er     quantities to supply fleets of the 500-tonne vessels which
           carried the Federation's cargoes.
    nd     I was crowded into the small crew cabin with about a
    d,     dozen other men. I gripped the frame of the bunk folded
    ne     against the bulkhead behind me. I had to hold the cutting
           bar between my knees, because its belt clip was broken.

    




    50            David Drake
    
     The hulk's thrusters lit at half throttle, three nozzles and
    then all four together. The moment of unbalanced thrust
    made the shoddy vessel lurch into a violent yaw whicb
    corrected as Ricimer's fingers moved on the controls.
     "If he hadn't shut off the autopilot," Jeude grumbled tc
    my right, "the jets'd have switched on about quick enougf
    to flip us like a pancake. Which is what we'd all be whet
    this pig hit."
     "If he hadn't shut off the autopilot," said Lightbody t,
    my left, "he wouldn't be our Mister Ricimer. He'll get u
    out of this."
     The tone of the final sentence was more pious th.9
    optimistic.
     The Absalom 231 lifted from its bobbling hover
    become fully airborne. The roar of the motors with
    the single-hulled vessel deafened me, but flight was mui
    smoother than the liftoff had been.
     "Say, sir," Jeude said to me, "wouldn't you like a rif
    sir? Or maybe a flashgun like your friend Mister Gregg
     "I've never fired a gun," I shouted in reply to the soli
    tous spacer. Your friend Mister Gregg. Did Gregg an
    have friends, either one of us?
     "I thought all you gentlemen trained for the milit'
    Lightbody said with a doubtful frown. He held a doul
    barreled shotgun, perhaps the one he'd had when guar~
    access to the Porcelain. Bandoliers of shells in indivi(
    loops crossed his chest.
     "Well, don't worry about it, Mister Moore," Jeude
    cheerfully, "A bar's really better for a close-in du
    anyway."
     Someone in the hold-most of them, it must be t
    heard in the cabin-was singing. is our God, a
    wark never failing."
     Macquerie and Guillermo peered from either side
    Ricimer's shoulders to see the hulk's rudimentary na
    tional display. The Molt had downloaded data fror
    base unit to the Absalom 231 before leaving the cc
    room. I couldn't guess how fast we were traveling
    hulk wallowed around its long axis. No starship was i
    for atmospheric flight, and this flimsy can less than

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH      51
    
    d           Gregg stood behind the general commander, but he
    st          didn't appear interested in the display. He glanced back,
    ch          his face framed by helmet, and noticed me. Gregg bent
               down and touched the sliding switch on the hilt of my
               cutting bar.
    to
                "That's the power switch," Gregg said, speaking with
     gh
               exaggerated lip movements instead of bellowing the words.
     en
               "Click it forward to arm the trigger."
     to         I laid my thumb on the switch. "Thank you," I said.
     us        My mouth was dry.
                Gregg shrugged and straightened again.
                "There it is!" Macquerie shouted. "There it is, a penta-
    than       gon, and there's the cutter!"
       to       "Stand by!" Dole cried, his amplified voice a dim shad-
               ow as thruster noise doubled by reflection from the ground.
    ithin
               The men in the hold couldn't hear the bosun's warning, but
       ch
               the changed exhaust note was as much notice as veteran
    fifle,      spacers needed.
    gg?99                                             The Absalom 231 lurched, wobbled, and swung an
    olici-      unexpected 30' on its vertical axis. Jeude grabbed me
               as centrifugal force threw me forward.
    and I
                The hulk hit with a sucking crash. My shoulders banged
               into the bed frame behind me, but I didn't knock my
    litia,"
               head.
     uble
                More people than me had trouble with the landing. Two
    arding
    vidual     of the sailors in the cockpit lost their footing, and the
               clangor of equipment flying in the hold sounded like some-
    e said     one was flinging garbage cans.
    dustuP          "Move! Move! Move"' Dole shouted. Gregg was at the
               cockpit's external hatch, spinning the manual undogging
     to be     wheel more powerfully than a hydraulic pump could have
    a bul-       done the job.
                 My bar had spun away at the landing. Lightbody
    e over     retrieved the weapon as Jeude hustled me forward with a
               hand on my elbow. "Think that was bad," Jeude remarked,
    naviga-    "you'll appreciate it when you ride in a hulk with anybody
    om the     else piloting."
     commo       Gregg 'umped out the hatch, his shoulders hunched and
    ng. The         J
    s meant    the fl i ashgun cradled in both hands. Piet Ricimer followed,
    an most.   wearing a beret and carrying a repeating carbine. "For God
                                                              HN
    
                                                               ij I
                                                             117

    




    52            David Drake
    
    and Venus!" he cried. Guillermo leaped clumsily next, ha
    pushed by a sailor named Easton who followed him.
     Lightbody cleared the hatchway, his shotgun at hi~
    port. The opening was before me. The ground was mete
    below; I couldn't tell precisely how far. The vegetati(
    was similar to what we'd seen on the trek from the Po
    celain to the Federation base, but it seemed lusher. Hul
    leaves waved in the near distance, hiding the figures w]
    brushed their supporting trunks.
     I jumped with my eyes closed. A leaf slapped my fa
    and tore like wet paper.
     I landed and fell over when my right leg sank to the kn
    in soupy mud. I could see for five meters or so between I
    stems in most directions, though the broad leaves wer(
    low ceiling overhead. The trees rose from pads of surf,
    roots. Between the roots, standing water alternated w
    patches of algae as colorful as an oil slick.
     I struggled upright. My left boot was on firmer grot
    than the right, though I couldn't tell the difference visua
    I saw a group of figures ahead and struggled toward th(
    Jeude hit with a muddy splash and a curse.
     "Easton, what's the line?" Piet Ricimer demanded.
    pudgy sailor bent over an inertial compass the size
    his hand.
     The swamp was alive with chirps and whoopin,-
    hadn't noticed anything like the volume of sound ne
    the base. I sank into a pool hidden by orange weed fl
    ing in a mat on its surface. Lightbody reached back
    grabbed me.
     A lid lifted from the ground at Easton's feet. The un
    side of the lid had a soft, pearly sheen like the ill
    membrane of an egg; the hole beyond was covered
    a similar coating to keep the wet soil from collapsing.
    Molt in the spiderhole rammed a spear up into East
    abdomen.
     The fat Venerian screamed and dropped the com]
    Gregg shot the Molt at point-blank range with his flast
    The alien's plastron disintegrated in a white glare a
    shock wave that jolted me a step backward. Shards oi
    tin stripped surrounding leaves to the bare veins.

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH      53
    
    f          Easton lurched three steps forward until the spear
              protruding from his belly tripped him. He fell on his
    h         face, his legs thrashing against the soft dirt.
    S          Jeude turned and fired. I couldn't see his target, if there
    n         was one. Screams and shots came from the direction of
    r-        the hulk's rear loading ramp.
    ge         Piet Ricimer picked up the compass, wiped its face on
    ho        his sleeve, and checked a line.
               Gregg slung his flashgun. He hadn't had time to lower
    e         the filtering visor, so he must have closed his eyes to avoid
              being blinded by his own bolt. Easton carried a rifle. Gregg
    ee        pulled it and the bandolier of ammunition from the body
    the       which still trembled with a semblance of life.
    e a        "Guillermo," Ricimer ordered coolly as he dropped the
    ace       compass in his purse, "go back to the ship and sound
    ith       recall with the bullhorn. The rest of you, follow me to
              the cutter!"
    und        He swung the barrel of his carbine forward, pointing
    Ily -     the way for his rush. Another spiderhole gaped beside
    em.       him. Lightbody and Gregg fired simultaneously, ripping
              the Molt with buckshot and a bullet before the creature
    The      was halfway into its upward lunge.
    e of                                                        Ricimer vanished beyond a veil of dropping leaves. The
              others were following him. I stumbled forward, terrified of
    g. I       being left behind. The only thing I was conscious of was
    earer      Gregg's back, two meters in front of me. Guns fired and
    float-     I heard the whine of a cutting bar, but the foliage baffled
    and       sound into a directionless ambience.
               I burst out of the trees. A swath of bare soil bubbled
    nder-      and stank where the cutter's'motor had cleared it while
    inner      landing.
     with      The boat itself lay at a skew angle five meters away. A
      The     human, one of the sailors who'd accompanied the gentle-
    ston's     men exiled to the Porcelain, lay beside the vessel. A Molt 0
              of olive coloration leaned from the cutter's dorsal hatch,
    pass.     pointing a rifle.
    shgun.     Ricimer shot the Molt and worked the underlever of
    and a     his repeater. Ten more aliens with spears and metal clubs
    of chi-   rushed us from the opposite side of the clearing. I was the
              man closest to them.

    




                    54            David Drake
                     "Watch it!" somebody shouted. A rifle slammed, but
                    none of the Molts went down.
                     I swept my bar around in the desperation of a man trying
                    to bat away a stinging insect. I tugged at the trigger but the
                    blade didn't spin. The ceramic edge clinked on the shaft
                    of a mace hammered from the alloy hull of a starship.
                    Another Molt thrust a metal-tipped spear at my crotch.
                     "The power switch, you whore's cunt!" Stephen Gregg
                    bellowed as he butt-stroked the Molt spearman, then thrust
                    the blunt muzzle of his rifle into the wedge-shaped skull
                    of the alien with the mace. A ruptured cartridge gleamed
                    partway out of the rifle's chamber, jamming Gregg's
                    weapon until there was time to pick the case out with
                    a knifepoint.
                     Lightbody fired. Jeude was reloading his rifle; Ricimer
                    had dropped to one knee, pumping rounds into Molts who
                    were too close to miss.
                     I found the power switch and thumbed it violently. My
                    index finger still tugged on the trigger. The torque of the
                    live blade almost snatched the weapon from my grasp.
                     One of the aliens was twice the size of the others. HeJ
                    shambled forward with an axe in either hand. Bullets
                    smashed two, then three dribbling holes in his chest.
                     Gregg clubbed another spearman. He held his rifle by
                    one hand on the barrel while he tried to untangle the
    et              flashgun's sling with the other. The big Molt lunged close
                    to Gregg and brought an axe down.
                     I stepped forward, focused on what I was doing and
                    suddenly oblivious of the chaos around me. My cutting
                    bar screamed through the steel axe-helve in a shower of
                    sparks.
                     Somebody fired so close that the muzzle flash scorched
                    my sleeve. I ignored it, continuing the stroke. The blade's
                    spin carried it through the Molt's triangular head and into
                    the torso. Brownish ichor sprayed from the wound.
                     Motion, more Molts beyond the toppling body of the
                    giant. I couldn't see out of my left eye. I stepped over the
                    Molt thrashing in front of me and cut at the next withoul
                    letting up on the bar's trigger. The Molt tried to club me.
                    but I was within the stroke. The shaft, not the studded tip,

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     55
    
    t        of the club gashed my forehead.
               The Molt's head and club arm fell to one side while the
    9        remainder of the corpse toppled the other way. I followed
    e        the cutting bar's edge toward another alien, but that one
             was already flailing, its plastron shattered by a charge of
             buckshot.
    P.
               I turned, looking for Molts. They were all down. I
    9        hacked at the alien giant, tearing a wide gouge down
    st       his carapace. Nerve trauma sent the creature into another
             series of convulsions.
    ed         Somebody grabbed me from behind. I twisted to bring
    g 'S       my howling bar back over my head. A hand closed over
    ith      mine. Gregg's thumb switched off the cutting bar.
               "I've got him!" Gregg said. "It's all right, Moore."
    er         Ricimer wiped my face with a swatch torn from the tail
    ho       of his own red plush tunic. I could see again; I'd been
             blinded by fluids from the Molt I'd cut apart.
    MY         Jeude looked all right. Lightbody was breathing hard.
    the      He'd opened the breeches of his shotgun, but he hadn't
             inserted the reloads ready between the fingers of his left
             hand. There was a bloody tear in his tunic.
    He
               "Into the cutter, now!" Ricimer ordered as he jogged
    Ilets
             drunkenly toward the small vessel.
               All personnel return to the ship!" crackled an amplified
    by
    the      voice. Through the bullhorn, Guillermo's mechanically
    ose      precise tones were indistinguishable from the voice of a
             human speaker. "All Porcelains return to the ship!"
    and        "Piet, watch-" Gregg shouted as Ricimer gripped the
             coaming of the cutter's dorsal hatch with his left hand and
    tting
    er of      leaped upward. Ricimer held the repeater like a pistol in
             his right hand, aiming it ahead of him as he swung into
      hed    the hatchway. The wham of the rifleshot within the cabin
    ade's      was duller but hugely amplified compared to the blast it
             made in the open air. Ricimer dropped into the vessel.
    d into
               "Get him!" Gregg ordered as he bent to pick up the
    qf the   rifle dropped by the Molt shot in the cutter.
    er the     I didn't realize I was "him" until Dole and Jeude gripped
    ithout   me by opposite arms and half hoisted, half heaved me into
    b me,    the cutter's roof hatch. I grabbed the coaming as I went
             over so that at least I didn't hit like a sack of grain.
    ed tip,  OW
    e I

    




    56            David Drake
    
     Ricimer was in the seat forward. Two Molts and a
    human lay dead in the cabin. The human had been gutted
    like a trout.
     Jeude, Lightbody, and Dole leaped into the cabin in
    quick succession. Three of the attitude jets snarled, rock-
    ing the cutter to starboard. Lightbody sprawled against the
    side of the cabin. His eyes were open but not animated.
    I wondered if the spacer's wound was more serious than
    the surface gash it appeared to be.
     Ricimer glanced over his shoulder as Gregg boarded,
    his breastplate crashing against the coaming. The cutter's
    single plasma motor lighted with a bang and a spray of
    mud in all directions from the hull.
     The vessel hopped forward from the initial pulse, then
    lifted in true flight as Ricimer relit the thruster. The initial
    cough of plasma had cleared mud from the nozzle so that
    the motor could develop full power without exploding
     Stephen Gregg braced his legs wide, leaning outw~d
    from the dorsal hatch. His rifle's muzzle lifted in a puff
    of white propellant gases. The blast was lost in the roar
    of the thruster.
     Gregg dropped the rifle back into the cabin behind him
    without looking; Dole slapped the grip of his own weapon
    into Gregg's open hand. The big gunman aimed ag~n.
    Jeude reached forward to take Ricimer's repeater and five
    cartridges from a pocket of the bandolier the general com-
    mander wore over his body armor.
     I stood beside Gregg, gripping the coaming with my
    free hand to keep from being flung away by the cutter's
    violent maneuvering. I still held the cutting bar. The ichor
    sliming the blade had dried to a saffron hue.
     Gregg fired. A Molt twisting through shrubbery forty
    meters away toppled on its face.
     The Molt was visible because Ricimer reined the cutter in
    tight circles only five meters above the soggy ground. The
    thruster's plasma exhaust devoured plants directly below
    the nozzle and wilted the foliage of those ten meters to
    either side.
     Ricimer dropped the little vessel almost to the soil. A
    dozen puffs of vapor fountained from the surrounaing

    




                        THROUGH THE BREACH     57
    
        vegetation, some of them forty meters away. The nearer
        plumes were iridescent plasma, the more distant ones
        steam. Piet had set down directly on a spiderhole. The
    n   exhaust blasted through all the passages connected with
        th initial target. Molts anywhere in that portion of the
    tuenne I system were incinerated.
        Gregg shot, using Ricimer's repeater. He shifted as he
    ~n  worked the lever action, never taking the butt from his
    shoulder, and fired again.
    d,  The cutter rotated vertiginously as well as porpoising
    's  up and down. I couldn't see the Molts in the foliage until
    Of  Gregg's bullets slapped them into their death throes, but
    the gunman didn't appear to waste a shot.
    en  A -ray streak splashed itself on the yellowed ceramic
    ial hull near where I stood. I gaped at it for a moment ~before
    ,at I realized a bullet had struck and ricocheted harmlessly.
        The goal that drew Hawtry and his fellows was a stone
    ird platform less than five meters across. Foliage curtained all
    uff but the center of the structure. Macquerie must have been
    Dar looking at a radar image to tell that it was a pentagon.
        Ricimer swept the cutter at a walking pace along the
    lim side away from the Absalom 231, fifty meters distant. He
    pon was avoiding men from the group in the hold who might
    ain.                                         have fought their way toward the target. Searing exhaust
    five                                         wilted enough vegetation to show a doorway in one face
    Dm_ of the building. A Molt flopped in tetanic convulsions
        nearby, its carapace the deep red of a boiled lobster.
       myRicimer set the cutter down on ground which plasma
      w'shad baked on an earlier pass. He jumped up from the
     chorcontrols, shouting, "Dole, radio the hulk and bring the
    men back!"
    fortyRicimer snatched a rifle the bosun had just reloaded.
        Gregg hoisted his buttocks onto the hatch coaming, swung
    ter inhis legs over and dropped, ignoring the steps and hand
    heholds formed into the outer hull.
    eow
    T         I tried to follow and instead tumbled sideways. The
    ~rs to   ground was still spongy enough to cushion my landing.
              Thomas Hawtry stepped out of the stone structure, hold-
    )II. A   ing a rifle. He'd lost his helmet, and a powerful blow had
    ading    crazed -the surface of his breastplate.
    
     ivy
       'o
                nd
                oma
              gr~
    
       A      ing
       Ig     crazed th,

    




    58            David Drake
    
     "We've found the treasure, Ricimer!" Hawtry called
    in attempted triumph. His face was white and his voice
    cracked in mid-sentence. "And an idol that we'll destroy
    in the Lord's name!"
     "You others, keep guard," Ricimer ordered curtly as he
    strode toward the Molt temple. Coos came through the
    doorway behind Hawtry. Ricimer pushed him aside and
    went within.
     Gregg followed Ricimer; I followed Gregg. I walked
    almost without volition, drifting after the leaders as thistle-
    down trails a moving body.
     The temple's floor was set three steps below the ground
    surface. The walls were corbeled inward, enclosing a great-
    er volume than I'd expected from the size of the roof.
     A Venerian battery lamp illuminated the interior. A
    spindle of meteoritic iron, twenty kilos or so in weight,
    rested on a stone pedestal in the center. Microchips-
    sacked, boxed, and loose-were piled in profusion on
    low benches along the walls. A silver starburst marked
    some of the containers, indicating the chips within were
    purpose-built: new production from pre-Collapse factories
    operating under Federation control.
     Six gentlemen stared at us, their saviors. Saha
                                                                     911
    clasped his hands together in prayer; Delray's face was
    as pale as ivory. Four were seriously wounded. The three
    missing men must be dead, unless they'd had sense enoulo
    to stay aboard the Porcelain.
     A Molt in a loose caftan lay face-up on the stone floon~
    I didn't remember having previously seen a Molt wearine
    more than a sash. The alien had been shot at least a dozen
    times. Judging from the smell, someone had then urinated
    on the body.
     Salomon appeared at the door to the temple, holding
    cutting bar. "I left Macquerie in charge aboard the shipj
    he said. "Say, there is a fortune here!"
     "We'll need stretchers," said Piet Ricimer. His voice
    was colorless.
     "I've got blankets coming," the navigator said. "We c
    use rifles for poles. Any Molts left are keeping out of
    way for now."
        




                 DECADES
    
    Day 11
    
    The garrison of Decades Station had mobile floodlights to
    illuminate threatened portions of the perimeter if the wild
    Molts should attack. Two banks of them threw a white
    glare over the Porcelain's gathered crew. I stood at the
    rear of the assembly, feeling dissociated from my body.
     "By the grace of God, we have come this far," Piet
    Ricimer said. He spoke without amplification from the
    flagship's ramp. His clear, vibrant voice carried through
    the soft breeze and the chugging of the prime movers that
    powered the lights. "The coordinates of our next layover
    have been distributed to every captain and navigator. We
    won't have settled facilities there, so be sure to complete
    any maintenance requiring equipment we don't carry."
     The next layover would be Mocha, one of the Breach
    worlds. The Southefns occasionally laid over on Mocha,
    but there was no colony. Mocha's only permanent inhabit-
    ants were a handful of so-called Rabbits: hunter-gatherers
    descended from pre-Collapse settlers. Though remnant
    populations like Mocha's were scattered across the for-
    mer human sphere, none of them had risen to the level of
    barbarism.
     "We've gained a small success," Ricimer said. Stephen
    Gregg was a bulky shadow in the hold behind the general
    commander, out of the light. Dole and other of Ricimer's
    longtime followers stood at the foot of the ramp. Not a
    bodyguard, precisely, but-there.
     "We have also had losses," Ricimer said, "some of them
    unnecessary. Remember that success is with the Lord, but
    
                     60

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH     61
    
             that we owe to Him and to our fellows discipline as well
             as courage."
               Federation prisoners listened to the general comman-
             der's address from beyond the pool of light. We'd left
             them unguarded since the day we landed. When we lifted
             off in the morning, the Feds could carry on as they had
             before.
               I wondered if Lavonne was listening. After the hulk
             returned to the base, she'd been very . . . "understanding"
             would be the wrong word; Lavonne hadn't in the least
    0        understood my desperate need to return to life. But she'd
    d        done what she could, as much as anyone could who hadn't
    te       been there, and I thought it had been enough.
               I prayed it had been enough.
               "There'll be one personnel change on the next stage
    et       of the voyage," Ricimer said. "I'm transferring Mister
    e        Hawtry to the Absalom-"
    gh         "You'll do what, you little clown?" Thomas Hawtry
    at       bellowed as he pushed his way onto the loading ramp.
    er       He'd been standing in the middle of his coterie of gentle-
    e        men. He stepped forward alone.
    ete                                             "Mister Hawtry-" Ricimer said. Behind him, Stephen
             Gregg moved into the light, tall and as straight as a
    ach        knifeblade.
    ha,                                             "If you were a gentleman and not a potter's whelp,"
    it-        Hawtry cried, "I'd call you outl"
    rers                                            I slid forward through the crowd. My hands were
    lant       flexing.
    (or-                                            Gregg stepped in front of the general commander. He
             held a rifle muzzle-down along his right thigh. His face had
    I of
             no expression at all. "I'm a gentleman, Mister Hawtry,"
             he said.
     hen
               Hawtry stopped, his right foot resting on the ramp.
    eral       Greg- pointed his left index finger at Hawtry. "And take
    er's
    ot a     your hat off when you address the general commander,"
             Gregg said. His voice had a fluting lightness, terrible to
    them     hear. "As a mark of respect.,,
     but       "Stephen," Ricimer said. He lifted a hand toward
             Greog's shoulder but didn't touch the bigger man. "I'll
             handle this."
    
                                                              -womb-
                                                              4

    




    62            David Drake
    
     "Mister Hawtry," Gregg said. He didn't shout, but his
    tone pierced the night like an awl. "I won't warn you
    again."
     I reached the front of the assembly. Easy to do, sinceJ
    men were edging back and to either side. Ricimer's vet-
    erans formed a tight block in the center.
     Hawtry wasn't a coward, I knew that. Hawtry stared
    at Gregg, and at Ricimer's tense face beyond that of the
    gunman. Hawtry could obey or die. It was as simple as
    that. As well argue with an avalanche as Gregg in this
    mood.
     Hawtry snatched off his cap, an affair of scarlet a,
    gold lacework. He crushed it in his hands. "Your pardon,
    Mister Ricimer," he said. The words rubbed each other
    like gravel tumbling.
     Gregg stepped aside. He looked bored, but there was a,
    sheen of sweat on his forehead.
     "There will be no duels during this expedition," Piet
    Ricimer said. His tone was fiery, but his eyes were focused
    on the far distance rather than the assembly before hit*
    "We are on the Lord's business, reopening the stars to
    His service. If anyone fights a duel-"
     Ricimer put his hand on Gregg's shoulder and turned
    the bigger man to face him. Gregg was the dull wax of
    a candle, and his friend was a flame.
     "If anyone fights a duel," Ricimer said. "Is that under-
    stood?"
     Gregg dropped to one knee before the general commill
    der. He rotated his right wrist so that the rifle was behind
    him, pointing harmlessly into the flagship's hold. i
     Ricimer lifted him. Gregg stepped back into the shadi
    ows again. "If anyone fights a duel," Ricimer repeated
    but the fierceness was gone from his voice, "then N
    surviving parties will be left at the landfall where 6
    offense against the Lord occurred. There will be no excep
    tions."
     He looked out over us. The assembly gave a collectivi
    sigh.
     Ricimer knelt down. "Let us pray," he said, tenting hi,
    hands before him.
        




                        THROUGH THE BREACH      63
    
             Decades Station had barracks to accommodate more tran-
             sients than the whole of the Venerian force. One of the
             blocks was brightly illuminated. In it, spacers with a flute,
             a tambourine, and some kind of plucked string instrument
             were playing to a crowd.
               I sat on the porch of the administration building across
             the way, wondering if any of the Federation women were
             inside with our men.
    ~s         Lavonne would be waiting for me in her quarters. I'd
             go to her soon. As soon as I calmed down.
    [d         ". . . could stick them all in the hulk," said a voice
    n,       from the darkness. Footsteps crunched along the path. Two
    er       sailors were sauntering toward the party. "None of them
             gentlemen's worth a flying fuck."
    a          "Well, they're not much good for real work," said a
             second voice, which I thought might be Jeude's. "Get into
    ,et        a fight, though, they can be something else again."
    ed         "Gregg?" said the first voice. "I give you that."
    al.                                            "I swear the new fellow, Moore, he's as bad," replied
    to       might-be-Jeude. The pair were past the porch now, con-
             tinuing up the path. "Straight into a dozen Molts, no armor,
    red        nothing but a bar."
    of         "Likes to get close, huh?"
               "He didn't even stop when they were dead!" the sec-
    er-        ond man said, his voice growing fainter with increasing
             distance. "I swear, Dorsey, you never saw anything like
    an-        it in your life."
    ind                                            My eyes were closed and I was shivering. After a time,
             I'm not sure how long, I stood shakily and began to walk
    ad-        toward the station's staff quarters.
    Led,
    t 'he
     the
     ~P_
    b is
    
        A!

    




                  MOCHA
    
    Day 37
    
    The mid-afternoon sun was so wan that stars were already
    out on the western horizon. At night they formed a sky-
    filling haze, too dense to be called constellations. The
    wind that swept across the ankle-high tundra was dank
    and chill.
     "There's one of them," I said. I started to raise my hand
    to point at the Rabbit sidling down the slope a kilometer
    away.
     The native didn't seem to be walking directly toward
    the ships on the shallow valley's floor. His track would
    bring him there nonetheless, as a moth spirals in on a
    flame.
     Piet Ricimer caught my arm before it lifted. "He'll think
    you're trying to shoot him," Ricimer said.
     "Yeah," Macquerie agreed. "No point in putting the
    wind up the little beasts. They can fling stones 6r,'#
    than you'd believe."
     A pump chuffed as it filled the Kinsolving with reaction
    mass from a Southern well we'd reopened the night before.
    The Southerns had also left a score of low shelters whose
    walls were made of the turf lifted when the interior was
    cut into the soil. The dwellings crawled with lice, so today
    some of our people were building similar huts at a distance
    from the originals.
     "There were a dozen Rabbits in the old Southern canV
    when we landed," Gregg muttered. "Where did they
     Macquerie shrugged. "Mostly they sleep in little tre
    without top cover," he said. "Hard to see unless you step
    
                     64

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH     65
    
          in one.Anyway, if they're gone, they aren't pilfering
          from us."
          "They can't take enough to harm us seriously," Ricimer
          said. "They're men like us. I won't have them treated as
          animals.17
          Macquerie sniffed and said, softly enough to be inored,
          "Hard to tell the difference, I'd say."
          Ricimer resumed walking toward the top of the slope.
          Distances were deceptively great on Mocha's treeless land
          scape. The surface rippled in shallow valleys separated by
          low ridges. Rare but violent storms cut raw gullies before
    ly    the torrents drained to impermeable rock layers from which
    Y_    the vegetation would in time lift the water again.
    he    "There's nothing on the other side different from here,
    ak    you know," Macquerie said.He was breathing harshly
          by now.
    nd    "I need the exercise," Ricimer said. He paused again and
    ,er   looked back. "Was this where Landolph landed, then?" he
          asked.
    rd    Macquerie and the general commander were unarmed.
    Jd    Gregg cradled his flashgun; the weight of the weapon and
    a     its satchel of spare batteries wasn't excessive to a man as
          strong as he was.
    ak    I carried a cutting bar. I'd known to pick one with a
          belt clip this time.
    he    "Yes,that's right," Macquerie agreed. "Since then,
      ter nobody touches down on Mocha unless there's a problem
          with the gradients into Os Sertoes. Once or twice a year,
       on that can happen."
      re. The Kinsolving's crew had off-loaded a featherboat and
      )Se were assembling it. Ricimer planned to use the light craft
      7as to probe the Breach without stressing one of the expedi
       -ay                   tion's larger vessels.
      ice "Three more of them," I said. "Rabbits, I mean." I lifted
          my chin in a quick nod toward mid-slope in the direction
      lip of the camp.
      ~T' The four of us must have passed within a few meters
      jes of where the natives had appeared. The Rabbits slouched
      tep along, apparently oblivious of the starships scattered in
          line for half a kilometer across the valley floor. One Rabbit
          ~a
               lin

    




                 66            David Drake
                 wore a belt twisted from the hides of burrowing animals;
                 another carried a throwing stick. Mocha's winds limited
                 the growth of plants above ground, but the vegetation had
                 sizable root systems.
                   "Some of them know Trade English," Macquerie said.
                   "From before the Collapse?" Gregg asked. I noticed that
                 the big man continued to scan the ridgeline above us while
                 we others were focused on the Rabbits.
                   Macquerie shrugged. "I don't have any idea," he said.
                   Piet Ricimer wore a cape of naturally-patterned wool.
                 He threw the wings back over his shoulders. The wind
                 was behind him now, though it was still cold enough for
                 me. "That's why what we're doing is important," Ricimer
                 said. "Those people."
                   "You're risking your life for the Rabbits?" Macquerie
                 said in amazement.
                   "For mankind, Captain," Ricimer said. His voice was
                 rich, his face exalted. "If man is to survive, as I believe
    AW           the Lord means him to, then we have to settle a thousand
                 Earths, a hundred thousand. There'll always be wars and
                 disasters. If we're confined to one star, to one planet real-
                 ly-when the next Collapse comes, it'll be for all mankind,
                 an
                  d forever."
                 "Earth has returned to the stars," I said. "The Feds and
                 the Southerns are out on hundreds of worlds between them.
                 They have no right to bar Venus from space-"
                 "Nor will they," Gregg said. His voice was as gray and
                 hard as an iron casting.
                  "-but they're there," I continued. "Mankind is."
                 "No," said Ricimer, speaking with the certainty of one
                 to whom the truth has been revealed. "What they're doing
                 is mining the stars and the past to feed the present whims of
                 tyrants. None of the settlements founded by the Federation
                 and the Southern Cross is as solid as the colony on Mocha
                 was before the Collapse. The destiny of mankind isn't to
                 scuttle and starve in a ditch on a hillside!"
                 Captain Macquerie cleared his throat doubtfully. "Do
                 you want to go on up the hill?" he asked.
                 Ricimer laughed. "I suppose we've seen what we needed
                 to see here," he said. The power informing his tones Of],

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH      67
    
    ds;        a moment before had vanished, replaced with a light
    ~ed        cheerfulness. "And had our exercise."
    kad          The distance back to the Porcelain looked farther than
               the ridge-still above them-had seemed from the vessel's
               ramp. "We're not here to found colonies," I said.
    hat          "Ah, we're here to bait the whole of mankind out to the
    iile       stars by bringing back treasure," Ricimer said.
                 He strung his laughter across the breeze like quicksilver
    tid.       on a glass table. "To break Earth's monopoly, so that there
    DOI.       won't be another revolt of outworlds against the home
     find      system, another Collapse              And quite incidentally, my
    for        friends, to make ourselves very wealthy indeed."
    mer          The trio of Rabbits glanced around, their attention drawn
    iene       by the chime of distant laughter.
    
    was
    ,ieve
    sand
    and
    real-
    dnd,
    
    and
    hem.
    
     and
    
    if one
    doing
    ms of
    ration
    4ocha
     ,t to
    
     "Do
    
                                      ieeded
                                      nes of
                                     
    
    




    0,;                          MOCHA
    
                   Day 38
    
                   1 lounged at the flagship's main display, watching
                   image of the floodlit featherboat transmitted from tl
                   Kinsolving's optics. A six-man crew had finished fittij
    X'             the featherboat's single thruster. Guillermo was still insi
                   the little vessel, setting up the electronics suite. Ricirr.
                   intended to take the vessel off exploring tomorrow or t
                   next day.
                   Trench-and-wall barracks had sprouted beside each
                   our ships. Plastic sheeting weighted with rocks formed I
                   roofs and sealed walls against the wind. The turf-and-stc
                   dwellings weren't much roomier than the ships, but tf
                   were a change after a long transit.
                   1 was alone aboard the Porcelain. I'd volunteered
                   communications watch, and I hoped to tie the featherboa
                   Ricimer had named it the Nathan-into the remote view
                   net I'd created.. No reason, really. Something to do I
                   only Jeremy Moore could do. The audio link was compt
                   but the Molt was still enabling the featherboat's extei
                   optics.
                   I had one orange left from the bags of citrus fruit m
                   loaded on Decades. It'd taste good now, and oranges d
                   keep forever ...
                   Boots scuffed in the amidships section. Somebod
                   several somebodies, from the sound of it-had ent
                   via the loading ramp to the hold.
                   Crewmen returning for personal items, I supposed. I
                   bored, but I didn't particularly want to chat with spo
                   who'd never read a book or a circuit diagram.
                     The hatch between the midships section and me ii
    
                                     68
     All 11

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     69
    
              bow was closed but not dogged. It opened for Thomas
              Hawtry, followed by Delray and Sahagun. I got up from
              the console.
                "We brought you some cheer, Jeremy," Hawtry said
              as he walked past the 17-cm cannon, locked in traveling
              position on its cradle. He was smiling brightly.
                Sahagun carried a square green bottle without a label.
              Delray held a repeating carbine; uncharacteristic for him
              to be armed, but perhaps they were worried about Rabbits
              in the starlit night.
                Hawtry held out his hand for me to shake. Holding-
    e         not quite seizing-my hand, Hawtry guided me away from
     9        the console. Delray stepped between me and the controls.
    de        The other four surviving gentlemen of Hawtry's coterie
     r
              entered the bow section.
     e
                Hawtry patted the back of my hand with his left finger-
     of       tips' then released me. "Sorry for the little deception,
     e        Jeremy," he said. His tone was full and greasy. "Didn't
    ne        want to have an accident with you bumping the alarm
     ey       button, because then something awkward would happen.
              That's it there, isn't it?"
                Hawtry nodded toward the console.
     for        "Yes," I said. "The red button at the top center."
                Coos wiggled the cage over the large button to make sure
     ing      it was clipped in place. He and Farquhar carried rifles also.
    that      Levenger and Teague wore holstered pistols like Hawtry's
    ete,          4:1
              own, but those could pass simply as items of dress for a
    rnal
              gentleman.
                When I came back to the Porcelain from our hike, I'd
     'd
     e
     on't     returned my cutting bar to the arms locker in the main hold.
              A bar's really betterfor a close-in dustup, Jeude had said
              on Decades, but there were seven of them here 
    dy-
    tered       "We're here to save the expedition, Jeremy," Hawtry
              said. "And our lives as well, I shouldn't wonder. You've
    T was     seen how that potter's whelp Ricimer hates gentlemen?
    acers     You've been spared the worst of the insults, but that will
              change."
                He lowered himself into the seat I'd vacated. Coos and
    in the
              Sahagun stepped to either side so that Hawtry could still
           I
           31~  view me directly.

    




    70            David Drake
    
     "So you're planning to kill the general commander and
    replace him?" I said baldly. I crossed my hands behind
    my back.
     Delray and Teague looked uncomfortable. "Say, now,
    fellow," Hawtry said with a frown. "Nobody spoke of
    killing, not in the least. But if we-the better class of
    men-don't act quickly, Ricimer will abandon us here on
    Mocha. He as good as stated his plans when he put me,
    me, aboard the Absalom. A hulk can't transit the Breach,
    anyone can see that!"
     "Go on, then," I said. My voice was calm. I watched the
    unfolding scene from outside my body, quietly amazed at
    the tableau. "If you're not going to kill General Comman-
    der Ricimer, what?"
     Sabagun glanced at Hawtry and held the bottle forward
    a few centimeters to call attention to it.
     "Say, I'm the real commander of the expedition any-
    way," Hawtry said. He looked away and rubbed the side of
    his nose. "By Councilor Duneen's orders, and I shouldn'i
    wonder the governor's directly. If it should be necessax3
    to take over, and it is."
     "Thomas, what are you going to do?" I said, with gend,
    emphasis on the final word.
     "A drink so that that psychotic bastard Gregg goes t
    sleep," Hawtry said, rubbing his nose. "That-that oni
    he won't listen to reason, that's obvious."
     Sahagun lifted the green bottle again. The liquor sloshe
    The container was full, but the wax seal around the stopp
    had been broken. Delray grimaced and tumed his back
    the proceedings.
     "Ricimer, he's not a problem without Gregg," Haw
    continued. "We'll put them on the Absalom=and a f
    sailors for crew, I suppose. There won't be any probl
    with the men. They'll follow their natural leaders, be g
    to follow real leaders!"
     "But you want me to give Gregg the bottle," I sai
    sounded as though I was checking the cargo manil
    "Because he'd wonder if any of you offered it."
     "Well, drink with him, jolly him along," Hawtry

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH      71
    
    "It won't do you any harm. You'll wake up in the morning
    without even a headache."
     He rubbed his nose again.
     "That Gregg's got a hut of his own," Levenger said in
    a bitter voice. "While the rest of us sleep with common
    sailors!"
     "Gregg doesn't sleep well when he's on the ground,"
    I said. I felt the comers of my mouth lift. Maybe I was
    smiling. "He doesn't want to distress other people. And
    there's the embarrassment, I suppose,"
     Hawtry lifted himself angrily from the seat in which
    he'd been pretending to relax. "Listen, Moore," he said.
    "Either you can do this and things'll go peacefully-or
    I'll personally shoot you outside Gregg's door, and when
    he comes out we'll gun him down. He won't have a chance
    against seven of us."
     Not a proposition I'd -care to bet my life on, Thomas, I
    thought. My lips tingled, but I didn't speak aloud.
     "We'll kill you as a traitor, and him because he's too
    damned dangerous to live!" Hawtry said. "So which way
    will it be?"
     "Well, I wouldn't want anyone to think I was a traitor,"
    I said. "But you'll have to wait-"
     Hawtry raised his arm to slap me, then caught himself
    and lowered his hand again. His face was mottled with
    rage. "There'll be no delays, Moore," he said savagely.
    "Not if you know what's good for you."
     "Gregg knows I'm on watch," I explained in a neu-
    tral voice. "If I appear before I've been relieved, he'll be
    suspicious."
     "Oh," said Hawtry. "Oh. How long are you..."
     I looked at the chronometer on the navigation console
    set to ship's time. "Oh," I said, "I think ten minutes should
    do it."
     The midships hatch banged violently open. "No time at
    all, gentlemen," said Stephen Gregg as he stepped through
    behind the muzzle of his flashgun. His helmet's lowered
    visor muffled his voice, but the words were as clear as the
    threat.
    
                                                   :i PP_
                                                  ,Eli

    




    72            David Drake
    
     Gregg wore body armor. So did Piet Ricimer, who fo
    lowed with a short-barreled shotgun. Dole and Lightbo~
    were behind the commander with cutting bars. Stampfe
    the gunner, carried a heavy single-shot rifle, and Salom(
    had a repeater. There were more sailors as well, shovii
    their way into the bow section.
     Hawtry dived for the compartment's exterior hatch,
    airlock. Perhaps he felt that no one would shoot in a roc
    so crowded.
     "Steady," Ricimer murmured.
     Hawtry tugged the hatch open. No one tried to stop hi
    Jeude waited in the airlock with his cutting bar ready.'
    twitched the blade forward, severing Hawtry's pistol t
    and enough flesh to fling the gentleman back screa
    ing.
     "Take their weapons," Ricimer said calmly.
     "It may interest you gentlemen to know," I said,
    voice rising an octave as my soul flooded back into
    body, "that there was a channel open to Guillermo in
    featherboat all the time we were talking. And if d
    hadn't been, I assure you I would have found ano
    way to stop you traitors!"
     "It wasn't me!" Coos cried. He was a tall man, willi
    and supercilious at normal times. "It wasn't---"
     Lightbody punched Coos in the stomach with the bu
    his cutting bar,'doubling him up on the deck. Coos b(
    to vomit.
     "I'll expect you to have that cleaned up by end of w,
    Lightbody," Ricimer said as he uncaged the alarm
    ton.
     "AyeThe flagship's siren howled a strident summons.I
                                   t~
                                   "Listen, Moore," snarled Hawtry's voice through
                                   speakers mounted to either side of the main hatch. A
                                   light on the Kinsolving two hundred meters awa)
                                   focused on the flagship's hold. "I'll personally shoc
                                   outside Gregg's door, and when he comes out we"
                                   him down."
     Wind sighed across the valley, bearing away the

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH     73
    
               mur of the gathered spacers. Someone called, "Bastard!"
    y          in a tone of loud amazement.
                 "Ricimer, he's not a problem without Gregg," said
    on         Hawtry's voice. Guillermo was working the board, mix-
               ing the gentleman's words for greatest effect from the
    9
               recording the Molt had made in the Nathan.
    an           Hawtry struggled against his bonds in the center of the
    In         hold. Dole had cinched Hawtry's ankles to a staple. The
               gentleman's wrists were tied in front of him and he was
               gagged besides. Hawtry's six followers stood at the base
               of the ramp-disarmed and discreetly guarded by trusted
    He         sailors, but not shackled.
    elt                                              "We'll kill you and him!" said Hawtry's voice. You'd
    In-          have had to hear the original words to realize the speech
               was edited. At that, Guillermo hadn't distorted the thrust
               of the gentleman's harangue.
    my           Piet Ricimer stepped forward. "Thomas Hawtry," he
    MY         said. "You knew that this expedition could succeed only
    the          if we all kept our oaths to strive together in brotherhood.
    ere          Your own words convict you of treason to the state, and
    ther         of sacrilege against God."
                 Stephen Gregg, a statue in half armor, stood at the oppo-
    wy         site side of the hatch from Ricimer. He hadn't moved
               since Dole and Jeude fastened the prisoner in front of the
    tt of        assembly.
    gan                                              A kerchief was tied behind Hawtry's head. Ricirner
               tugged up the knot so that the gentleman could spit out
               the gag.
                 Hawtry shook himself violently. "You have no right to
               try me!" he shouted. "I'm a factor, afactor! I need answer
               to no judge but the Governor's Council."
                 Unlike Ricimer's, Hawtry's voice wasn't amplified. He
               sounded thin and desperate to me.
     oud-        "Under God and Governor Halys," Ricimer said, "I am
    spot-      general commander of this expedition. I and your shipmates
     was       will judge you, Thomas Hawtry. How do you plead?"
    t you        "It was a joke!" cried Hawtry. He turned from side to
    I gun      side in the glare of lights focused on him. "There was no
               plot, just a joke, and that whorechaser Moore knew it!"
     mur-        The crowd buzzed, men talking to their closest com-

    




    74            David Drake
    
    panions. Hawtry's coterie stood silent, with gray faces and
    stiff smiles. Gregg's eyes, the only part of the gunman that
    moved, drifted from them to the prisoner and back.
     Contorting his body, Hawtry rubbed his eyes with his
    shoulder. He caught sight of me at the front of the assembly.
    "There he is!" Hawtry shouted, pointing with his bound
    hands. "There's the Judas Jeremy Moore! He lied me into
    these bonds!"
     I climbed the ramp in three crashing strides. The cutting
    bar batted against my legs, threatening to trip me. Hawtn
    straighten
        ed as he saw me coming; his eyes grew wary.
    A tiny smile played at the comers of Stephen Gregg'
    mouth.
     "Aye, strike a fettered man, Moore," Hawtry sai
    shrilly.
     I pulled the square-faced bottle from the pocket of tt
    insulated vest I wore over my tunic. Hawtry's face w;
    hard and pale in the spotlights.
     "Here you are, Thoma
                   s," I said. A part of my mind noti
    in surprise that a directional microphone picked up r
    voice and boomed my words out thmugh the loudspeak(
    so that everyone in the crowd could hear. "Here's the boi
    that you ordered me to drink with Mister Gregg."
     Hawtry's chin lifted. He shuffled his boots, but D
    had shackled him straitly.
     I twisted out the glass stopper. "Take a good drini
    this, Thomas," I said. "And if it only puts you to sl(
    then I swear I'll defend your life with my own!"
     Hawtry's face suffused with red hatred. He swung
    bound arms and swatted the container away. It clat
    twice on the ramp and skidded the rest of the way d
    without breaking. Snowy gray liquor splashed frorr
    bottle's throat.
     "Yes," I said as I backed away. I was centered xN
    myself again. For a moment I'd been. . . "I rather th(
    that would be your response."
     I'd watched in my mind as the bar howled in the I
    of my own puppet figure below. It swung in an ar
    continued through the spray of blood and the shocke,
    of Thomas Hawtry sa;ling free of his body.

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     75
    
               Piet Ricimer stepped forward. He took Hawtry's joined
              hands in his own and said, "Thomas, in the name of the
              Lord, won't you repent? There's still-"
    s          "No!" said Stephen Gregg thunderously as he strode into
              the center of the hatchway. The ceramic armor added bulk
              to the rangy power of his form. "There's been forgiveness
              aplenty. The next time it'll be your life, Piet, and I'll not
              have that."
    Ig         Gregg laid his great left hand over Hawtry's wrists and
              lifted them away from Ricimer. Gregg raised Hawtry's
              arms, ignoring the prisoner's attempt to pull free, and
    's        shouted to the assembly, "Is this man guilty of treason?
              Shall he be marooned here as a traitor?"
    id         "Yes!" I screamed. Around me I heard, "Aye!" and
              "Guilty!" and "Yes!" A murmur of, "No," a man crying,
    e         "You have no right!" But those latter were the exceptions
    as        to a tide of anger tinged with bloodlust. The sailors were
              Betaport men, and in Betaport Piet Ricimer sat just below
    ted        the throne of God.
    my         "No, you can't do this!" Delray shouted angrily. The
    rs        other gentlemen stood silent, afraid to speak lest Gregg
    ttle       turn the mob on them as well.
               Gregg dropped the prisoner's arms. "You didn't want
    ole        to obey the general commander, Hawtry," he said. "Now
              you can rule a whole planet by yourself."
      of       Officers of the Mizpah and Kinsolving stood in a clump
    ep,        at the back of the assembly, muttering and looking con-
              cerned. They knew better than the common sailors how
    his        niuch trouble could come from punishing a powerful
      ed      noble. Blakey was Councilor Duneen's man, while
      wn      Captain Winter trimmed his behavior to the prevailing
     the      winds.
               "You can't do this!" Delray repeated. The wind toyed
    ithin     with his voice. Perhaps a third of the assembly could make
    ught      out his words, while the rest heard only faint desperation.
              "The Rabbits will kill him!"
    ands       The other gentlemen moved away as though Delray was
    that      thrashing in a pool of his own vomit. A sailor behind
    face      Delray patted a baton of steel tubing against the calluses
              of the opposite palm, but the gentleman took no notice.

    




    L
    
                                             76 David Drake
                                                "They'll flay him with sharp stones!" Delray shoute
                                 F           "You can't do this'
                                                I didn't know Delray well and hadn't liked what I
                                             know: the third son of Delray of Sunrise, a huge hold
                                             the Aphrodisian Hills. Very rich, very haughty, and el
                                             younger than his 19 Earth years.
                                                It struck me that there was a person under Deir,
                                             callow exterior who might have been worth knowing
                                             all.
                                                "He's right," Gregg said abruptly. The amplified b,
                                             of his voice startled me after an interval of straining to
                                             Delray's cries. "Dole, cut his feet loose. Hawtry, we'll
                                             a gully out beyond the ships."
                                                I blinked, shocked by a sudden reality that I'd av(
                                             until that moment. It was one thing to eat meat, ar,
                                 "0          to watch the butcher. Dole stepped up the ramp, h
                                                humming.
                                                "No!" said Ricimer, placing the flat of his ha
                                             Gregg's breastplate. He directed the bigger man
                                             Piet's too good a man for this existence, Gregg h,
                                             the last night on Venus.
                                                "Give me a ship!" Hawtry blurted. His face
                                             white as a bone that dogs were scuffling over. "C
                                             a featherboat, C-cap-commander Ricimer!"
                                                "Mister Hawtry," Ricimer said, "you cannot
                                             starship, and I will not diminish a force devote,
                                             Lord's work for the sake of a traitor. But the ji
                                 HN          on your treason was that of the expedition as
                                             Therefore the expedition will carry out the r
                                             sentence."
                                                Ricimer turned to face the assembly. He didn
                                             though the spotlight was full on his face. He r
                                             the front of the crowd, his arm as straight as a
                                             rel.
                                                "Coos, Levenger, Teague," he said, clipping
                                             bles like cartridges shucked from a repeater's
                                             "Farquhar, Sahagun. And Delray. Under the d
                                             Mister Gregg, you will form a firing party to e.,
                                             tence of death on the traitor Thomas Hawtry.
                                             at dawn. Do you understand?"

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH      77
    
    d.          None of the gentlemen spoke. Farquhar covered his face
              with his hands.
                Hawtry shuddered as though the first bullet had struck
    id        him. He closed his eyes for a moment. When he reopened
              them, his expression was calm.
                "This assembly is dismissed," the general commander
    Is        said in a voice without triumph or pity. "And may God
    ~er       have mercy on our souls."
    
    )m
    ear
    ind
    
    d
    er
    bar
    
     on
    ick.
    sa'Id
    
     as
     m
     e
    
    the
    ot a
    
                                       pent
                                      riole.
                                       sary
                                      juint,
                                      od to
                                       bar-
    
                                      sylla
                                      Vine.
    on of
     sen-
    L)rrOW
    
                                                           Ila

    




                  MOCHA
    
    Day 39
    
    Mocha's sun laid a track of yellow light from the eastem
    horizon. Ricimer and Hawtry stood at the edge of the
    shallow mere, talking in voices too low to carry twenty
    meters to where the nearest of the other men waited.
     The air was still, for the first time that I could remembei
    since we landed here. I shivered anyway.
     A group of sailors commanded by the Porcelain's bosui
    held single-shot rifles. The men were chatting companior,
    ably. Jeude punctuated his comment by raising his le
    hand in the air and wriggling the fingers. He and tf
    others laughed.
     About half the expedition's complement had trekked
    the north end of the valley to watch the execution. T
    remainder stayed with the ships, pretending this ww
    normal day. Occasionally someone might pause and glar
    northward, but there would be nothing to see. The irrej
    larity of the valley's floor seemed slight, but it was enot
    to swallow a man-height figure in half a kilometer.
     I didn't know why I was here. I rubbed my hands togi
    er and wondered if I should have brought gloves.
     The gentlemen of the firing party faced one anothc
    a close circle, shoulders together and their heads boi
    A spacer cried out, "Pretty little chickens got their feat
    plucked, didn't they?"
     The remark didn't have to be a gibe directed again,,
    gentlemen ... but it probably was. Delray spun to ide
    the speaker. The gentleman remembered his present
    and subsided in impotent anger.
    
                     78

    




      7
    
                      THROUGH THE BREACH      79
    
           Stephen Gregg, standing alone as if contemplating the
           sunrise, turned his head. "Roosen?" he called to the spacer
           who'd flung the comment. "I'm glad to know you have
           spirit. I often need a man of spirit to accompany me."
           Roosen shrank into himself. His companions of a
           moment before' edged away from him.
            I chuckled.
           Gregg strolled toward me, holding the flashgun in the
           crook of his left arm. Gregg wore his helmet and a satchel
           of batteries, but he didn't have body armor on for the
           morning's duties.
           The big man nodded toward the mere thirty meters away,
           where Hawtry and the general commander still talked. "So
           you would have protected Mister Hawtry from me if he'd
           been willing to drink from your bottle, Moore?" Gregg
           said in a low, bantering tone.
           Sometimes Ricimer's aide looked like an empty sack.
           Now-there was nothing overtly tense about Gregg, but
           a black power filled his frame and dominated the world
           about him.
           I shrugged. "Thomas isn't the sort for half measures,"
           I said evenly. "Sleep where death would do, for exam-
           ple. Besides ... I rather think he resented my--closeness.
           With Councilor Duneen's sister."
    3L                        My mouth smiled. "Though to listen to him, he wasn't
           aware of that. Closeness."
                              Gregg turned again to face the sunrise. "I was mistaken
    h      in my opinion of the man I brought aboard in Betaport,
           wasn't P Just who are you, Moore?"
                              I shrugged again. "I'm damned if I know," I said. Then
           I said, "I could use a woman right now. The Lord knows
    'n     I could."
    d.     Ricimer and        Hawtry clasped hands, then embraced.
    r's    Ricimer walked back to the company. His face was still.
           The crowd hushed.
    le                        Gregg's visage became cold and remote. "Distribute the
    fy                        rifles," he ordered as he strode toward the gentlemen and
    ce     the sailors waiting to equip them for their task.
                              Dole muttered a command. He gave a single cartridge
                              md a rifle, its action open, to Sahagun. That gentleman
            c
            0
            R
            c
            The
    
            rifle
            the
            I
            and
        




    L
    
                                              80 David Drake
                                              and the other members of the firing party accepted
                                  *17         weapons with grimaces.
                                                 "Take your stand!" Gregg ordered. He placed him
                                              beside and a pace behind the gentlemen. His flashgun
                                              ready but not presented.
                                                 "I'll give the commands if you please, Mister Gre
                                              Thomas Hawtry called in a clear voice. He stood at ar
                                              ent ease, his limbs free.
                                                 Gregg looked at Ricimer. Ricimer nodded agreem
                                                 "May God and you, my fellows, forgive my s
                                              Hawtry said. "Gentlemen, load your pieces."
                                                 The men of the firing party were mostly experit
                                              marksmen, but they fumbled the cartridges. Coos dr(
                                              his. He had to brush grit off the case against his a
                                              leg. Breeches closed with a variety of clicks and shu
                                              sounds.
                                                 Hawtry stood as straight as a sunbeam. His eyes
                                              open. "Aim!" he said.
                                                 The gentlemen lifted their rifles to their shoi
                                              Farquhar jerked his trigger. The shot slammed out I
                                              the horizon. Farquhar shouted in surprise at the acc
                                              discharge.
                                                 "Fire!" Hawtry cried. The rest of the party fire,
                                              bullets punched Hawtry's white tunic, and the br
                                              his nose vanished in a splash of blood.
                                                 Hawtry crumpled to his knees, then flopped
                                              face. There was a hole the size of a fist in the
                                              his skull. The surface of the water behind him &
                                              if with rain.
                                                 Delray opened the bolt of his rifle to extract t
                                              case, then flung the weapon itself toward the m
                                              rifle landed halfway between him and the corpse t
                                              spastically on the ground.
                                                 Delray stalked away. The remainder of the fir
                                              stood numbly as Dole's team collected the rifleE
                                                 Gregg turned and walked back to me. He look
                                              and gray.
    
                                  liq             ~4
                                                   I'm impressed with the way you handled yc
                                                 other night," he said quietly. "And on Decades,

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH      81
    the        but courage in a brawl is more common than the ability to
               stay calm in a crisis."
    self                                             I hugged myself and shivered. A spacer had tossed a
    was        tarp over Hawtry's body. Two other men were digging a
               grave nearby.
               Piet Ricimer knelt in prayer, his back to the dead man.
               Brains and bits of bone, splashing the mere in a wide
               arc.
    ent.                                             "How do you sleep at all, Mister Gregg?" I whispered.
    ins!"                                        Greggsniffed. "You can get used to anything, you
               know," he said.I suppose that's the worst of it. Even
    nced                                  the dreams."
    pped       He put a hand on my shoulder and turned me away from
    user       the past. "Let's go back to the ship," he said. I have a
    cking      bottle. And you may as well call me Stephen, Jeremy."
    were
    Iders.
    ward
    dental
    
                                                                71
    Two
       of
      his
    ack of
    ced as
    spent
    e. The
    itching
    g party
    drawn
    self the
    course;
    gg"
    par
    
    ge
    to

    




    L
    
                                                         MOCHA
    
                                           Day 51
    
                                           When the alert signal throbbed on the upper right corner
                                           of the main screen, I slapped the sidebar control that I'd
                                           preselected for potential alarm situations. Salomon dumped
                                           the transit solutions he'd been running at the navigation
                                           console and echoed all my data on his display.
                                           A grid of dots and numbers replaced the 360' visual
                                           panoram
                                           a I'd been watching for want of anything better
                                           to do, Presumably some of the Rabbits were female but
                                           it hadn't come to that yet.
                                           I didn't understand the new display. A pink highlight
                                           surrounded one of the dots.
                                            I held the siren switch down briefly to rouse the
                                                                          men
                                           sleeping, gambling, or wandering across Mocha's barren
                                           landscape. A few seconds could be important, and even
                                           a false alarm would give the day some life it otherwise
                                           lacked.
                                           "It's the passive optical display," Salomon explained.
                                           "An object just dropped into orbit. If it's not a flaw in
                                           the scanner, something came out of trans-"
                                           "Nathan to squadron," said Piet Ricimer's voice, flat-
                                           tened by the program by which the Porcelain's Al took
                                           the static out of the featherboat's transmission. "Respond,
                                           squadron. Over."
                                           I switched the transceiver to voice operation while my
                                           left hand entered the commands that relayed the conver-.1
                                           sation through the loudspeakers-tannoys I'd taken fr
                                                                             om,
                                           Federation stores on Decades-on poles outside the tem
                                           porary shelters. It'd been something to do, and the disor-'
    
                                                            82

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH      83
    
    ganized communications among the ships scattered here
    had offended my soul.
     "Go ahead, Commander," I said before I remembered
    that Salomon was on watch this morning. "We're on
    voice."
     Handover procedures were cumbersome and basical-
    ly needless between two parties who knew one another.
    Without visuals-the featherboat's commo was rudimen-
    tary-there was a chance that one speaker's transmission
    would step on the other's, but that wasn't a serious con-
    cem.
     "Moore?" Ricimer said. His words blared through the
    external speakers to the men alerted by the siren. "We've
    got to leave immediately. Get essential stores out of the
    Absalom; we're leaving her. We'll be abandoning the
    Nathan here too, so that frees up space on the Kinsolving
    for the Decades loot. We'll be coming in on the next
    orbit-"
     The featherboat couldn't communicate through her
    thruster's discharged ions.
     "-and I want to lift off within an hour of when we
    land. Is that understoodT'
     "We understand, Commander," I said. I rose from the
    console. Officers and senior men would be gathering work
    crews from men more concerned with getting their person-
    al gear back aboard the ships.
     "I'll address the squadron when we reach orbit," Ricimer
    said. The transmission was beginning to break up beyond
    the Al's capacity to restore it. The caret on the main
    screen that was the Nathan had already slipped beneath
    the horizon of the display. "Before we negotiate the
    Breach. . ."
      His words died in a burst of static.
     "I've got takeoff and initial transit programs loaded,"
    Salomon said to me with a wry smile. Perhaps it was a
    comment on the way the gentleman had hijacked commu-
    nications with the general commander.
     Men were already crashing aboard the Porcelain, shout-
    in.2 to one another in a skein of tangled conversations. I
     strode for the midships hatch to get through it before the

    




                   84             David Drake
    
                   crush arrived in the other direction.
                   "I'm going to pull the Al from the hulk," I called back to
                   the navigator. "It's not worth much, but it's something ...
                   and it's the only thing I can do now."
    
    3161

    




    to                  MOCHA ORBIT
    
              Day 51
    
              Because of the adrenaline rush of the hastened liftoff,
              wei-htlessness didn't make me as queasy as it had on
              every previous occasion.
              "Men of Venus," Piet Ricimer said, standing before the
              video pickups of the main console.
              The general commander's tone and pose were conscious-
              ly theatrical, but not phony. An unshakable belief in his
              mission was the core of Ricimer's being. "My fellows.
              While I was on Os Sertoes, a Southern colony three
              days transit from here, six Federation warships landed.
              Their admiral announced that they'd arrived to protect the
              Breach from Venetian pirates under the command of the
              notorious Ricimer."
                He allowed himself a smile.
              The interior of the Porcelain looked as if a mob had torn
              through the vessel. Belongings seemed to expand in the
              course of a voyage. Objects were never repacked as tightly
              as they'd been stowed before initial liftoff. Loot, even
              from a near-wasteland like Mocha, added to the bulk, and
              the crew's hurried reboarding would at best have created
              chaos
               The interior of the Kinsolving, visible on the split screen
               past the set face of Captain Winter, was an even more
               complete image of wreckage. The quality of the Mizpah's
               transmission was so poor that the flagship's Al painted
               the field behind Blakey as a blur of color. On all the
               vessels, items that hadn't been properly stowed before
               liftoff drifted as the ships hung above Mocha.
    
                               85

    




               86            David Drake
    
               "The Feds will be patrolling all the landing sites in
               the region, I have no doubt," Ricimer said. I could hear
               the words echoing from tannoys in the compartments
               sternward. On the Kinsolving, sailors listened in the
               background as tense, dim shapes. "We aren't here to
               fight the Federation. We're here to take the wealth on
               which President Pleyal builds his tyranny and turn that
               wealth to the use of all mankind."
                Another small smile. "Ourselves included."
               Stephen Gregg stood between a pair of stanchions, doing
               isometric exercises with his arms. He was too big to be
               comfortable for any length of time on a featherboat, but
               not even Piet Ricimer had dared suggest Stephen remain
               on Mocha during the exploratory run.
                "I've set an initial course," Ricimer contin e
                                    u d. "The
               Nathan tested the gradients within the throat of the Breach.
               I won't disguise the fact that the stresses are severe; but
               not too severe, I believe, for us to achieve our goal."
               "It was rough as a cob," Jeude muttered, trying to emas-
               culate his fear by articulating it. "The boat nigh shook
               herself apart. Mister Ricimer, he kept pushing the gradi-
               ents an
                   d she couldn't take it."
               I put a hand on the eyebolt which Jeude held. I didn't
               quite touch the young sailor's hand, but I hoped the near-
               contact would provide comfort.
               Part of my mind was amused that I was trying to reassure
               someone who understood far better than I did the risks we
               were about. to undergo. There were times that the risks i
               couldn't be allowed to matter. At those times, it was a
               gentleman's duty to be an example.
               "There is one further matter to attend before we pro-
               ceed," Ricimer continued. "Our flagship has been named
               the Porcelain. I am taking this moment, as we enter a
               new phase of our endeavors, to rechristen her Oriflamme.
               May she symbolize the banner of the Lord which we are
    j          carrying through the Breach!"
               He swept off his cap and cried, "In the name of God,
               gentlemen, let us.do our duty!"
               "Hurrah!" Salomon cried, so smoothly that I reipem-
               bered Ricimer's whispered conversation with his navigator

    




                     THROUGH THE BREACH      87
    
          before he began his address. Throughout the flagship-
          the Oriflamme-and aboard the other vessels, men were
          souti
           hi I ing, "Hurrah!"
          I shouted as well, buoyed by hope and the splendor of
          the moment. For the first time in my memory, Jeremy
          Moore was part of a group.
          Ricimer shut off the transmission and slipped into his
          couch to prepare for transit. Guillermo and Salomon
          watched from the flanking consoles.
          I let go my grip and thrust myself across the com-
          partment toward Stephen. My control in weightlessness
           was getting better-at least I didn't push off with all my it
           strength anymore-but it was short of perfect. Stephen
           caught me by the hand and pulled me down to share a
           stanchion.
            "You may think you dislike transit now," Stephen said,
           "but you'll know you do shortly."
            "Yes, well, I was going to suggest that I'd get out and
           walk instead," I said. "Ah-it occurs to me, Stephen, that
           the oriflamme is the charge of Councilor Duneen's arms."
            Stephen nodded. "Yeah," he said. "Piet thinks it may
           take the Councilor's mind off the fact that we've executed
           one of his chief clients. Not that Hawtry was any loss, not
           really; but the Councilor might feel that he needed to 
           react."
            "Ali," I said. "It was the general commander's idea?"
            "Prepare for transit!" Salomon warned over the PA sys-
    S      tem.
            440h, yes," Stephen agreed. "Piet thinks ahead."
            I followed Stephen's glance toward the general com-
           mander. It struck me that Ricimer was, in his way, just
    d      as ruthless as Stephen Gregg.
    
                                                            kc

    




                IN TRANSIT
    
    Day 64
    
    The leg of the attitude-control console nearest me began
    to quiver with a harmonic as the Oriflamme's thrusters;
    strained. The vessel flip-flopped in and out of transit
    again, again. The surface of the leg dulled as tiny crack,
    spread across the surface, metastasizing with each success
    sive vibration.
     Life was a gray lump that crushed Jeremy Moore again
    the decking. My vision was monochrome. Images shift(
    from positive to negative as the Oriflamme left ai
    reentered the sidereal universe, but I was no longer st
    which state was which,
     The sequence ended. Bits of ceramic crazed from
    leg lay on the deck beneath the attitude controls.
     Salomon got up from his console. His face looked
    a skin of latex stretched over an armature of thin wi
    "The charts are wrong!" he shouted. "Landolph lied al
    coming here, or if he did, it's closed since then. The
    no Breach!"
     Pink light careted a dot on the starscape a
    Guillermo's console. Either the Kinsolving or the M
    was still in company with the flagship. I didn't cart
    that mattered now was the realization that if I was
    the nausea would be over.
     "I'm going to add one transit to the sequence A
    changing the constants," Piet Ricimer said from the (
    couch. Above him, the main screen was a mass of s
    lines. "From the tendency of the gradients, I believ(
    very close to a gap."
    
                     88

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH     89
    
              Guillermo's three-fingered hands clicked across his key-
            board, transmitting the solution to the accompanying ves-
             sel.
              Stephen Gregg was curled into a ball on the deck. He'd
             started out leaning against the attitude-control console, but
             lateral acceleration during a previous series of transits had     J
             toppled him over. He either hadn't wished or hadn't been
             able to sit up again.
              The sailors without immediate duties during transit were
             comatose or praying under their breath. Perhaps I should
             have been pleased that experienced spacers were affected
             as badly as I was.
              "The gradients are rising too fast!" Salomon shouted.
             "The levels are already higher than I've ever seen them,
             and-"
              Lightbody came off his seat at the attitude-control con-
             sole. The sailor didn't have a weapon, but his long arms
    t
    I       were spread like the claws of an assassin bug. Salomon
            started to turn, shocked from his panic by the palpable
    e       destruction lunging toward his throat.
             Stephen caught Lightbody's ankle and jerked the sailor
    ,e       to the deck. I leaped onto the man's shoulders.
             Lightbody's face was blank. The wild light went out of
    ,e       his eyes, leaving the sailor with a confused expression.
    S.       "What?" he said. "Wha. .
    Ut                                                      "SorTy, sir," Salomon muttered. He sat down on his
    is       couch again.
             I rolled away. I had to use both hands to lever myself
    ,,e      back to a squat and then rise. The jolting action had settled
    711
      1     my mind, but my limbs were terribly weak. I could stand
    01       upright, so long as I gripped a stanchion as though the
            Oriflannne was in free fall rather than proceeding under
            1-g acceleration.
    ~ut
             Lightbody stood, then helped Stephen up as well.
    ral
    ,ed     Lightbody returned to his seat. I held out a hand to bring
    Ire     Stephen to his stanchion.
             "Prepare for transit," Piet Ricimer said. He hadn't risen    T
             ftorn his couch or looked back during the altercation.
             Light and color. Blankness, blackness, body ripped
             L
             r
              g
             I
    
             L
              J
       MEW
    
       ~Steg
    
             on
             L

    




    90            David Drake
    
    inside out, soul scraped in a million separate Hells.
     Light and color again.
     "There," said Piet Ricimer. "As I thought, a sta~ t,
    and she has a planet. We will name the planet Respi e.

    




    Day 68
    
    The plateau on which the Oriflamme and Mizpah rested
    above the jungle was basalt. The fresh ceramic with which
    teams resealed the vessels' stress-cracked hulls was black,
    and the sound of grinders processing the dense rock into
    raw material for the glazing kilns was nerve-wracking and
    omnipresent.
     Stephen checked the weld which belayed the glass-fiber
    line around a vertical toe of basalt near the plateau's rim.
    He nodded. I let myself drop over the edge.
     The mass of the plateau dulled the bone-jarring sound.
    My chest muscles relaxed for the first time in the three
    days since the grinders had started work.
     The basalt had formed hexagonal pillars as it cooled
    from magma in the depths of the earth. Cycles of upthrust
    and weathering left this mass as a tower hundreds of meters
    above the surrounding jungle. As the outermost columns
    crumbled, they created a giant staircase down into the
    green canopy.
     Forty meters below the top of the plateau, my boots
    touched the layer of dirt covering the sloping top of a
    broken pillar. I released my harness from the line and
    stepped away, waving Stephen down in turn.
     A pair of arm-long flying creatures paused curiously
    near Stephen, hovering in the updraft along the plateau's
    flank. The "birds" were hard-shelled, with four wings and
    sideways-hung jaws. They were harmless to anything the
    size of a man and hadn't learned to be wary.
     The forest far below was a choir of varied calls. Mist
    
                     91

    




                          92             David Drake
    
                          trailed among the treetops, and a plume hectares in area
                          rose a few kilometers away like a stationary cloud. I won-,
                          dered if a hot spring or a lake of boiling mud broke surface
                          there in the jungle.
                          Respite's atmosphere had a golden hue. I found I actual-
                          ly liked being under an open sky, unlike most men raised
                          in the tunnels and impervious domes of Venus. It made me
                          tingle with uncertainty, much the way I felt when making
                          my initial approaches to a woman.
                          The feeling of peace below the rim was relative. The
                          rock vibrated from the teeth of the grinders, felt if not
                          heard. The terrace was a nesting site for a colony of the
                          flying creatures. Hundreds of them stood at the mouths of
                          buffows excavated in the soil, goggling at us with octuple
                          eyes. They clacked the edges of their front and rear pairs
                          of wings together querulously.
                            Opinions of the flyers' taste among our crew ranged
          ~'Pi6 I         from adequate to delicious: Salomon swore he'd never
                          before eaten anything as good as the sausage of smoked
                          I ung tissue and organ meat he'd made from the creatures.
                          In any event, the expedition would leave Respite w
                          stocked with food.
                          Stephen landed with a grunt. His fingers massaged
                          opposite shoulders. For this excursion he'd slung a short
                          rifle across his back, rather than the flashgun he favored.
                          "I don't know about you," he said, "but I'm not looking
                          forward to the climb back, ascenders or no. I'm not in
                          shape for this."
                          "I'm not looking forward to going back to the noise,"
                          I said. I felt the strain in my arms and thigh muscles also,
                          but I thought I'd be physically ready before I was mentally
                          ready to return. "I suppose it's better than falling apart
                          transit, though."
                            Stephen sniffed. "Worried about the Kinsolving?"
              it          said. "Don't be. Winter just didn't have the stomach for
                          this. He's headed back to Venus with the rest of Hawtry's
                          node of vipers. That lot'd make me ashamed to be a gentle-
                          man-if I gave a damn myself"
 The hexagonal terrace sloped at 30', enough to turn-
                                                       tin
                          ble a man over the edge if he lost his foo g. Eacfi
    
    1P,

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH      93
    
    r, a                                            the basalt columns was about ten meters wide across the
        flats. I stepped forward carefully. "With the Decades loot
    cc besides," I noted.
        As I passed close to nesting sites, the creatures drew
    al- themselves down as far as they could into their burrows.
        Because the soil was so shallow, their heads remained
    'ne above the surface but the clicking of the wings was muted.
        "Commander Ricimer," I went on, "thinks they've just
    ng
        missed this landfall and gone on through the Breach. The
    'h Kinsolving."
    e
    '10 "Piet likes to think the best of people," Stephen said.
    't
    the He walked over to me without apparent caution. The wind
    of  frorn the forest ruffled our cuffs and tunics upward and
    bathed us in earthy, alien odors.
    pie
    airs                                            "And you?" I asked without looking at my companion.
        Something moved across the distant forest, perhaps a shad
    ged ow. If the motion had been made by a living creature, it
    wer was a huge one.
    'ked                                            "Oh, I'd like to, sure," Stephen said, adjusting his rifle's
    .res. sling.
    'Vell                                           "The loot's the reason I'm not angry," Stephen added.
        "There's enough value aboard the Kinsolving to arouse
    I his                                           attention, but not nearly enough to buy Winter's way out
    hort                                            o f trouble for attacking the colony of a state with whom
        Venus is at peace. That lot has punished themselves."
    wed.
    king                                            I looked at my companion. "Technically at peace," I
    A In said.
        "Politicians are very technical, Jeremy," Stephen said.
    ise","Until it's worth the time of somebody in court to cut
    also,corners. And the Decades loot won't interest the likes
    [tallyof Councilor Duneen, which is what it'd take to square
    irt in this one."
        I peered over the edge of the terrace. The next step down
       hewas within five meters of the outer lip of the one we were
    h foron, A pattern of parallel semicircular waves marked the
    Itry, ssurface of the step, springing out like ripples in a frozen
    -,ntle-pond from the side of the column on which we stood.
        Pits weathered into the rock offered toeholds. I turned
      Will-     and swung my legs over.
     ch of       "It's a long way down," Stephen warned. "And it's

    




                   94            David Drake
    
                   likely to be a longer way back up."
                  "I want to check something," I said. "You don't have
                  to come."
                  I clambered my own height down the rock face, then
                  pushed off and landed with my knees flexed. Perhaps
                  Stephen could pull me up with our belts paired into a
                  rope, or-
                  Stephen slammed down beside me. He'd jumped with
                  the rifle held out so that it didn't batter him in the side
                  when he hit the ground. He grinned at me.
                  I shrugged. "It's the pattern here," I said, walking toward
                  the ripples in stone.
                    Conical nests built up from the surface indicated that
    IF"            flyers of a different species had colonized this step. These
                   were hand-sized and bright yellow in contrast to the dull
                   colors of the larger creatures. Hundreds of them lifted into
                   the air simultaneously, screeching and emitting sprays of
                   mauve feces over the two of us.
                  I ducked and swore. Stephen began to laugh rackingly.
                  The cloud of flyers sailed away from the plateau, then
                  dived abruptly toward the jungle.
                  Stephen untied his kerchief, checked for a clean portior
                  of the f abric, and used that to wipe down the rifle's receiv.
                  er. "I was the smdrt-ass who decided if you thought ~ai
                  could make it back, I sure could," he explained. "Nobody'
                  choice but mme-which is why I let Piet make the dec
                  sions, mostly."
                   I stepped to the point from which ripples spread fro
                   the rock face. As I'd expected, the basalt had be(
                   melted away. Because the rock was already fully o)
                   dized, it splashed into waves like those of metal weld
                   in a vacuum.
                   The cavity so formed was circular and nearly two met,
                   in diameter. It was sealed by a substance as transparent
                   air-not glass, for it responded with a soft thock whe
                   tapped it with my signet ring. -
                   The creature mummified within was the height and sh
                   of a man, but it was covered with fine scales, and its lb
                   were jointed in the wrong places. At one time the mun
                   had been clothed, but only shreds of fabric and fitt

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH      95
    
    remained in a litter around the four-toed feet.
     "Piet said it looked from the way the rocks were glazed
    that ships had landed on the plateau in the past," Stephen
    remarked. "Landolph, he thought. But after he looked clos-
    er at the weather cracking, he decided that it must have
    been millennia ago."
     "What does it mean?" I asked.
     "To us?" said Stephen. "Nothing. Because our business
    is with the Federation; and whoever this fellow was, he
    wasn't from the Federation."
    
                                                   r

    




    AS'                        IN TRANSIT
    
                  Day 92
    
                   The Oriflamme came out of transit-out of a universe
                   which had no place for man or even for what man thought
                   were natural laws. This series had been of eighteen inser-
                   tions. The energy differential, the gradient, between the
                   sidereal universe and the bubbles of variant space-time had
                   risen each time.
                   I stood with one hand on the attitude-control console,
                   the other poised to steady Dole if the bosun slipped out of
                   his seat again. I hadn't eaten in ... days, I wasn't sure how
                   long. I hadn't kept anything down for longer yet. Every
                   time the Oriflamme switched universes, pain as dull as
                   the back of an axe crushed through my skull and nausea
                   tried to empty my stomach.
                   Dole had nothing to do unless Piet Ricimer ordered
                   him to override the Al-which would be suicide, given
                   the stresses wracking the Oriflamme now. Helping the
                   bosun hold his station, however pointless, gave me reason
                   to live.
                   Stephen Gregg stood with a hand on Lightbody's:shoul-
                   der and the other on Jeude's. Stephen was smiling, in a
                   manner of speaking. His face was as gray and lifeless
                   as a bust chipped out of concrete, but he was standing
                   nonetheless.
                   During insertions, the Oriflamme's thrusters roared at
                   very nearly their maximum output. Winger, the chief of the
                   motor crew, bent over Guillermo's couch. He spoke about
                   the condition of the sternmost nozzles in tones clipped Just
                   this side of panic.
    
                                    96

    




                             THROUGH THE BREACH     97
    
                  A few festoons of meat cured on Respite still hung from
                 wires stretched across the vessel's open areas. We'd
                 been eating the "birds" in preference to stores loaded on
             i   Decades, for fear that the flesh-smoked, for the most
                 part-would spoil. There was no assurance we'd reach
                 another food source any time soon.
                  Salomon's screen was a mass of numbers, Ricimer's
                 a tapestry of shaded colors occasionally spiking into a
                 saturated primary. The two consoles displayed the same
                 data in different forms, digital and analogue: craft and art
                 side by side, and only God to know if either showed a
    iverse        way out of the morass of crushing energies.
    pught
                  The Mizpah in close-up filled Guillermo's screen. The
    iinser-       gradients themselves threw our two vessels onto congruent
    -n the
                 courses: the navigational Als both attempted with electron-
    ie had        ic desperation to find solutions that would not exceed the
                 starships' moduli of rupture. The range of possibilities was
    insole,       an increasingly narrow one.
    out of        "Stand by for transit," Piet Ricimer croaked. "There
    -e how        will be a sequence of ff-four insertions."
    Every         He paused, breathing hard with the exertion. Guillermo
    lull as
                 compiled the data in a packet and transferred it to the
    iausea
                 Mizpah by laser.
                  Winger swore and stumbled aft again to his station.
    rdered        He would have walked into the Long Tom in the center
     given
                 of the compartment if I hadn't tugged him into a safer
    .ig the       trajectory.
    reason        The Mizpah's hull was zebra-striped. The reglazing done
                 on Respite had flaked from the old ship's hull along the
     shoul-      lines of maximum stress, leaving streaks of creamy original
      in a       hull material alternated with broader patches of the black,
    ifeless      basalt-based sealant. Leakage of air from the Mizpah must
    anding       be even worse than it was for us, and it was very serious
                 for us.
    wed at        More pain would come. More pain than anything human
    fofthe       could survive and remain human. Oh God our help in ages
     about
                 past, our hope in years to come 
    ,ed just      "We need to get into suits," Salomon said. He lay at
                 the side console like a cadaver on a slab. "They're in suits
                 already on the Mizpah." The navigator's eyes were on the

    




                   98            David Drake
    
                   screen before him, but he didn't appear to be strong enough
                   to touch the keypad at his fingertips.
                   A sailor sobbed uncontrollably in his hammock. Steph-
                   en's eyes turned toward the sound, only his eyes.
                   "This sequence will commence in one minute forty sec-
                   onds," Ricimer said. His words clacked as if spoken by
                   a wood-jawed marionette. "The gradients have ceased to
                   rise. We're. We're.
                   Stephen didn't turn his head to look at Ricimer, but he
                   said, "You're supposed to tell us that we've seen worse,
                   and we'll come through this too, Piet."
                    Watching Stephen was like watching a corpse speak.
                   Ricimer coughed. After a moment, I realized that he was
                   laughing. "If we do come through this, Stephen," Ricimer
                   said, "be assured that I will say that the next time."
                   "Prepare for t-trans--2' Salomon said. He couldn't get
                   the final word out before the fact made it redundant.
                   My head split in bright skyrockets curving to either side.
                   Guillermo's screen, fed by the external optics, became
                   hash as the Oriflamme entered a region alien to the very
    4k-
                   concept of light as the sidereal universe knew it.
          v~,
                   Back a heartbeat later, another blow crushing me into
                   a boneless jelly which throbbed with pain. The gasp that
                   started with the initial insertion was tightening my throat
                   and ribs, or I might have tried to scream.
                   Half the Mizpah hung on the right-hand display. A streak
                   of centimeter-thick black ceramic ringed the stem. Where
                   the bow should have been, I saw only a mass as confused
                   as gravel pouring from a hopper.
                   Transit. There was a God and He hated mankind with
                   a fury as dense as the heart of a Black Hole. The mills of
                   His wrath ground Jeremy Moore like-
                   Back, only gravel on Guillermo's screen, dancing with
                   light, and then nothing because the Oriflamme had cycled
                   into another bubble universe and I wished that I'd been
                   aboard the Mizpah because-
                   The Oriflamme crashed into the sidereal universe again
                   and stayed there while I swayed at Dole's station and
                   Stephen Gregg held Jeude's slumping form against the
                   back of his seat. There must have been a fourth insertion

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     99
    
              and return, but I hadn't felt it. Perhaps I'd blacked out,
              but I was still standing 
                "The gradients have dropped to levels normal for
              intrasystem transits," Ricimer said. He sounded as though
              he had just been awakened from centuries of sleep. The
    Y         muscles operating his vocal cords were stiff. "We'll make
    0         a further series of seven insertions, and I believe we'll
              find Landolph's landfall of Pesaltra at the end of them.
    ie        Gentlemen, we have transited the Breach."
    r"          I tried to cheer. I could only manage a gabbling sound.
              Dole put up a hand to steady me; we clutched one another
              for a moment.
                "We made it," Jeude whispered.
                Guillermo's display showed a blank starscape, and there'
              was no pulsing highlight on the main screen to indicate the
    ret
              Mizpah.
    le.
    ne
    ,ry
    ato
    hat
    oat
    -ak
    ~ere
    sed
    Mit
    cled
    )een
    gain
     and
     the
    rtion

    




      lei
    
                             PESALTRA
    
                Day 94
    
                The ramp lowered with squealing hesitation, further sig
                that the stress of transiting the Breach had warped 0
                Oriflamme's sturdy hull. Air with the consistency of h
                gelatin surged into the hold. I was the only man in t
                front rank who wasn't wearing body armor. Sweat slict
                my palm on the grip of the cutting bar.
                "Welcome to the asshole of the universe," muttere
                spacer. He spoke for all of us in the assault party.
                "Well," said Piet Ricimer as he raised the visor of
                helmet. "At least nobody's shooting at us."
                  Steam still rose from the mudflat that served Pe&
    Mill"       as a landing field. Nine of the local humans were pic
                their way toward the Oriflamme. Molts-several scort
                perhaps a hundred of them-stood near the low buil(
                and the boats drawn up on the shore of the surroui
                lagoons. The aliens formed small groups which stal
                but didn't approach the vessel.
                There were no weapons in sight among the Feds o
                slaves.
                Finger-length creatures with many legs and no ol
                eyes feasted on a blob of protoplasm at the foot
                ramp. They must have risen from burrows deep
                mud, or the thruster exhaust would have broiled
                The creatures were the only example of local anit
                that I could see.
                "No shooting unless I do," Stephen Gregg sai
                don't expect that. Let's go."
                  He cradled his flashgun and strode forwa~d. S,
    
    ik
                                 100

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     101
    
    boots squelched to the ankles when he stepped off the
    end of the ramp. I sank almost as deep, even though I
    didn't have the weight of armor and equipment Stephen
    carried.
     The front rank, ten abreast, stamped and sloshed forward.
    The second rank spread out behind us. The locals wore
    thigh-length waders of waterproofed fabric. In this heat
    and saturated humidity, their garments must have been
    nearly as uncomfortable as our back-and-breast armor.
     There were mountains in the western distance, but the
    Pesaltran terrain here and for kilometers in every direction
    was of shallow lagoons and mud banks with ribbons and
    spikes of vegetation. None of the plants were as much as
    a meter high; many of them sprawled like brush strokes of
    bright green across the mud.
     A bubble burst flatulently in the middle of the nearest
    channel. I guessed it was the result of bacterial decay, not
    a larger life7form.
     I felt silly holding a cutting bar as a threat against people
    so obviously crushed by life as the Fed personnel here.
    How the rest of the assault party must feel with their guns,
    armor, and bandoliers of ammunition!
     Though Stephen Gregg wouldn't care ... and maybe
    not the others either. Overwhelming force meant you were
    ready to overwhelm your enemy. What could possibly be
    embarrassing about that?
     "Ah, sirs?" said one of the locals, a white-haired man
    with a false eye. "You'd be from the Superintendency of
    the Outer Ways, I guess?"
     He stared at the Oriflamme and its heavily-armed crew
    as if we were monsters belched forth from the quavering
    earth.
     It wasn't practical to carry building materials between
    stars. The colony's structures were nickel steel processed
    from local asteroids or concrete fixed with shell lime.
    Three large barracks housed the Molt labor force; a fourth
    similar building was subdivided internally for the human
    staff.
     A middle-aged woman stood on the porch with the aid
    of crutches and leg braces. The door to the room behind
        




    _7
    
                 102            David Drake
    
                 her was open. Its furnishings were shoddy extrusions of
                 light metal, neither attractive nor comfortable-looking.
                 The same could be said for the woman, I thought with
                 a sigh.
     Sheet-metal sheds held tools and equipment in obvious
     disorder. A windowless concrete building looked like a
     blockhouse', but the sliding door was open, showing the
     1T
                 interior to be empty except for a few shimmering bales.
                 Garbage, including Molt and human excrement, stank
                 in the lagoon at the back of the barracks. The hulls of
                 at least two crashed spaceships and other larger junk had
                 been dragged to the opposite side of the landing site.
                 Ricimer halted us with a wave of his band and took
                 another step to make his primacy clear. "I'm Captain
                 Ricimer of the Free State of Venus," he said to the
                 one-eyed man. "We've come through the Breach. We'll
                 expect the full cooperation of everyone here. If we get it,
                 then there'll*be no difficulties for yourselves."
                 The Fed official looked puzzled. The men approaching
                 with him had halted a few paces behind. "No, really," the
                 man said. "I'm Assistant Treasurer Taenia; I'm in charge
                 here. If anyone is. Who are you?"
                 Dole stepped forward. The butt of his rifle prodded
                 Taenia hard in the stomach. "When Captain Ricimer's
                 present," he said loudly, "nobody else is in charge-and
                 especially not some dog of a Fed! Take your hats off,
                 you lot!"
                 Only two of the locals wore headgear, a cloth cap on
                 a red-haired man and another fellow with a checked ban-
                 danna tied over his scalp. Dole pointed his rifle in the face
                 of the latter. The Fed snatched off the bandanna. He was
                 bald as an egg.
                 Dole shifted his aim. "No, put that up!" Piet Ricimer
                 snapped, but the second Fed was removing his cap and
                 a third man knelt in the mud with a look of terror on
                 his face.
                 Taenia straightened up slowly. He blinked, though the
                 lid covering his false eye closed only halfway. "I don't. .
                 he said. "I don't. .
                   Ricimer stepped up to the man and took his right hand.
    VIR

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     103
    
              "You won't be hurt so long as you and your fellows
              cooperate fully with us. Are you willing to do that?"
    h                                               "We'll do anything you say," Taenia said. "Anything
              at all, of course we will, your excellency!"
                Ricimer looked over his shoulder. "Mister Moore," he
    is
    a           said. "When we lift off, I'll want to put a transponder in
    te          orbit to infon-n Captains Winter and Blakey of our course
              should they pass this way. Can you build such a device
              with what we have on hand?"
    lk
                I nodded, flushing with silent pleasure. Ricimer had
              noticed my facility with electronics and was willing to
              use it. "Yes, yes, of course," I said. "But I suspect I can
              use local hardware."
    in          Ricimer smiled at me. "I can understand a man being
              interested in a challenge," he said. "Though I'm surprised
    he
              at a man who doesn't find this voyage enough of a chal-
              lenge already."
    it ,        Ricimer's face set again; grim, though not angry. There
    . 119     was no headquarters building, so he indicated the human
    te        barracks with a nod of his carbine's muzzle. "Let's pro-
    rge       ceed to the shelter," he said.
                "But why in God's name would you want to come
              here?" blurted the Fed wringing his bandanna between
    led
     9        his hands.
    Ir s        "That," remarked Stephen Gregg as we twenty Ven-
    ind       erians swept past the flabbergasted locals, "is a fair ques-
              tion."
     on       "Well, we don't have anybody to communicate with,"
    mn-       Schatz, Pesaltra's radio operator, said defensively to me.
    ,ace      "They were supposed to send a new set from Osomi with
    was       the last ferry, but they must've forgot it. Besides, the ferry
              comes every six months or a year, and nobody else comes
    mer
              at all. It's not like we've got a lot of landing traffic to
     and
              control."
                Across the double-sized room that served the station's
     the      administrative needs, Salomon rose from a desk covered
              with unfiled invoices. "What do you mean you don't have
              any charts?" he snarled at Taenia. "You've got to have
              some charts!"
     [and.

    




    104           David Drake
    
     The floor was covered with tracked-in mud so thick
    that a half-liter liquor bottle was almost submerged in a
    comer. Paper and general trash were mixed with the dirt,
    creating a surface similar to wattle-and-daub. I'd dropped
    a spring fastener when I pulled the back from the non-
    functioning radio. I'd searched the floor vainly for al-
    most a minute, before I realized that the task was vain
    as well as pointless.
     "We're not going anywhere," Taenia said in near echo
    of Schatz's words a moment before. "What do we need
    navigational data for?"
     "If we were going anyplace," Schatz added with a
    variation of meaning, "they wouldn't have stuck us on
    Pesaltra."
     "We'll search the files," Piet Ricimer said calmly. He
    9estured his navigator to the chair at the desk and dragged
    another over to the opposite side. "Sometimes a routing
    slip will give coordinates."
     "But not values," Salomon moaned. He organized a
    thatch of hard copy to begin checking nonetheless.
     "But how do you communicate across the planet?" I said
    to Schatz. The sealed board was still warm when I pulled it
    from the radio, though the Fed claimed it had failed three
    months before. Schatz hadn't bothered to unplug the set-
    which had a dead short in its microcircuitry.
     Venerians stood in the shade of buildings, staring at a
    landscape that seemed only marginally more interesting
    than hard vacuum. The low haze the sun burned off the
    water
       blurred the horizon. The glimpse I'd gotten through
    the Oriflamme's optics during the landing approach con-
    vinced me that better viewing conditions wouldn't mean
    a better view.
     "There's nobody . . ." Schatz said. "I mean, there's just
    us here and the collecting boats, and nobody goes out in
    the boats but the bugs. So we don't need a radio, I'm
    telling you."
     Three Venerians had boarded one of the light-alloy boats
    on the lagoon. It was a broad-beamed craft, blunt-ended and
    about four meters long. A pole rather than oars or a motor.
    propelled the craft. From the raucous struggle the men were

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH     105
    
    ~k         having, the water was less than knee-deep.
                 "Bugs?" I repeated in puzzlement.
    a
    rt,                                                "He means the Molts, Jeremy," Stephen Gregg said
    ~d         dryly. "It's a term many of the folk on outworld stations
               use, so that they can pretend they're better than somebody.
               Which these scuts obviously are not."
    an           I unhooked my cutting bar. The tool's length made it
               clumsy for delicate work, but it would open the module.
    ho           "There's no call to be insulting," Schatz muttered. He
    ed         was afraid to look at Stephen. His hand rose reflexively
               to shield his mouth halfway through the comment.
       a         "Is he helping you, Jeremy?" Stephen asked.
      Dn         I looked up from the incipient operation with a scowl.
               "What?" I snapped, then remembered I owed Stephen 
     -.le      Well, owed him the chance to be whatever it was I'd
      ed       become. "Sorry, Stephen. No, he's useless to me."
      ng         "Get a shovel and a broom," Stephen ordered Schatz
               crisply, "and get to work. I expect to see the entire floor
               of this room in one standard hour."
                 I triggered my bar and let it settle after the start-up
      dd       torque. I held the electronics module against the blade
    I it       with my left hand, rotating the work piece while holding
     ,ee        the cutting bar steady.
                  B t there's bugs-" Schatz said, raising his voice over
        u
      the keen of the bar's ceramic teeth.
      a
                 Stephen's face went as blank as a concrete wall. His
     ng         eyes seemed to sink a little deeper into his skull, and his
     he         lips parted minusculely.
      gh                                              Schatz backed a step, backed another-hit the door-
      )n-        jamb, and ducked out into the open air.
      an                                              I shut off the power switch for safety's sake before I
                hung the bar back on my belt. I parted the sawn casing
      ~st        with a quick twist.
       in        "Useless," Stephen said in a hoarse voice. "But he will
        m       clean this room."
                 "And so's this," I said. "Useless, I mean-fried like
      ats       an egg.
      .nd        I dropped the pieces of module back onto the radio's
      tor       chassis and shook my head. "I'm going out to check the
      %,re      wrecked ships," I said. "Could be something there will
                                                            1EN I
                                                            0 1~ A
                                                            k
    
       or       C,
                W,
      -re

    




    106           David Drake
    
    help. I doubt this lot is any better at salvage than at any-
    thing else."
     Stephen's eyes focused again. "Yes, well," he said. "I'll
    come with you, Jeremy."
     He gestured me out the door ahead of him. Schatz stood
    halfway along the porch, holding a mattock in one hand
    and arguing with the woman on crutches.
     "To keep from doing something you'll regret, you
    mean," I said over my shoulder to Stephen.
     "Not quite," Stephen said. "But I don't want to do some-
    thing that Piet would regret."
    
    The high scream of my cutting bar ground down into a
    moan as the battery reached the limits of its charge. I
    backed away from the twisted nickel-steel pedestal I'd
    sawn most of the way through. Federation salvagers at
    the time of the crash had removed the navigational Al
    from the pedestal's top.
     I gasped for breath. My gray tunic and the thighs of my
    trousers were black with ~weat.
     Stephen looked down into the freighter's cockpit. The
    wreck lay on its side, so a rope ladder now dangled from
    the hatch in the ceiling. The force of the crash had twisted
    the hatchway into a lozenge shape.
     "I repeat," Stephen said. "I could take a shift."
     "I know what I'm doing," I snarled, "and you bloody
    well wouldn't! I haven't put in this much work to have
    somebody saw through the middle of the board."
     I was trembling with fatigue and the heat. I hadn't recov-
    ered from the strains my mind had transmitted to my body
    during the weeks of brutal transit. Maybe I'd never recov-
    er. Maybe-
     "Come on up and have some water," Stephen said mild-
    ly, reaching a hand out to me. "The distillation plant here
    works, at least."
     Stephen's touch settled my flailing mind so that I could
    climb the ladder. As Stephen lifted, the muscles of my
    right forearm twisted in a cramp and pulled my hand into
    a hook. I flopped onto the crumpled hull, cursing undcr
    my breath in frustration.

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH     107
    
         Salomon trudged toward us across the seared mud of
         the landing field, holding a curved plate of shimmering
         gray. The object was as large as his chest. Hydraulic fluid
         from the infrequent ships had painted swatches of ground
         with a hard iridescence.
         Stephen's flashgun was equipped with a folding solar
         panel to recharge the weapon when time permitted. He
         had spread the panel as a parasol while I worked in the
         cabin below.
         Stephen had brought a I 0-liter waist jug from the Ori
         flamme when I got my tool kit. The curved glass container
         was cast with a carrying handle and four broad loops for
         harness attachment. I lifted it with care, letting my left
         hand support most of the weight.
         Stephen took my cutting bar and opened the battery
         compartment in its grip. He swapped the discharged bat
         tery for the one in the flashgun's butt. The charging mecha
         nism whined like a peevish mosquito when the flashgun's
         prongs made contact.
         The jug'scontents were flavored with lemon juice,
         enough to cut the deadness of distilled water. Micropores
         in the glass lifted water by osmosis to the outer surface,
         cooling the remaining contents by convection. The drink
         was startlingly refreshing.
         "Thought I'd join you,"Salomon said. He lifted the
         object he held, the headshield of some large creature, to
    e    Stephen to free his hands.
         The Federation freighter was a flimsy construction built
         0",mostly of light alloys on this side of the Miffor. It had
         touched down too hard, ramming a thruster nozzle deep
         into the mud as the motors were shutting down. The final
         pulse of plasma blew the vessel into a cartwheel and ripped
         its belly open.
    re   The crew may have survived with no worse than bruises,
         but the ship itself was a total loss. The hull had crumpled
    Id   into a useful series of steps, though you had to watch the
    ly   places where metal bent beyond its strength had ripped
    ,to  jaggedly.
    [er  "There'sno information at all," the navigator com
         plained bitterly. I offered him the heavy jug, but he
    ~d
    y
            p
    
            b
            j
            p
            n
            u
            t
             s
             0
             's
             b
             T
             ut t
             nto
               e
               e
    
               h
               a
      MW
    
             laces
    to      jag~ e(
    r
    
    1~e        I
             plame

    




                    . ...........
    
                  108            David Drake
                  waved it away. "We'll have to coast the gradients
                  looking for the next landfall, and there's no guarante
                  that'll have navigational control either. Osomi sounds lik
                  another cesspool, sure, maybe a bit shallower."
                    "If Landolph could do it, Piet can," Stephen,said caln-fl
                  He tapped the plate of chitin. "What's this?"
                    "The values aren't even the same on this side of t
                  Mirror!" Salomon said. "The people here live like animE
                  drinking piss they brew for a couple months after the fe
                  from Osomi drops off supplies. Then they run out of dr
                  fruit and don't even have that!"
                    "It's from a local animal, not a Molt, I suppose'
    MIN           asked. By helping Stephen break the navigator's n
                  out of its tail-chasing cycle of frustration, I found I
                  calming myself. I smiled internally.
                    Salomon shrugged. "It's a sea scorpion," he said.
                  live in the lagoons. The head armor fluoresces, 0 it's
                  for jewelry this side of the Mirror. That's the only r(
                  anybody lives here-if you call this living!"
                    Stephen looked at his arm through the chitin. The,
                  was nearly transparent, but sunlight gave it a rich
                  that was more than a color.
                    "Pretty," I said. I liked it. "How big is the who
                  mal?"
                    "Three, four meters," Salomon said. He reached
     'NI)
                  jug, then grimaced and withdrew his hand. "I'v(
                  bottle back on the ship," he said. "I was going to c(
    fill          when we transited the Breach, but when the time
                  didn't feel much like it."
                  He glared at the surrounding terrain. "We'N
                  through the Breach, we've lost most of the squa(
                  His head snapped toward Stephen and me. "Y
                  that the Kinsolving and Mizpah aren't going to
                  don't you?" Salomon demanded.
                  "Yes," said Stephen evenly. "But we're goinj
                  a transponder here anyway."
                  Salomon shuddered. "And what we've got for
                  bank-and a bale of crab shells that wouldn't
                  a three-day voyage, much less what we've gone
                    "They'll be trading material," Stephen said.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     109
    
    food as we go on, and sticking a gun in somebody's face
    isn't always the best way to bargain."
     I grinned at him. "Though it works," I said.
     It's not a magic wand, Jeremy," Stephen said. "It
    depends on the people at either end of the gun, you
    see."
     Stephen's voice dropped and he rasped the last few
    syllables quietly. I felt sobered by the results of my quip.
    I put my hand over his and drew the gunman back to the
    present.
     "You know," Stephen resumed with a dreamy softness,
    "Pesaltra is actually a pretty place in its way. Water and
    land stitched together by the plants, and the mist to soften
    the lines."
     Salomon knew Stephen well enough to fear him in a
    killing mood. He nodded with approval that we'd stepped
    back from an unexpected precipice. "They catch the scor-
    pions in traps, Tacnia says," he said. "It's dangerous. Every
    year they lose a few boats and half a dozen Molts running
    the trapline."
     "We're not doing it for the shell," Stephen said. He
    wasn't angry, any more than a storm is angry, but his tone
    brooked as little argument as a thunderbolt does. "We're
    not doing it for the wealth, either, though we'll have that
    by and by."
     In a way, it wasn't Stephen Gregg speaking, but rather
    Piet Ricimer wearing Stephen's hollow soul. There was
    fiery power in the words, but they were spoken by some-
    one who knew he had nothing of his own except the Hell
    of his dreams. "We're doing it for all men, on Venus and
    Earth and the Rabbits, bringing them a universe they can
    be men in!"
     Stephen's big frame shuddered. After a moment, in a
    changed voice, he added, "Not that we'll live to see it.
    But we'll have the wealth."
     I flexed my hands and found they worked again, though
    my right arm had twinges. "I'm going to finish down
    below," I said.
     "Let me take a look," Stephen said. He furled the
    charging panel and collapsed its support wand so that
    
122     David Drake

and his face wore a dazed expression. Jeude's buckshot had hit him squarely at the top of the breastbone, but he was still-for the moment-alive.
Which is all any of us can say, I thought as I jumped his legs. My boots skidded on the remains of the man Stephen's bolt had eviscerated. I caught the counter with my free hand and swung myself through the gate. I'd left my cutting bar behind. There was more shootin outside 9
the building.
The room stank worse than a slaughterhouse. Ozone, powder smoke, and cooked meat added their distinctive smells to the pong of fresh-ripped human guts. The woman Ricimer shot was huddled beside the outer door. She'd smeared a trail of blood across the floor to where she lay.
Heimond's car pulled a hard turn as I ran out the front door. Ricimer was driving again. Stephen stood on the passenger seat. He'd slung the flashgun and instead held Piet's repeating carbine.
The man on the roof now lay full length on his back. P
I don't know if he'd been killed or had passed out from drink.
1 jumped into the back with Lightbody and Jeude. The car hadn't slowed, and I'm not sure anybody realized I wasn't already on board. Jeude fired again. The flash from the shotgun's muzzle was red and bottle-shaped.
"Shut that popgun down until there's a target in range, you whore's turd!" Stephen snarled in a voice with more hatred than you'd find in a regiment of Inquisitors.
Stephen swayed as the car jounced. I grabbed his belt so that if he fell he wouldn't be thrown out. He poised the butt of the carbine to crush my skull, but his conscious mind overrode reflex at the last moment.
I sucked breaths through my mouth. I was dizzy, and nothing around me seemed real.
The car had a quartet of headlights above the hood, but only the pair in the center worked. They threw a long shadow past a bareheaded man in blue running down the track a hundred meters ahead of us.
Stephen fired once. The man pitched forward with one arm flung out and the other covering his eyes. We joited
MW

THROUGH THE BREACH  123

    past the body at the car's best speed, 50 kph or so. There
    was no sign of the other Feds who'd escaped from port
    control with that one.
        "Stephen, sit down!" Piet Ricimer ordered. Gregg
    ignored him.
        The boarding ramps of the ship that landed after ours
    were down, and the vessel was lighted like a Christmas
    star. Molts and humans in blue uniforms stood on the
    ramps and at a distance from the vessel: the ground directly
    underneath would still be at close to 100'C from the ship's
    exhaust.
        A man on the vessel's forward ramp pointed toward
d   our swaying vehicle and shouted orders through a bull
    horn. "The fucking Parliament!" Jeude snarled. "The real
t   fucking escort, and why she couldn't have showed up
e   tomor-"
Id      A uniformed woman ran into our path, waving her arms
    over her head. Piet swerved violently. Stephen fired, a
k.  quick stab of yellow flame. The Fed toppled under our
in  right front wheel.
        We lurched but the wheels were mounted on half-axles
he  and had a wide track. Stephen flailed, completely off bal
I   ance. The car didn't go over. By bracing my leg against
in  the side of the compartment I kept Stephen from falling
    out as well.
(TC,        Lightbody cried, "Lord God of hosts!" as he fired toward
ore the Parliament, and Jeude's shotgun boomed again despite
    the fact that I was sprawled half across him as I clung
elt desperately to Stephen. The car's frame swayed upward
the as the heavy front wheel slammed down. The rear wheel
ous hit the woman's body, and Stephen shot the blue-sashed
    Molt who tried to leap over the hood at Ricimer.
and     A ship down the line lit her thrusters. A bubble of rain
    bow fire lifted and cooled to a ghostly skeleton of itself
but before vanishing entirely. The Parliament was a dedicated
ong warship. I'd seen three rectangular gunports gape open in
the succession in my last glimpse of her, but now we were
    past.
one     Stephen got his legs straight and sat down. His carbine's
Ited    bolt was open. He opened a pocket of Piet's bandolier
124     David Drake

and took out a handful of cartridges. The Parliament's siren howled and a bell on the Molt barracks clanged a twice-a-second tocsin.
A ship tested her thrusters again. This time the vessel
4,  lifted slightly from her berth and settled again ten meters
out in the roadway. She was the Oriflamme. The 20-cm
hoses with which she'd been drawing reaction mass dan
gled from her open holds.
Glowing exhaust backlit us. I stared stupidly at the spray of dust ahead of our right front wheel. "There's a truck following-" Jeude shouted.
Maybe he meant to say more, but three violent hammer blows shook our vehicle. Stephen pitched forward, the severed tags of his flashgun's sling flapping. A palm-sized asterisk of lead smeared his backplate; the ceramic was cracked in a pattern of radial lines. My face stung, my hands bl
ed where bits of bullet jacket had splashed them, and I still didn't realize the Feds were shooting at us.
I twisted to look back the way we'd come. A slopefronted truck bounced down the road in a huge plume of dust. It was moving twice as fast as we could. Red flame winked from the framework on top of the vehicle. The Feds had welded dozens of rifle barrels together like an array of organ pipes.
Bits of rubber flew off our left rear tire, though it didn't go flat. Because of Rabbit attacks, the garrison of Templeton had a mobile reaction force. It was too mobile for us.
Stephen leaned across the back of his seat and rested his left elbow on my shoulder. It was like having a building fall on me. I had just enough awareness of what was happening to close my eyes. The flashgun drove its dazzling light through the tight-clenched eyelids, shocking the retinas into multiple afterimages when I looked up again.
The laser mechanism keened as it cooled beside my ear. Stephen tilted the weapon and slapped a fresh battery into the butt compartment. The flashgun wasn't going to do any good; even I could see that.
The truck was armored. The metal shutter over the wiqdshield glowed white, but the driver behind it was unharmed.
THROUGH THE BREACH  125

Flashgun bolts delivered enormous amounts of energy, but a monopulse laser has virtually no penetration. Even a hit on the driver's periscope might be useless, since properly designed optics would shatter instead of transmitting a dangerous amount of energy.
"Bail out!" I shouted. I squirmed to the side of the compartment. Jeude wasn't moving; Lightbody thumbed a cartridge into the breech of his rifle.
"Jump!" I shouted, but as I poised Lightbody fired again and Stephen leaned forward against the butt of his squat laser.
A bullet hit our right rear wheel and this time the tire did blow. The car fislitailed, flinging me against the seats. The sky ripped in a star-hot flare. Concussion pushed the car's suspension down to the stops, then lifted us off the ground when the pressure wave passed.
The Oriflamme had fired one of her 15-cm broadside guns. The truck was a geyser of flame. Fuel, ammunition, and the metal armor burned when the slug of ions hit the vehicle.
Ricimer crossed his wrists on the yoke, countersteering to bring us straight. The wheel rim dragged a trail of sparks across the gravel.
-Salomon shouldn't have risked running out-" Ricimer cried.
Another of the Oriflamme's cannon recoiled into its gunport behind a raging hell of stripped atomic nuclei.
The facade of the Molt barracks caved in. The interior of the three-story building erupted into flame as everything that could bum ignited simultaneously.
Wreckage spewed outward like the evanescent fabric of a bubble popping. Shattered concrete and viscous flame wrapped port control and the maintenance shop on the barracks' other side.
Ricimer stood on the car's brakes. Because of the blown tire we spun 180' and nearly hopped broadside into the lip of the Oriflamme's stem ramp. Stephen rose in his seat and poised like a statue aiming the flashgun. I tried to raise Jeude one-handed-I'd clung to my electronics kit since the moment I slammed it over the data we'd come
126     David Drake

to get. Lightbody bent to help me.
Stephen fired. A secondary explosion erupted with red
;UA flame.
        Piet grabbed Jeude's legs. He and I and Lightbody lifted
    Jeude out. The smooth surface of Jeude's body armor
    slipped out of my hand, but Lightbody's arms were spread
    beneath the wounded man's torso.
        Beneath the torso of the dead man. A bullet had struck
    Jeude under the right eye socket and exited through the
    back of his neck. Strands of his blond hair were plastered
    to the wounds, but his heart no longer pumped blood.
        A thumping shock wave followed several seconds after
    Stephen fired. He'd managed to do effective damage with
    the flashgun instead of leaving the fight to the thunderous
    clamor of plasma cannon.
        We ran up the ramp, carrying Jeude among us. The air
    shimmered from the hop that had lifted the Oriflamme
    into firing position. Salomon poured full power through
    the thrusters. Heat battered me from all sides. I would
    have screamed but my lips and eyelids were squeezed
    tight against the ions that flayed them like an acid bath.
        I fell down, feeling the shock as the third of our big
    guns fired. Acceleration squeezed me to the deck as the
    jets hammered at maximum output. I was blind and suf_
    focating and at last I did scream but the fire didn't scour
    my lungs.
        I thrashed upright. The crewman spraying me with a
    hose shut it off when he saw I was choking for breath.
    I was wrapped in a soaking blanket. So were the others
    who'd staggered aboard with me.
        Dole knelt and held Piet's hands with a look of fear
    for his commander on his face. Stephen checked the bore
    of his flashgun and Lightbody was trying to unlatch his
    body armor. The fifth blanket must cover Jeude, because
    it didn't move.
        Our ramp was still rising. Through the crack I could
    see waves on the lake fifty meters below, quivering in the
    icteric light of a laser aimed at us from the Templeton
    defenses. Something hit the hull with a sound more like
    a scream than a crash. Our last broadside gun slammed
THROUGH THE BREACH  127

        as the ramp closed against its jamb.
    red     Piet got to his feet. Dole tried to hold him. Piet pushed
        past and staggered toward the companionway to the Ori
    ~fted   flamme's working deck. His face was fiery red under the
    ~mor    lights of the hold. Stephen walked behind Piet like a giant
    iread   shadow.
            I stood up. Pain stabbed from my knuckles when I tried
    suck    to push off with my free hand. My face was swelling, so
    ,,i the that I seemed to be looking through tubes of flesh. Soon
    tered   I wouldn't be able to see at all.
d.          I stumbled to the companionway, swinging my arm to
    after   clear startled crewmen from my path.
    with        I had to get to the bridge. My partner held the course
    r1rous  we would follow until we won free or died.

[ie air ~mme 'rough xould eezed bath.
ar big
as the
d suf
scour

with a
wath.
iothers

bf fear
ie bore
tch his
iecause

could in the
4pleton
Sre like
animed
INTERSTELLAR SPACE

Day 102

"Sir, please leave the dressing in place," begged Rakoscy, the ship's surgeon. "I can't answer for what will happen to your eyes if you don't keep them covered for the next twenty-four hours at least."
"It's under control, Piet," Stephen said, taking Piet's hands in his own. He pulled them down from Piet's eye bandage with as much gentle force as was necessary. "There's nothing to see anyway. Salomon'll tell us when the data's been analyzed."
Dressings muffled both men's hands into mittens. The visored helmet Stephen wore because of the flashgun's
I-V glare had protected his face.
Ughtbody moaned in a hammock against the crossbulkhead, drugged comatose but not at peace. He'd come through the night better than the rest of us physically, but I was worried about his state of mind.
I hadn't thought of Lightbody and Jeude as being close friends. I don't suppose they were friends in the usual sense, a deeply religious man and an irreverent fellow who talked of little but the women and brawls he'd been involved with between voyages. But they'd been together for many years and much danger.
I could see again. Shots had shrunk the tissues of my face enough for me to look out of my eye sockets, and Rakoscy had left openings in the swaths of medicated dressings that
Mill,   covered the skin exposed to the plasma exhaust. I felt as
though a crew had been pounding on my body with mauls,
but Rakoscy assured me there'd be no permanent injury.

128
A

    THROUGH THE BREACH  129
        It was good to worry about Lightbody's state of mind,
    because then I didn't have to consider my own.
        Salomon turned his couch and said, "Sir, Guillermo and
    I have a course to propose."
        Rakoscy led Piet by the hands to the center console. I
    suppose it would have made better sense for Salomon to
    use Piet's couch under these circumstances. The same Al
    drove all three consoles, but the main screen was capable
    of more discriminating display because it had four times
    the area of the others.
        Salomon hadn't suggested he take over, much less make
    the decision without asking. Logic wasn't the governing
,n
    factor here. It rarely is in human affairs.
xt      Stephen moved nearer to me and hesitated. I'm not sure
    whether or not he knew I could see.
s       "That seemed close," I said quietly. "Or is it something
Ve  I'll get used to after the fiftieth time?"
Y.      Stephen gave a minuscule smile. "No," he said, "that
,n  was pretty near-run, all right. If it hadn't been for Salomon
    taking the initiative, it would've been a lot too close."
he  He coughed. "You're all right?"
I's     "Yeah," I said. "I don't have much color vision at the
    moment, that's all."
;s-     He looked hard at me, but he didn't push for answers
ne  to the real questions. Why had God saved me and taken
wut Jeude beside me?
    If there was a God.
)Se     Piet settled onto his couch and sighed audibly. Fans,
ial thrusters, and the noise of the ship herself working filled
)w  the Oriflamme with a constant rumble.   With time, that
~en drifted below the consciousness.
ier     There were no human sounds aboard now. The crew
        in the forward section had fallen tensely and completely
ice
    silent.
,cy     Piet switched on the public address system by feel. "Go
hat ahead," he said.
as      "Trehinga is about six days transit from Templeton,"
Ils,
        Salomon said. "Seven, according to Federation charts, but
ry- I'm sure we can do it in six."
        The navigator had shown himself to be able and quick
130     David Drake

thinking. As Stephen said, he'd saved us on Templeton. Salomon ran out the big guns against orders when he heard the landed Parliament identify herself as a presidential vessel-a dedicated warship--over the radio. The Feds
iL
party sent by the Parliament's captain to
we met were a
F
    port control when nobody replied to the radio.
Despite his proven ability, Salomon licked his lips from nervousness as he proposed a solution based on information that the general commander couldn't see. Alone of us aboard the Oriflamme, Salomon was afraid that his responsibilities were beyond him.
"It has dock facilities," he continued. "We've lost two attitude jets, and the upper stem quarter of the hull was crazed by laser fire as we escaped. But there shouldn't be much traffic."
"Trehinga grows grain for the region," Guillermo put in from the opposite console. "There are no pre-Collapse vestiges, and therefore little traffic or defenses."
Salomon nodded, gaining animation as he spoke. "The port's supposed to have a company of human soldiers," he IF,
T1  said, "but Mister Gregg says he doubts that." He looked
up at Stephen.
Piet nodded agreement. "A few dozen militia, counting Molts with spears and cutting bars," he said. "Unless the Back Worlds are much better staffed than the Reaches in general."
"Of course, Templeton was no joke," Stephen said. The 'I lack of concern in his voice wasn't as reassuring as it might
have been if a less fatalistic man were speaking.
"Templeton was a treasure port," Piet said briskly. "Go on, Mister Salomon. What about the risk of pursuit from Templeton?"
"The bloody Parliament isn't pursuing anybody till they build her a new bow, sir," Stampfer said. "Since me and the boys on Gun Three blew the old one fucking off as we lifted."
U; J        The satisfaction in the master gunner's voice was as
    obvious as it was deserved.
    Piet nodded again in approval. "And there wasn't any
    thing docked on Templeton when we arrived that would be
THROUGH THE BREACH  131

    a threat," he said. "Nevertheless, we'll need to take some
    precautions if we're going to do extensive repairs."
        Piet turned his head-"looked," but of course he couldn't
    see-from Salomon to Guillermo and back. "Are we ready
    to go, then?" he asked. The infectious enthusiasm of his
    tone helped me forget how much I hurt. Piet had been
    burned at least as badly.
        "The first sequence of the course is loaded," Guillermo
f   said. Salomon glanced up in surprise, but the Molt knew
    Piet Ricimer.
        "Then let's go," Piet said. "Gentlemen, prepare for
    transit!"
11 ~ 117
TREHINGA

Day 109

The cutter touched bow-high. Piet cut the motor and we skipped forward on momentum, crashing down on the skids about the boat's own length ahead of its thruster's final pulse. It was a jolting landing compared to Piet's usual, but I understood why he wouldn't take chances with plasma for a while.
Lightbody and Kiley had undogged the dorsal hatch when we dropped below three thousand meters. They and the four other sailors packed beneath the hatch slid it open, but Stephen was first out of the vessel and I managed not to be far behind. I was more mobile than the men in half armor and bandoliers of ammunition.
A featherboat with room for twenty men and a small plasma cannon would have been better for this assault, but that option had gone missing with the Kinsolving. Twelve of us were squeezed into the cutter. Four spacers would cover the pair of grain freighters on the landing field, while we others "captured" the settlement of New Troy: a two-story Commandatura with bay windows and a copper-sheathed front door, and fifty squalid commercial and residential buildings.
The landing field was adobe clay, flat and featureless. Dust puffed under my boots. The sun was near zenith, but the air felt pleasantly cool,
The Oriflamme roared down from orbit above
    us,
Salomon would be on the ground in three minutes, bu
it would be at least five minutes more before anyone left
the ship safely except wearing a full hard suit. The flagship

132
THROUGH THE BREACH  133

    could dominate the community by her presence and the
    threat of her heavy guns, but a quick assault required a
    lighter vessel.
        The Commandatura was fifty meters from where we'd
    landed. People watched us from its windows and the door
    ways of other buildings.
        According to the database I'd copied on Templeton,
    Trehinga was fairly well populated, but most of that popu
    lation lived on latifundia placed along the great river sys
    tems of the north continent. New Troy was the planet's
    administrative capital and starport, but it was in no sense
    a cultural center.
        Still, some of the people watching were women.
        A pair of men in white tunics, one of them wearing a
    saucer hat with gold braid on the brim, walked out of the
    Commandatura. Stephen and I started toward them. Dole
    was beside me, carrying a rifle as well as a cutting bar, and
    the other sailors fanned out to the sides. Piet ran to join us,
    last out of the cutter because he'd been piloting it.
        The Fed officials paused at the base of the three steps
    to the Commandatura's front door. They stared at us, all
    armed and most of us wearing body armor.
        "Raiders!" the older man shouted.
        Stephen pointed his flashgun.
        "Don't anyone shoot!" Piet cried as he aimed his own
    carbine toward the Feds. "And you, wait where you are!"
        "Raiders!" the Fed repeated. He turned and took the
    four steps in two strides. His companion raised his hands
    and closed his eyes. The onlookers of a moment before
    vanished, though eyes still peeked from the comers of
    windows.
        I ran toward the Commandatura, holding my cutting bar
    in both hands to keep it from flailing. The others followed
    me as quickly as their equipment allowed.
        "You won't be harmed!" Piet said.
        The Fed official grabbed the long vertical handhold and
    started to pull the door open. Piet fired. His bullet whacked
t   the door near the transom, jolting the panel out of the Fed's
    hand. The Fed ran into the edge of the door instead of
    slipping between it and the jamb. The impact knocked

4A
    134 David Drake
    him back down the steps, scattering blood from a pressure
    cut over his right eye.
        I ran past the man. He moaned and squeezed his fore
    head with his palms stacked one on the other. I tugged
L   at the door with my left hand. Piet's bullet had split the
    wood of the heavy panel, wedging it tighter against the
50
    jamb. Stephen jerked the door open but I eeled into the
    reception area ahead of him.
        There were offices to right and left behind latticework
    partitions. Either half held a dozen Molts and a few humans
    among the counters and desks. A man in his fifties had
    crawled under his desk. The opening faced the front door,
    so he was perfectly visible.
        Two rifles lay on the wooden floor of the anteroom. Men
    in white Federation military tunics stood in the office to
    the left, with the lattice between them and their weapons.
    Their hands were raised, but from the looks on their faces
    they expected to be killed anyway.
        I started up the central staircase to the second story,
    taking the steps two at a time. Behind me Piet ordered,
    "Get them all in the left room. Loomis and Baer to guard
    them!"
        Heavier boots crashed on the stairs behind me. Stephen
    breathed in gasps. Dole whuffed, "Christ's blood!" as his
    boot slipped. Armor and equipment slammed down loudly
    on the hardwood treads. I could be shot from behind by
    accident, I realized, but the thought didn't touch the part
    of me that was in control.
        As fast as we'd arrived, the personnel of New Troy had
    found time to respond. The folk downstairs reacted by
    hiding and dissociating themselves from their weapons,
    but that might not be everyone's choice
        To the right of the stair head was an openwork gate of
    cast bronze. The workmanship was excellent. The pattern
    was based on pentacles, like that of the Molts' own archi
    tecture. The gate was locked. Somebody inside had tried
    to draw a curtain for visual privacy, but he/she had torn
    the fabric in panic. The room beyond had thick rugs and
    a good deal of plush furniture, though I couldn't see any,
    people in the glance I spared it.
- ---------

m6ig
1016m

THROUGH THE BREACH  135

The door to the left was thick, ajar, and carried the legend in letters cut from copper sheet-stock GUARDS OF THE REPUBLIC. I rammed it fully open with my shoulder.
The interior was dim because the space was partitioned into smaller rectangular chambers. A man stood at the end of the central hallway, trying to step into his trousers onehanded. He saw me and straightened, aiming his rifle.
I lunged toward him. He flung away the rifle and screamed, "No, don't shoot!" He crossed his arms in front of his face.
"Watch the other doors!" Stephen ordered behind me, the fat muzzle of his flashgun pointed at the Fed soldier. The partition walls didn't reach the high ceiling. Dole, Lightbody, and I kicked open doors.
Two men came out with their hands raised. One of them snarled, "Traitor!" He must have thought we were mutineers from a Back Worlds garrison. Dole knocked the man down with his rifle butt, then gave him a boot in the stomach.
There were ten cubicles in all, each with a bunk, a table, and a freestanding wardrobe. Others had been occupied recently, but the three men who'd surrendered were the only ones present now.
Maher, take them down with the rest," said Piet. He'd waited at the stair head until he was sure there'd been no trouble in the guards' Jormitory.
Stephen said.
Piet turned and smashed the gate open with the heel of his right boot. He strode into the room beyond with his carbine slanted across his body-ready for trouble but not expecting it. I was the last man to follow him.
Four Molt servants huddled at the rear comer of the room, out of sight from the doorway. French windows opened onto a balcony overlooking the walled garden behind the Commandatura. A narrow staircase led from the balcony to the garden.
A Molt was pruning Terran roses, apparently oblivious of the commotion going on around him. There was a shed against the back wall, and a small but ornate residential outbuilding at the end of the pathway through the center of
136     David Drake

the garden. The outbuilding's door closed as I watched.
"Where's the commander?" Piet said, pointing his left hand imperiously at the cowering Molts. Piet held his carbine muzzle-up in his right hand; the butt rested in the crook of his elbow.
One of the Molts gestured toward a heap of large, embroidered pillows along the sidewall. "Masters," the Molt said, "none of us know where Secretary Duquesne might be."
Dole groped in the pile of pillows, found something, and jerked a fat man in loose trousers and an open-throated shirt into view. "Wakey, wakey," the bosun said, laying the muzzle of his rifle on the bridge of Secretary Duquesne's nose.
"Please!" Duquesne squealed. "Please!"
"Let him up," Piet said, obviously relaxing. "I don't think he'll be any difficulty."
"Piet, there's somebody in the building behind this," I said, nodding toward the French windows.
The Oriflamme touched down. While the thrusters' roar reflected from the ground, the doubled noise rattling the
Ir I Rl~    window casements made further speech impossible. Piet
gestured first to me, then to Lightbody, and last toward
the outside. stairway. Stephen nodded the ceramic barrel
of his flashgun and stepped to a window from which he
could command the whole back of the garden.
I'd reached the midway landing when Salomon shut off the Oriflamme's motors. The sudden silence released a vise the noise had clamped around my chest. I wasn't aware of the pressure until it stopped.
"Sir?" said Lightbody. I glanced over my shoulder. "Will there be treasure in there?" He nodded down the path ahead of us.
"In a manner of speaking," I said, because I had a notion as to just who might be housed in the cottage. "Not that'll mak
e us rich, though."
I wondered if Piet had the same suspicions I did
    and
if so, what he'd meant by sending me to investigate.
    The gardener continued spraying his roses with a cau
P,
designed for a Molt's three-fingered hands. He crooned
THROUGH THE BREACH  137

    d.  in a grating voice as we passed, but it wasn't us he was
    left    speaking to,
    his     The Oriflamme's ramp began to lower with a loud
J in    squeal. The ship was going to need a lot of work. I didn't
        believe she could ever be reconditioned to the point she
xge,    could pass the Breach a second time.
    the     The curtain on the window to the left of the door flut
,,sne   tered as we approached. I paused to hang the cutting bar
from my belt .. though of course, she could be guard-
iing,       ed, probably would be guarded. The place had blue trim
,ated       and white stucco walls, though both were flaking to a
lay-        degree.
,tary           "Open in the name of the Free State of Venus," I said,
        pitching my voice to command rather than threaten.
            Nothing happened. I tried the latch. It was locked.
lon't           "This is absurd,` I muttered.
            Lightbody stuck the muzzle of his shotgun into the six
s", I       pane window casement and swept the barrel sideways,
        shattering half the glass and snatching the curtain aside.
roar        There were two women within. I'd expected only one,
    the and these were both tough-looking. They wore the white
Piet        jackets of the Federation military.
ward            "Open the door, then!" Lightbody said. His face grew
,arrel      red and his voice sank into a growl. "You whores!"
:h he           "We're not armed!" snarled the 40-year-old woman with
        light brown hair. The name tag over her left pocket read
    shut    VANTINE. She might have been handsome at one time, but
,ased       not since the scar drew up the left side of her mouth.
    asn't       Lightbody kicked the center panel out of the bottom of
        the doorframe. He was furious. "Easy. . ." I warned, but
ilder.      his bootheel smashed the central crossbrace from the door,
    .1 the  flinging jagged fragments into the room. Vantine jumped
        back from the latch when she realized that we were in no
    otion   mood to play games.
    hat'll      "Lightbody!" I said, but I might as well have been in
        Betaport for the effect I had. He half turned, then lunged
    and against the remnants of the door. The back of his armored
        shoulder hit the top panel. It splintered also as Lightbody
    a can   spun into the small living room. The furniture-a couch,
    ~oned   two chairs, and an end table-was of local wood with
_1441

138     David Drake

lacework coverings. The oval area rug was patterned in small pentagons of gray, pink, and white thread.
The two women backed toward the couch, keeping their hands plainly in sight.
I stepped between them and Lightbody. "Where's the person who lives here?" I asked. The cottage had two more rooms, a kitchen and-through a bead curtain-a bedroom.
"We live here," said the second woman, whose black hair was shot with gray. Her name tag read PATTEN and her face was less attractive than Dole's. "We?re not billeted with the other soldiers because we're women, can't you see?"
"You're whores!" Lightbody shouted. "Soldiers of Hell, most like! Prancing about as if you was men!"
He swung his shotgun toward Patten. I grabbed it with both hands. He was bigger than me and stronger for his size. He forced me back.
I snatched the cutting bar from my belt. "Lightbody!" I shouted. I thumbed on the power and triggered the bar. "If you won't obey me, then by God you'll obey this!"
I don't think it was the threat that brought Lightbody to his senses so much as having my face pressed into his above the crossways shotgun. He slumped back.
"Sorry, sir," he muttered. He turned his face aside and wiped it with his callused right palm. "It's against God and nature to see women pretending to be men."
I let go of him. I was trembling.- The bar shook as much with my finger off the trigger as it had the moment before. "We're not here for that," I said. My voice shivered too.
I turned. The women watched with a mixture of anger and loathing. Patten wore a crucifix around her neck. I jerked it with my left hand, breaking the thin silver chain. "We're not mutineers," I said, "we're from Venus. And we're Christians."
I'd spent more time in the Governor's Palace than I had in a church, and I'd only been to the palace twice.
I slapped the crucifix into Patten's hand. "Keep your idols out of sight, or I won't answer for the consequences."
THROUGH THE BREACH  139

The bead curtain rattled as I walked into the bedroom. The chance that either Patten or Vantine was the secretary's mistress was less than that of Piet swearing allegiance to President Pleyal.
I opened the large freestanding wardrobe beside the door. The clothes within were gauzy and many-layered, decorated with lace and ribbons. Shades of blue predominated. The bottom of the wardrobe held shoes in ranks; no one was hiding there.
The wood above me thumped. I backed a step and looked up. A flaring cornice ornamented the wardrobe's top. The hollow behind the cornice was about twenty centimeters deep. A blonde woman, gagged and with furious blue eyes, peered over the edge at me.
I tossed my cutting bar onto the bed to free both hands. "Lightbody, watch that pair of yours!" I warned.
I got extra height by hopping onto the wardrobe's bottom shelf, scattering delicate shoes. The woman squirmed completely over the cornice, trusting me to take her. Her weight was no problem.
Her wrists were tied, first behind her back, then to her ankles. Patten and Vantine had been busy in the minutes they'd had since we landed. They'd used filmy stockings for the bonds; not Terran silk, but something at least -as strong. I ripped my bar's ceramic teeth across the fabric with the power off.
The captive pulled the gag out of her mouth when I'd freed her hands. She was in her mid-twenties and far, far too supple and beautiful to be wasted on a pig like Secretary Duquesne ...
Well, that was true of a lot of women, and no few men.
"Thank you, sir," she said as she got to her feet in a motion as smooth as that of smoke rising. "My name is Alicia."
She walked into the living room without looking back at me. I suppose she was used to having men follow her without question.
Alicia's dress was pale orange. The soft fabric fit looseIv and had no particular shape of its own. She moved like a puff of flame.
i IN
140     David Drake

Lightbody faced the two soldiers, holding his shotgun at low port. His eyelids flicked in surprise when he saw Alicia. Patten and Vantine glared at her with molten hatred. My thumb slid the bar's power switch forward.
"Sergeant Vantine here..." Alicia said coldly. She stepped to the soldier's side without coming between Vantine and Lightbody's shotgun, then reached under the tail of Vantine's tunic.
has a gun," Alicia continued. Vantine moved minusculely. I reached over Alicia's shoulder and touched the tip of the bar to Vantine's right ear.
Alicia pulled a small revolver from Vantine's waistband. "I know about it," she went on in the same distant voice, "because the sergeant-"
Her face suddenly broke into planes like those of an ice carving, inhuman and terrible though still beautiful. Alicia backhanded Vantine across the jaw with the butt of the revolver. Vantine staggered.
Alicia hit her again, this time on the forehead. Vantine's head jerked back. There was an oval red splotch above her left eye.
I closed my left hand over Alicia's on the gun. She relaxed with a great shudder, leaning against me and closing her eyes. "Because the sergeant put it into me," Alicia said softly. "And shetold me to be a good girl and stay quiet like Ducky wanted, or she'd shovel hot coals there instead."
I dropped the revolver into my pocket. It was surprisingly heavy for something so small. Patten held Vantine by the shoulder and elbow, helping her stay uprighthAlicia I
e
straightened and stepped to the side. She watche( t e proceedings regally.
"Strip," I said to the soldiers. Lightbody looked at m oddly, Patten with fear.
"Oh, don't worry about your virtue, ladies, not from me," I said. "You'll strip to make sure you've no more toys hidden. We'll tie your hands with our belts, and then Lightbody'll march you to the Molt pen where you and I your friends will stay until we lift."
THROUGH THE BREACH  141

My voice caught repeatedly on images my mind threw up; Vantine and Patten, and the bound girl between them. Secretary Duquesne had acted quickly to keep his mistress safe when raiders landed. Safe in his terms, safe from other men.
The Fed soldiers only stared at me. I touched Vantine's tunic with the tip of my cutting bar, then triggered it. White fluff spun up from the whine.
"Don't worry about your virtue, ladies," I repeated. My voice quivered like the cutting bar's blade. "But your lives, now, that could very easily be a different matter."

4
TREHINGA

Day 111

The Federation freighter C*, renamed the Iola after Salomon's mother and for the next few days a Venerian warship, lifted thunderously from New Troy. The freshlycut gunports in her hold gaped like tooth cavities when the rest of the bare metal hull reflected sunlight. The Iola was 15' nose-down; she rotated slowly around her vertical axis because the thrusters weren't aligned squarely.
"I thought you said automated ships were safer on liftoff than landing?" I said to Piet, moderating my voice as the Iola climbed high enough to muffle her exhaust roar.
Piet quirked a smile at me. "The concept of automation isn't a problem," he said. "Just the cheap execution. Besides, it's safe enough."
"Or you'd be taking her up yourself," Stephen said in a tone of mild reproof. Alicia heard enough in the gunman's voice to look sharply at him. She'd known a lot of men in her 25 standard years, but none like Piet or Stephen Gregg.
She'd known men like me. I didn't doubt that.
The Iola had risen to a dot of brilliant light in the stratosphere. The sound of saws and the rock crusher became loudly audible again, now that the thrusters were gone.
The Federation laser battery that hit us as we escaped from Templeton had crazed several hull laminations as well as taking out two attitude jets. The shock of repeated transits flaked the damaged sheathing off in a five-meter gouge.
The crew was sandblasting the fractured edges just as

142
THROUGH THE BREACH  143

    a surgeon would debride a wound in flesh before closing
    it. When they finished the prep, they'd flux the bounda
    ries and layer on ceramic again. I suspected Piet would
    oversee that final process himself Hawtry was right when
    he claimed Piet's father was a craftsman rather than a
gentleman.
    Another team removed attitude jets from the second
    Federation freighter, the Penobscot. We carried spare jets
    in the Oriflamme, but all the original nozzles were badly
    worn from the long voyage. Jets from the ships and stores
IT here would replace our spares.
    Dole had muttered to me that he'd rather use burnt
    out ceramic than trust Fed metalwork, but Piet seemed   lid
e   to think the tungsten nozzles would be adequate. Sailors
    as a class were conservative: "unfarniliar" was too often
Is
is  a synonym for "lethal." The general commander of an
    expedition through the Breach had to be able to assess
Iff options on the basis of fact, though, not tradition.
~e  licia raised a slim hand toward where the Iola had van
    ished. "But where are you sending the ship?" she asked.
    It didn't seem to occur to her that anybody might think
,a
    she was asking out of more than curiosity. Stephen and I
    exchanged glances: mine concerned, his clearly amused.
    Piet, with an innocence as complete as I'm sure Alicia's
~a  was, answered, "We're just putting her in orbit with two
I s guns, Mistress Leeman. The Oriflamme can't lift while
en  we're working on her hull, and there's the risk that a
en  Federation warship will arrive while we're disabled."
    As he spoke, Piet began walking down Water Street.
to- New Troy stretched along a broad estuary. It had a sur
    faced road along the water and a parallel road separating
.ne the buildings from the field where starships landed. A
~ed dozen barges were moored to quays behind the grain ele
vators.
as  "Warships here?" Alicia said. "Don't worry about that.
ted I haven't seen one in . . ." She shivered. "Nine months,
Ier I've been here. Earth months. I was born in Montreal."
    There was more to the last statement than information.
as  I wasn't sure whether she meant it as a challenge or an
adrnission, though.
144     David Drake

"Still, it's better not to run a risk," Piet said mildly. "We'll reship the guns to the Oriflamme in orbit, I think. Since, as Jeremy points out, the C* is worse maintained than I'd thought from viewing her."
He tipped me a nod.
"Dole takes a crew up in the cutter to replace Salomon tomorrow?" Stephen asked.
Piet shook his head. "Guillermo tomorrow, Dole the following day. Stampfer asked for a watch, but I don't trust his shiphandling, even with automated systems."
He glanced at me. "I wouldn't put it so bluntly to Stampfer, you know, Jeremy," he said.
I shrugged. "He's a gunner," I said. "One man can't do everything."
Though maybe Piet could. Being around him gave you
q1 i    the feeling that he walked on water when nobody was
watching.
The pen for Molts being transshipped was adjacent to the Commandatura. There'd been a dozen aliens behind the strands of electrified razor ribbon when we landed. Neither the C* nor the Penobscot was a dedicated slaver, but both vessels carried a handful of Molts as part of their general cargo.
We'd turned the Molts loose. Half of them still wandered about New Troy, looking bewildered and clustering when we distributed rations from the Fed warehouse. Secretary Duquesne, his seven soldiers, and three of the officials who'd been cheeky enough to sound dangerous had replaced the slaves in the pen.
'oil lil
-residents as well as tran.
For the most part, the humans
sients from the barges and two starships-seemed willinj to do business on normal terms and otherwise keep ou of our way. The local Molts were no problem withou human leaders. Stephen, Piet, and a sailor who'd bee. to the Reaches with them had separately warned me th, Molts would fight for human masters, even masters wb treated them as badly as the Feds generally did. It was
mj  matter of clan identification among the aliens.
Duquesne trembled with anger as he watched the fo, of us saunter by the pen. He touched the razor ribi
THROUGH THE BREACH  145

    forgetting that the metal was charged. A blue spark popped
    and threw him back. Patten and a male soldier heard the
    secretary bellow and ran to help.
        "Run toward the wire," I ordered Alicia in a low voice.
        "Duckyl" she cried.
        I let her' go two steps and grabbed her roughly around
    the neck. "Get back here or you'll be in there with him!"
    I shouted as I swung her between me and Piet.
        Stephen faced the pen and raised the flashgun's butt
    toward-not quite to-his shoulder in warning. Duquesne
    and his henchmen scurried out of sight within the wooden
    shed meant to shelter slaves.
        We walked on. "That was a good thought, Jeremy,"
    Piet said.
        I shrugged. "Maybe it'll help," I said. I didn't suggest
    we hang Duquesne and the two women who'd been so
    enthusiastic to carry out his orders. Piet wouldn't go along
    with the idea, and I've got better things to do than waste
    my breath.
        We passed one of the hotels/boardinghouses for human
    transients. Men watched from chairs on the lower-level
r   stoop. Stephen eyed them, shifting slightly the way he
    carried the flashgun. The captain of the Penobscot banged
    his chair's front legs back down on the deck and threw us
    a salute.
        Piet had addressed the population of New Troy the night
    we arrived, promising that we would deal fairly with them
d   as individuals, paying for whatever merchandise or ser
    vices we required. Our quarTel was with President Pleyal
i-  and his attempt to dictate to all mankind.
9       When Piet was done, Stephen added a few words: if
it  there was trouble, the colony would pay for it. If one of
it  our men was killed, there would be no colony when we
~n  left. The next visitors would find the bones of the present
at  inhabitants in the ashes of their buildings.
        There was a line of men--our men-reaching out the
ra  door of the next building, a brothel. There were three girls,
    though Dole said the fiftyish madame had turned tricks
.ir as well during the crush the night before.
n,      The waiting spacers grew silent and looked away. Piet
146     David Drake

turned his head in the direction of the river and said to Alicia, "Do the landowners have guards on their estates, Mistress Leeman?"
Alicia sniffed. "They arm trusties to track Molts who run away," she said. "None of the landowners are going to risk their life or property to help the secretary, though."
We were past the brothel. Piet didn't approve of whoring or drunkenness, but he didn't order his crew to remain chaste and sober while on leave. A cynic would say Piet was too smart to give orders he knew would be ignored ... but I'm not sure most of this crew would ignore an order of his, even an order that went so clearly against their view of
'1113 ~i    nature.
Sunset painted clouds in the eastern sky, while veils of heat lightning shimmered behind them. We might have a storm before morning. I doubted the shed in the Molt pen was waterproof.
The combination saloon and general merchandise store next to the brothel was owned by Federation AssociatesPresident Pleyal himself, in his private capacity. The facade sagged, and I could see through the grime of the display windows that the roof leaked badly. The store had twenty meters of frontage, but the shelves within were dingy and almost empty. A Molt clerk stared back at us, as motionless as a display mannequin.
Boards filled the lower three-quarters of the saloon's window frames, leaving only a single row of glass panes for illumination. A drunk lay in the street. Two men arguing in front of the door stepped inside when they saw who we were.
"This is why we have to bring Venus to the stars," Piet said. "New Troy, a thousand New Troys-this can't be allowed to continue as man's face to the universe." i
"Commander," I said, "it's a frontier. You can't expect polish on a frontier."
Piet stood arms akimbo in the middle of the street. Tracked-on clay covered the plasticized surface. The adobe would be slick as grease in a rainstorm.
Three grain elevators marked the boundary of the human, community of New Troy. Beyond were pentagonal tow
THROUGH THE BREACH  147

        ers the Molt labor force had built for itself Their upper
to
        floors were served by outside staircases. Though construc
'S,
        ted from scrap material by slaves, the towers had a neat
10 unity that the human buildings lacked.
        "Let's go back," Piet said. He turned up the broad pas
io
        sage beside the saloon and the nearest elevator. After a
        moment, he went on, "It's not a frontier, Jeremy. It's a
9       dumping ground, a midden. Pleyal is mining the universe
in
et for his personal benefit, not mankind's."
        His voice was rising. The louvered shutters of most of
        the windows on this side of the saloon were swung back
of
of      from unglazed casements. A barge crewman at a table
        followed us with his eyes as we passed.
of      "The only kind of men who'll come to the stars to serve
a       a tyrant are the trash, or men as grasping and shortsighted
ell     as their master is," Piet said. "The few of a better sort
        sink into the mire because they're almost alone. This isn't
ire     a frontier where hardship makes men hard, it's a cesspool
        where filth makes men filthy! And it will not change until
de      the claim of Pleyal to own the universe beyond Pluto is
ay      disproved. At the point of a gun if necessary!"
Ity     The fronts of commercial buildings on the starport side
    nd  duplicated those on Water Street. The saloon's facade had
    Iss one fully-glazed sash window. The bartender was a Molt.
        A dozen men sat inside, drinking from 100-ml metal tum
    i's blers.
    ies None of the clientele was from the Oriflamme. Our
    ru- tnen had taken over a saloon at the other end of town by
    ho  arrangement between Dole and local businessmen. Nobody
        wanted the sort of trouble that could explode when violent
    'iet enemies got drunk together.
    be  "One ship won't bring down the North American Feder
        ation," Alicia said. This evening she wore a frock of trans
    ect lucent layers. The undermost was patterned with Terran
        roses which seemed to climb through a dense fog of over
    ,et. lying fabric.
        "Our success will bring other ships, Mistress Leeman,"
    )be
        Piet said. "Raids on the Federation Reaches have already
    ian increased twentyfold in the two years since, since we--2'
    )w- He gripped Stephen's right hand, though he continued
148     David Drake

to look toward Alicia on his other side.
"-carne back with more microchips than had been seen on Venus since the Collapse."
"It's not just the wealth for Venus," Stephen said. "It's the wealth that doesn't go to Earth to help President Pleyal strangle everyone but Pleyal."
There was no line on the starport side of the brothel. A lone Federation spacer glanced at us from the doorway. A pink-shaded lamp inside was lighted. I stepped into a pothole that the sky's afterglow hadn't shown me.
Alicia lifted her chin in a taut nod. "So you'll replace bums with'pirates? That's your plan?" She paused. "Bums and whores!"
"We'll break the present system, mistress," Piet said, "because it can't be reformed. With the help of God we'll do that. Then there'll be room for men-from Earth, from Venus, from the Moon colony and Mars, perhaps-to expand in however many ways they find. Rather than as a tyrant demands, in a fashion that will come crashing down when the tyranny does-as it must!-in a second Collapse that would be forever."
The last words were a trumpet call, not a shout. Another man would have blazed them out with anger, but Piet's transfiguring vision was a joyous thing. Though even I'd seen how harsh the execution would be.
"I went to the Reaches to trade," Stephen said in the thin, lilting voice I'd heard him use before. "I wonder what would have happened if we'd been left to trade in peace, hey?"
He laughed. Alicia shut her eyes and missed a step. She squeezed against me instinctively.
"Maybe I'd sleep at night, do you think?" Stephen went
on in the same terrible voice. Piet took his friend's hand
again.  I
The slave pen was unlighted. Figures moved around a lantern at the Water Street end. It was about time for the prisoners to get their rations.
Floodlights gleamed on the Oriflamme. Half a dozen crewmen continued to work on the hull. "If I thought,we had time," Piet said, "I'd grind off the repairs we made
THROUGH THE BREACH  149

        on Respite and reglaze from the original. I don't think the
ten     basalt bonded well, despite the surface crazing."
        "There'll   be time for that after we've taken the
It, s       Montreal," Stephen said. "Or it won't matter."
~al         Piet gave a nonchalant shrug. "We'll take her," he said.
        "And return home, with the help of God."
iel.            He looked at Alicia, smiled, and bowed slightly. "I think
lay.        I'll go aboard and see how the repairs are coming," he said.
, p a       Mistress Leeman, I've appreciated your company."
        "I'll go along with you, Piet," Stephen said.   "Maybe
,ace        I'll bunk in the ship tonight."
Ims         He gave me a wan smile. The two of them walked in
        step toward the Oriflanune, though I'm sure neither was
aid,        attempting to match strides. They were as different as an
'e"ll       oyster and its shell; and as much akin.
rom         I opened the wicket into the Commandatura garden for
-to     Alicia.
han         "Captain Ricimer really believes in what you're doing,"
iing        she said softly. Roses perfumed the air. There were lights
~ond        in the far wing of the building, but the garden seemed to
        be empty. "But Mister Gregg doesn't."
ither           "I think Stephen believes the same things as Piet does,"
iet's       I said. "I just don't think he cares very much."
    I'd "He frightens me," she said.
            Stephen would never kill anyone by accident, I thought;
    the but Alicia understood too much for that to sound reassur
    rider   ing to her. "He's a good friend to Commander Ricimer,"
    le in   I said, "Not a very good friend to himself, though."
            I paused to twist off a rose. Its deep pink glowed like
    She     a diamond's heart with the last of the sunset. I broke the
            thorns Off sideways with the tip of my thumb, then handed
    went    the flower to Alicia.
    hand        She giggled and put the stem behind her ear. Flying
            creatures as big as gulls swooped and climbed over the
    md. a   river. Their calls were surprisingly musical.
    ,r the  Alicia turned at her cottage's new door-a panel of
        raw wood that Molt workmen had fitted the evening
    [ozen       before. "You're a very gentlemanly pirate, aren't you?"
    it we       she said. "You could easily have forced me to-whatever
        Vou chose."
    made
150     David Drake

I shrugged. My skin was tingling. I respect you too much for that," I said. I respect myself too much. Again, though I don't lie when I can avoid it, one chooses the particular truth he speaks aloud.
"A girl doesn't always want to be respected quite so much," Alicia said. My arms were around her by the middle of the sentence, and my lips muffled the final word.

Near morning, as I was starting to dress to be gone before dawn, Alicia told me about Secretary Duquesne's personal cache of chips in a pit beneath the floor of the garden shed.

Al

T

JV
WEI
00  TREHINGA
in,
he
so
id-

Dre     Day 114
nal
Jen I   "Here's the whores you wanted, Mister Moore," Lightbody
        said in a tone that could have been forged on an anvil. He  A
        gestured Patten and Vantine into the walled office I'd taken
        for this interview. Baer stood behind the women with a
        cutting bar.
            Because the Federation soldiers wore trousers and had
        hired on to fight, Lightbody called them whores, thought of
        them as whores. He treated Alicia with the deference due a
        lady; and she was a lady, as surely as I was a gentleman,
        but the twists of Lightbody's mind disturbed me at a basic
        level nonetheless.
            The Oriflamme fired a matched pair of attitude jets in
        the field outside. The hull repairs were complete. Piet
        and Guillermo were doing the final workup. We'd lift by
        evening, so it was time for me to act.
            "You can take their hands loose, Lightbody," I said. The
        women were filthy. Facilities in the slave pen were limited
        to a trough, buckets, and mud. Twice so far we'd had rain
        before dawn, and the yellow adobe clay was everything
        I'd expected it to be.
            Were conditions reversed, Secretary Duquesne would
        have us hanged out of hand-unless he directed Patten and
        Vantine to torture us to death instead. I didn't think of this
        pair as whores. More like vicious dogs, to be trusted only
        in their malice.
            Lightbody looked doubtful, but he opened the knots
        on the women's wrists with the spike of his clasp knife.
        He held his shotgun out to the side where the prisoners
                151
    152 David Drake
    couldn't easily grab it. "You'll want us to stay in here
    with you then, sir?" he suggested.
        I shook my head. "No," I said, "I want to have a friendly
    talk in private. Close the door and wait outside."
        The two sailors obeyed, but I could tell they didn't think
    much of the idea. To reassure them, I laid my cutting bar
    on top of the desk I was using, with its grip ready for
    my hand.
        I'd chosen the office of the Clerk of Customs because
    the, room was private and it had a large window. I wanted
    the light behind me for this interview. The clerk-the older
    of the pair who'd come out to the cutter initially-had
    decorated the walls with wood carvings. Molt workman
    ship, I supposed. The pieces were intricate, but I didn't
    find them attractive.
        The women glared at me with caged fury. Their white
    tunics were sallow with dried mud, and their faces weren't
VIR much cleaner.
        I waited for the next pair of jets to finish their screaming
    test, then said, "You can sit down." I gestured to the chairs
    against the wall behind the women.
        "What do you want from us?" Vantine demanded in a
    voice which broke with anger.
        "Help," I said. "For which I'm willing to pay.99
        They were making it easy for me, though I'd have car
    ried through in any case. I'd seen this pair in action the
    morning we arrived. No amount of feigned contrition now
    would have changed the decision I'd made.
        "And if we don't agree, you9re going to threaten us with
    that toy?" Patten said, nodding toward my cutting bar. "I
    ought to feed it to you!"
        "No threat," I said. I picked up the bar and waited a
    moment. If Lightbody and Baer heard the blade whine,
    they'd burst in on us.
        The Oriflamme fired two more attitude jets. I triggered
    the bar and shaved the comer off the desk. I laid the
    weapon down again.
                take of attacking
        "This is so that you won't make the mis
    me," I said. "If you did, I'd-"
        Another part of my mind started to fog my conscious
THROUGH THE BREACH  153

intelligence. My voice was husky and very soft.
    11
        -cut you into so many pieces that they'd have to fill
        your coffins by weight." I swallowed. "And I don't want
        that, I want a friendly conversation, that's all."
        The part of me that hid behind the red fog, the part that
        had been in control at the Molt temple and was almost in
        control just a moment before-that part very much wanted
    another chance to kill.
        The women had straightened as I spoke. Their faces
        were expressionless, and the earlier bluster was gone.
        "What do you want?" Vantine repeated quietly.
        "We'll be lifting for Quincy soon," I said. I was all right
        again, though my hands still trembled. "We're hoping to
        meet Our Lady of Montreal there." I smiled. "If not there,
        then we'll catch her farther on. It depends on how long she
        lays over on Fleur de Lys. But before we leave Trehinga,
t   I'd like to find the treasure stored here."
        The women looked at one another cautiously, then back
        to me. Patten massaged her right thigh through her dirty
    trousers.
    "There's    no chips, no artifacts here," Vantine said.
a   She was more afraid of keeping silent than of speaking.
    "Trehinga   wasn't settled before the Collapse. There's
    nothing but wheat."
        "I can't imagine that a man like Secretary Duquesne
        doesn't have a private hoard," I said. "I don't know what
    sort of favors he's tradin  to the ships' captains who land
        9
        here, but there'll be something. He'll be building up a store
        so that when he retires to Earth he has something better
        than a Federation pension to support him. Chips are the
        most likely, but maybe pre-Collapse artifacts smuggled
    a from other planets, sure."
        "We don't," Vantine said very carefully, "know anything
        about that." She watched me the way a rabbit watches a
    -d
    snake.
    ie  Attitude jets-the last pair of the morning, unless Piet
        saw a need to retest-fired. The sound wasn't so loud that
    ig  1 couldn't have talked over it, but the three-second pause
    was useful.
    as  "I'd pay you each a hundred Mapleleafs if you showed
154     David Drake

me where the cache was," I said. I held up a pair of twelve-sided coins bearing President Pleyal's face toward the women.
The paymaster's safe on the opposite side of the Commandatura contained a fair amount of currency. As Piet had promised, we weren't robbing the businessfolk of Trehin a, but the Federation government was another 9
matter.
The women stared at me. Patten began to laugh. "Are you crazy?" she said. She regained her composure. "Do you think we're crazy? We lead you to Duquesne's personal stash, and then you go off and leave us here? Do you have any idea what he'd do to us then?"
I shrugged. "I've got a notion, yeah," I said. "Open the door, would you please?"
Vantine obeyed. Her companion's laughter was half bravado, but Vantine was clearly terrified. She'd sensed.
not, I think, what was about to happen, but that something was about to happen.
Lightbody raised his shotgun's muzzles when he saw everything was calm. "Baer," I said, "go out and gather as many of our off-duty people as you can in five minutes. Into the garden. And tell the locals to come, too. There'll be some entertainment."
"What are you doing, sir?" Lightbody said as Baer ran down the corridor shouting.
"For the moment," I said, "you and I wait here with the ladies. Then we'll go out to the garden too."
I put my hand on the cutting bar. I was shaking so badly that the blade rattled on the desk and I had to put it down. Patten was silent, and Vantine was as gray as if someone 1 was nailing her wrists to a cross.

There were easily a hundred people in the garden when we came out-me in front, the prisoners behind, and last of all Lightbody with the shotgun. I'd had him tie Patten's right wrist to Vantine's left while we waited. They couldn't escape, but it was important that they not be seen to try.
"Hey, Mister Moore!" Kiley called from the crowd. "Do they take their clothes off now?"
MIR
THROUGH THE BREACH  155

        I waved with a grin; but the joke made me think of
    Jeude, and the grin congealed.
        The Molt gardener stood on one leg, rasping the other
    one nervously against his carapace as he watched people
    brush his precious roses. Because of the thorns, the bushes
    weren't likely to be trampled; but sure, some sailor might
    clear more room with his cutting bar.
        Funny to think of a Molt worrying about Terran roses
    on one of the Back Worlds. In those ternis, most of life
    seemed pretty silly, though. I suppose that's where religion
    comes in, for those who can believe in a god.
        I waved my bar ahead of me to make a path. A lot
    of those present were locals, as I'd hoped, but they kept
    to the edges of the courtyard. The central walkway and
    an arc facing the back of the Commandatura were filled
    with Venerians. More spectators streamed in through the
    wickets beside the building and the larger gate onto Water
    Street.
        Baer had done a good job, though I wasn't quite sure
    how he'd managed it so quickly. I'd wanted a big enough
    gathering that word would spread at once throughout the T
    community, but this was ideal.
        Alicia's jalousies were lowered; she would be watching
    from behind them. I'd told her she should at all costs stay
    hidden this morning.
        "What are we doing?" Vantine asked over the chatter
te  of the crowd.
        "Keep moving, whore!" Lightbody snapped. I suspected
    he prodded Vantine with the gun as he spoke.
        "None of that!" I ordered. "The ladies are helping us."
ke      As I turned my head to speak, I saw that Piet and Stephen
    had come out the back of the Commandatura. They were
    following us.
,e  The storage shed was padlocked. I sheared the hasp
I       off in twinkling sparks. A bit remained hanging from the
ht  staple. I flicked it away with the tip of the cutting bar: the
    steel would be just below red heat from friction.
        Stephen reached past and slid the door open. He grinned
)o      in a way that was becoming familiar, but he didn't ask any
    questions.
156     David Drake

The shed's floor was wooden and raised a few centimeters from the ground. Tools optimized for Molt hands, crates, a coil of fencing, and other impedimenta were
nd the walls, but the two square meters in stacked arou
the center of the shed were clear.
There'd be a catch hidden somewhere, but I wasn't going to hunt for it. I swept my bar in an arc through the flooring. Nails pinged bitterly within the cloud of sawdust; the head of one bounced from my shin.
I stepped forward, turned, and drew the reverse arc. The crowd outside was pushing for a better view, but Stephen planted himself in the doorway to keep people out of my blade's way. Patten and Vantine watched in dawning awareness.
Stringers gave. The rough circle of floor fell with a crackle under my weight. I kicked the fragments of lumber aside.
A rectangular steel door measuring a meter by eighty centimeters was set in concrete where there should have been bare soil. I gripped my bar with both hands.
"Jeremy?" Piet Ricimer called.
I looked up. Piet handed Stephen the white silk kerchief he'd worn around his neck. "Cover Jeremy's eyes,71 he said.
Stephen knotted the silk behind my head. I saw through a white haze. The doorplate had no keyhole, but the hinges were external.
"We didn't-" Patten shouted at the top of her voice, but the scream of my bar cutting metal drowned her out.
A rooster tail of white sparks cascaded to either side of the bar's tip, pricking my bare hands and charring trails of smoke from the wood they landed on. A chip of steel flicked my forehead. Momentary pain, gone almost as soon as I jerked my head.
"Step back, Jeremy," Stephen ordered. His arm kept me from stumbling on the wood floor that I'd forgotten.
I was shaking with effort and my tunic was soaked. I'd been holding the cutting bar as though it supported me over a chasm. I pulled the kerchief off so that I could breathe
31i freely, then mopped my face with it.
amp ~:

I !~ ll
THROUGH THE BREACH  157

    There were three black-edged holes in the silk. I
wouldn't have thought of covering my eyes.
    Stephen kicked the door with his bootheel, aiming for
    the concealed lock. The plate rang. This wasn't a real safe,
    just a protected hiding place. The second time Stephen  0
    stamped down, the back of the lid where I'd sheared the
hinges sprang up.
    The lid was more than two centimeters thick. Stephen
    lifted it by the edges with his fingertips. He tossed it past
me into a comer of the shed.
    "We didn't have anything to do with this!" Patten cried.
Vantine hugged herself, shaking as if in a cold wind.
    Stephen reached into the opened stash. He came up with
    a mesh bag of microchips in one hand and what looked
like the core of a navigational Al in the other.
    He walked out into the sunlight. "There's fifty kilos of
    chips here!" he shouted to the crowd. There were shouts
    of awe and surprise, some of them from the local specta
tors.
    I came out with Stephen. "Lightbody," I called loudly,
"release these women at once."
    Patten tried to hit me. I stepped close and embraced
    her. I caught a handful of her short hair to keep her from
    biting my ear in the moment before I backed clear again.
    Lightbody still didn't understand, but Piet held both wom
    en"s free elbows from behind so that they couldn't move.
    I waved the hundred-Mapleleaf coins so that they caught
    the sunlight. Vantine was numb. Patten spat at me, but
    nobody at any distance could see that. Certainly not the
locals at the back of the crowd.
    "And here's your pay," I said, dropping both coins into
Vantine's breast pocket.
    There was sick horror in Vantine's eyes. I didn't much
like myself, but I'd done what I'd needed to.
    At least the pay was fair. The Sanhedrin had only paid
thirty pieces of silver to finger a victim for crucifixion.
    Everybody's aboard, sir," Dole called over the clamor
    of men claiming bits of shipboard territory after days of
        Wk
    freedom to move around. "Smetana was sleeping it off
158     David Drake

behind Gun One so I didn't see him."
Piet nodded to me. I ran two seconds of feedback through the tannoys as an attention signal, then announced, "Five minutes to liftoff."
I'd told Stephen he should take the right-hand couch since Guillermo was in the Iola, but he'd insisted I sit there instead. At least I could work the commo as well as the Molt could, and it wasn't as though the process of lifting to orbit required a third astrogator.
Piet's screen echoed the settings that Salomon had programmed. Salomon flipped to an alternate value, then flopped back to the original, all the time watching Piet.
"Either," Piet said with a smile. "But yes, the first, I think, given the Iola's present orbit."
The Oriflamme's displays were razor-sharp, though the lower third. of my screen was offset a pixel from the remainder ever since we'd come through the Breach. The population of New Troy watched from buildings and the road.
I could have expanded any individual face to fill the entire screen. That probably wouldn't be a good idea. -
Stephen knelt beside my couch. "Have they let Duquesne out of his cage yet?" he asked.
I shook my head. "I don't see any of that lot," I said. I stewed and expanded the slave pen in the field. The prisoners were still there behind razor ribbon. "Maybe the locals are afraid that he'll start shooting and we'll flatten the town."
"Maybe they just don't like the bastard," Stephen replied.' He laced his fingers and forced them against the backs of his hands. His face was empty; that of a man you saw sprawled in a gutter. "Lightbody says the pair of women
~N~li   you released stole a boat and headed upriver."
He raised an eyebrow. I shrugged.
    Piet leaned toward me. "We've made a preliminary
    examination of the database you found, Jeremy," li~j
said.   JJ
I turned away from Stephen. "Was it valuable?" I asked. "I don't see why it was part of Duquesne's stash."
"Valuable, though perhaps not in market terms," Piet
EC
THROUGH THE BREACH  159

said. "It's a courier chart. It has full navigational data for the Back Worlds and the longer route to the Solar System. The value to us is . .
He smiled like an angel. "Perhaps our lives."
"Shall I initiate, sir?" Salomon asked sharply.
Piet's attention returned to the business of planning liftoff. "One minute!" I warned over the PA system.
I swung the magnified view on my screen sideways a touch, focusing on the. woman at the wicket beside the Commandatura.
"We couldn't bring her along, you know," Stephen said in a low voice. "Anyone female."
"She didn't ask, did she?" I said. I didn't realize how angry I was until I heard my tone. I started to blank the
,e  display, then instead expanded it further. The discontinuity
le  fell just at the point of Alicia's chin.
"It wasn't a clever plan, Stephen," I said softly. "I didn't
    id  ask her about anything. She volunteered     She volun
        teered everything that she gave me."
I ~e        Stephen put his hand on my arm. ".Best I get to my
I . hammock," he said as he rose.
,Re     Salomon engaged the Al. Our roaring thrusters drew a
t
I   curtain of rainbow fire across the face of a woman I would
Id. i-      1   0
he  never see again.

~e en

-d. of

ien T'lif 0

lry he

)iet
f
ABOVE QUINCY

10~q

Day 127

Men in hard suits were around us in the forward hold, though our cutter's optics were so grainy they suggested rather than showed the figures. Clanks against our hull were probably restraints closing; chances were the ramr had locked shut since I didn't feel the vibration of th( closing mechanism anymore.
"All right, you lot," Lightbody ordered as he lifted hiM self from the pilot's couch. "Open her up! Ah-"
He remembered I was alone in the back of the cutter "Ah-sir!"
Baer rose from the attitude controls. I'd already freei the undogging wheel by bracing my boots against thwart and slamming a spoke with the shoulder of my hard sui I spun the wheel fully open, then let Baer help me slid the hatch back over the dorsal hull.
The two sailors Piet gave me to crew the cutter wei solid men, either of them capable of piloting the vessi alone in a pinch. Lightbody wasn't used to thinking of landing party as two sailors and a gentleman, though.
The crew of the Oriflamme was at action stations. f been sent down to the settlement on Quincy to - gath information. I could be spared if Our Lady of Montre appeared while the cutter was on the surface.
I floated out of the cutter's bay. Maher, one of the sailc who'd locked us into the hold, grabbed me with one ha as he hinged up his visor with the other.
"Captain Ricimer's waiting on you forward, sir," said. He aimed me toward the companionway, then shov

160
THROUGH THE BREACH  161

        me off like a medicine ball. A sailor waiting there absorbed
        my momentum and redirected me up the tube.
            Dole hugged me to him as I drifted into the forward
        compartment. He kicked off, carrying us both to the
        navigation consoles-skirting the 17-cm plasma cannon
        with a neat carom from the ceiling gunport, still for the
        moment closed.
            I didn't know whether the men were obeying Piet's
        orders or if they'd simply decided oft their own that Mister
        Moore in free fall was clumsy as a hog on ice. Maybe
        the process was demeaning, but it'd halved the time I
        would've taken to negotiate the distance on my own.
~d          I gripped Piet's couch to stay in place. I'd expected to
A       see Stephen, but I realized he would be with the assault
lp      party in the after hold.
            Piet's screen and that of Salomon to his left were
        filled with navigational data in schematic and digital
        fo2 Guillermo's display showed the world we were
        orbiting Quincy was ninety percent water, with strings
r.      of small volcanic islands and one modest continent
        for the moment on the opposite hemisphere. Ivestown,
~d      the planet's sole settlement, was on the continent's north
ts      coast. Farms nearby provided garden truck and fruit for
X.      starships which stopped over to load reaction mass, but
le      there was no large-scale agriculture and nothing of interest
        in Ivestown save the pair of brothels.
    .e      Piet turned the PA system on to echo my words. He
    -,I lifted himself on his left arm to face me directly, since the
    a   hard suit prevented him from twisting his torso in normal
        fashion. We'd radioed from Ivestown before lifting off to
    d   return, but face-to-face communication was far better than
    ,r  depending on RF transmissions through Quincy's active
        ionosphere.
                The Montreal hasn't arrived yet," I explained. "Nobody
        down there is even expecting her."
    .d      I shook my head in renewed wonder. "It's like talking
        to a herd of sheep. There's eighteen, twenty humans in
    ie  Ivestown, and about all they're interested in is scraping
    ,,d local algae off the rocks and eating it. It turns their teeth
        brown. I suppose there's a drug in it."
David Drake
162

"They could be lying," Salomon said. "To keep us here instead of following the Montreal."
"No," I said. "No. Lightbody checked the field. He says there hasn't been a ship landed at Ivestown in weeks. Sure, the Montreal could land anywhere on the planet, but they wouldn't have. And-you'd have to see the people down there. They don't care."
I suppose all four of the colony's women worked in the brothels when a ship was in; maybe some of the men did too. I'd have found coring, a watermelon a more satisfying alternative. Piet couldn't have asked a better proof of Fed colonies being garbage dumps rather than frontiers.
Salomon sighed and relaxed his grip on the arm of his couch. Because the navigator had unlatched his restraints to look at me, his armored body began to rise. "It might be weeks before the Montreal arrives," he said. "We might have to wait for months. Months."
Piet looked toward the screen before him. I don't know
'whether he was actually viewing the course equations dis-
played there or letting his mind expand through a range of
ossibilities as vast as the universes themselves.
"We've waited months already," Piet replied. His voice
was soft, but the PA system's software corrected to boom the words at full audible level from the tannoys in all the compartments.
Salomon looked at me for support. I wanted desperately to be back in a gravity well. My hard suit's rigid presence constricted my mind. We hadn't stayed long enough on the ground for me to take the armor off. I said nothing.
"If we land . . ." Salomon said. The prospect of an indefinite stay in weightless conditions was horrifying to veteran spacers as well as to me, but Salomon still wasn't willing to complete the suggestion. He knew it was a bad one, knew that landing would jeopardize the whole expedition.
"If we land," Piet said with his usual quiet certainty, "then we have to hope that the Montreal sets down without first determining who we are. If instead she transits immediately, we won't be able----2'
"The Feds are too sloppy to worry about a ship on the ground," Salomon said. His voice didn't have enough

A
THROUGH THE BREACH  163

energy to be argumentative. "Especially on the Back Worlds."
"We've risked a great deal," Piet replied. "Many of our friends have died. Many others as well, and they're also human beings. We aren't oing to cut comers now."
9
He tapped his armored fingertip twice on the audio pickup as a formal attention signal. "Gentlemen," he said,
you may stand down for the moment. Don't take off your hard suits. I regret this, but we have to be ready to open the gunports at a moment's notice."
I nodded within the tight confines of the helmet sealed to my torso armor by a lobster-tail gorget. My eyes were closed. I'd like to have been able to pray for mercy.
"Men," Piet said. "Comrades, friends. With the Lord's help, we'll prevail. But it's up to us to endure."
The tannoys chirped as Piet switched off the PA system.
We would endure.
'I Ij
ABOVE QUINCY

Day 129

I unlatched the waste cassette-the shit pan--of Stephen's hard suit. You can change your own, but you're likely to slosh the contents when you reach beneath your fanny with arms encased in rigid armor.
This cassette leaked anyway. Stephen made a quick snatch with a rag. A few droplets of urine escaped despite that. Because we were in free fall, the drops would spread themselves across the first surface they touched, probably a bulkhead.'
That wouldn't make much difference, because the Oriflamme already stank like a sewer from similar accidents. What bothered me worse was the way my body itched from constant contact with my suit's interior.
"If I ever have a chance to bathe again," I said softly, "all that's left of me is going to melt and run down the drain like the rest of the dirt."
Ild
The Oriflamme's crew hung in various postures within the compartment. The only comfortable part of free fall was that any of the surfaces within the vessel could serve as a "floor." Piet lay on his couch, apparently drowsing. Dole was on lookout at the left console. Guillermo's usual position was empty. The Molt had gone into suspended animation and was bundled against the forward bulkhead in a cargo net.
    The displays were set for blink comparison. Images
    of the stars surrounding the Oriflamme flashed against
MIMI
    images taken at the same point in the previous orbit. The
AI corrected for the vessel's frictional slippage and high-

164
7 MW
, lim
THROUGH THE BREACH  165

lighted anomalies for human examination. In two days of waiting, we had the start of a catalog of comets circling Quincy's sun.
Kiley held open the clear bag so that I could add my cassette to the dozen already there. A detail of sailors would open the after hold and steam the day's accumulation, but there were limits to the cleaning you could do in free fall and vacuum.
Stephen slapped an empty cassette into the well of his suit. "You've never been on a slaving voyage, with Molts packed into the holds and all the air cycled through them before it gets to you," he said. "Though we didn't have to stay suited up that time, that's true."
I looked at him. "I didn't know that you'd been a slaver," I said.
Stephen turned his palms up in the equivalent of a shrug. "Back when we were trying to trade with Fed colonies," he said. "The only merchandise they wanted were Molt slaves. Piet wasn't in charge."
He smiled, "Neither was 1, for that matter, but it didn't bother me a lot." There would have been as much humor in the snick of a rifle's breech opening. "And that was back when some things did bother me, you know."
"Hey?" said Dole. Piet, who I'd thought was dozingand maybe he was-snapped upright and expanded by three orders of magnitude a portion of the starfield blinking on his display. Dole was still reaching for the keypad.
The magnified object was a globular starship. We had no way of *udging size without scale, but I'd never heard of J
anything under 300 tonnes burden being built on a spherical design. Plasma wreathed the vessel. Her thrusters were firing to bring her into orbit around Quincy.
Piet wound the siren for two seconds. The impellers couldn't reach anything like full volume in that time, but the moan rising toward a howl was clearly different from all the normal sounds of the Oriflamme in free fall.
"General quarters," Piet ordered crisply. "Assault party, remain in the main hull for the moment."
He paused, his armored fingers dancing across his console with tiny clicks. "My friends," Piet added, "I believe
    166 David Drake
    this is the moment we've prepared and suffered for."
        Stephen checked the satchel which held charged bat
    teries to reload his flashgun. I bent and held him steady
    with both hands to get a close look at his waste cassette.
    It was latched properly.
        When the Oriflamme's gunports opened, we'd be in
    hard vacuum. That was the wrong time to have the pressure
    within somebody's suit blow his waste cassette across the
    compartment, leaving a two-by-ten-centimeter hole to void
    the rest of his air.
        Lightbody unbound Guillermo and pumped his arms
J   to break him out of his trance. The Molt was a doubly
    grotesque figure in the ceramic armor built for his inhu
    man limbs.
        Salomon slid into his console as Dole propelled himself
    clear. The bosun could land the vessel manually and run
    the Al during normal operations, but he lacked the spe
    cialized training to match courses with a ship trying to run
    from us. With a competent navigator like Salomon backing
    Piet Ricimer at the controls, the Federation vessel didn't
    have a prayer of escaping either in the sidereal universe
    or through transit.
        I'd hung a cutting bar from one of my hard suit's waist
    level equipment studs. I unclipped it. There was no need
    to, but it gave me something to do with my hands. Catch
    ing our quarry was only the first part of the business.
        "Prepare for power!" Salomon warned. Veteran sailors
    had already made sure their boots were anchored on the
    deck, "down" as soon as the thrusters fired.
        A I -g thrust simulated gravity. I was at an angle, because
    my right foot bounced from the deck. Stephen kept me from
    falling.
        The Fed vessel's image filled the main screen. That
    was another jump in magnification, though I supposed
    we were closing with them in real terms. Some of her
    plating had been replaced, speckling the spherical hull
    with bright squares. Her lower hemisphere was crinkly
    with punishment from atmospheric friction and the bath
    of plasma exhaust during braking.
        Everyone in our forward compartment stared at the
THROUGH THE BREACH  167

screen. The men amidships and in the stem cabin could only guess at what was happening, since the navigation staff was too busy to offer a commentary.
Our quarry's hatches would lower like sections of orange peel. There was an inlay of contrasting metal set beside one of them. I couldn't read the lettering, but I made out the figure of a woman with her hand outstretched.
"See the Virgin?" I said to Stephen. "I think she's the Montreal.
"Half the Feds' shipping is our lady of this or that," Stephen said. His voice was that of a machine again. "But if not this time, then another. And we'll be ready."
As Stephen spoke, his hands moved as delicately as butterfly wings across the stock and receiver of his flashgun. He'd folded the trigger guard forward so that he could use the weapon with gauntlets on.
"Unidentified vessel," crackled the tannoys. Piet had set them to repeat outside signals. This must have been from a communications laser since our thrusters and those of our quarry were snarling across the RF spectrum. "Sheer off at once. This is the Presidential vessel Montreal. If you endanger us you'll all be sent to some mud hole for the rest of your life!"
"Gentlemen," Piet ordered, "seal your suits."
He snapped his visor closed. I tried to obey. The cutting bar clacked against my helmet. I'd forgotten I was holding it. I couldn't feel it in my hand because of the gauntlets.
Our commo system switched to vacuum mode instead of depending on atmospheric transmission. Piet's voice, blurred almost beyond understanding, growled through the deckplates and the structure of my hard suit. "Run out the guns."
We dipped lower into orbit around Quincy, losing velocity from atmospheric friction as well as from our main motors. The Oriflamme began to vibrate fiercely. The Montreal's image trailed a shroud of excited atoms.
The gunport in the starboard bulkhead swung inward, U,
glowing with plasma from our own exhaust. The Ori-
flamme's outrushing atmosphere buffeted us and carried

- ------------
168     David Drake

small objects-a glove, a sheet of paper, even a knifewith it.
Ambient light vanished because there were no longer en
ough molecules of gas to scatter it. All illumination became direct, turning armored men into outlines lit by the gunport. When hydraulic rams advanced the muzzle of the Long Tom through the opening, we became a ship of ghosts and softly gleaming highlights.
The image of the Montreal on our main screen took on a slickness that no working starship could have in reality. The tornado of exhaust and roaring atmosphere degraded the data from our optical pickups. The screen's Al enhanced the image in keeping with an electronic ideal, substituting one falsehood for another.
Three gunports slid open along the midline of the Montreal's hull.
Our hard suits didn't have individual laser commo units, though a few of the helmets could be hardwired into the navigational consoles. Radio was useless while the main engines were firing anyway. I touched my helmet to Stephen's and shouted, "Why don't we shoot?"
The muzzles of plasma cannon emerged from the Montreal's gunports, setting up violent eddies in the flow of exhaust back over the globular hull. The guns looked very small, but the lack of scale could be deceiving me. Unlike us, the Federation crew wouldn't have been waiting in hard suits. A handful of gunners must have suited up hastily while the bulk of the personnel aboard prayed the gun compartments would remain sealed from the remainder of the vessel.
"If we disabled them now"-Stephen's voice rang through the clamor shaking our hull-Ahey'd crash and we'd have only a crater for our pains. Of course, they aren't under the same con-2'
The Montreal's guns recoiled into the hull behind streaks of plasma. The Oriflamme grunted, shoved by atmosphere heated from a near miss.
:'-straints," Stephen concluded.
'Assault party to the aft hold," a voice buzzed. The order could have been a figment of my imagination. Dole
7

THROUGH THE BREACH  169

and Stephen were moving, as well as other figures anonymous in their armor.
I'm going to die in this damned hard suit, and I can't even scratch. I started to laugh, glad no one could hear me.
Our four 15-cm cannon amidships were trained to starboard like the Long Tom. Wisps of our thrusters' plasma exhaust wreathed the weapons through the gap between the ports and the guntubes.
Stampfer sat at a flip-down console against the opposite bulkhead. The 15-cm magazines to either side of him
Wer(e locked shut for safety. I wondered how long that
c
J)r
eaution would be followed during the stress of combat. If a bolt hit an open magazine, the Oriflamme's hull might survive. I doubted that any of the crew would, hard suits or no.
I glanced over the gunner's shoulder as we passed. Our Lady of Montreal was centered on the director screen, but several phantoms overlaid the main image. The console was cal ulating the effect of atmospheric. turbulence, our exhaust, and the target's own exhaust. Because a plasma bolt is by definition a charged mass, contrasting charges could affect it more than they would a bullet or other kinetic-energy projectile.
I was halfway down the companionway when a shock jotted my grip loose from the ladder. I fell the rest of the way into the after hold, landing like a ton of old iron on Stephen's shoulders.
I managed to keep a grip on my cutting bar. I had only an instant to feel foolish before the next man fell on top of me.
Stephen helped me up. Armored men staggered into line like trolls. Stephen and I took our places in the front rank, facing the bulkhead that would pivot down into a boarding ramp.
The Oriflamme had dived deep enough into the atmosphere that the interior lighting appeared normal again. I took a chance and raised my visor. Stephen did the same. The air was hot and tasted burned because of traces of thruster exhaust.

............
, ~ pi~w

1, V1,
170     David Drake

"The Montreal doesn't mount heavy guns," Stephe
n
said. "They won't be able to do us serious damage in
the time they'll have before we land."
His face was quietly composed, and his eyes still looked human. There was nothing to do until the ramp opened, so Stephen's mind hadn't yet reentered the place that it went when he killed.
The man beside us bobbed his face forward to look through his open faceshield. It was Dole. There were twelve of us in the front rank this time, packed so tight that the bosun couldn't turn to face us he normally would while suited up. "Bastards did good to hit us the
0nce," he shouted. "Don't worry about them getting home again, sir."
"Don't discount the Fed gunners," Stephen said calmly. "They may have somebody as good as Stampfer. It only takes one if they have director control."
"I'm not worried," I said. I stood in the body of a man about to charge through a haze of sun-hot plasma toward a ship weighing hundreds of tonnes and crewed by anything up to a thousand enemy personnel. I wasn't a part of that suicidal mission, I was just observing.
The siren sounded, warning that we were about to touch down. Stephen and I linked arms and braced one boot each against the ramp. I felt a sailor in the second rank clasp my shoulder. There were no individual gripping points within the hold, but if we locked ourselves together, I figured the whole assault party would be able to stay upright.
Our rate of descent was much higher than Piet's normal gentle landings because we had to remain parallel with Our Lady of Montreal. She was dropping like a brick, either from panic, general incompetence, or as a calculated attempt by the Fed captain to get an angle from which he could send a bolt into the thruster nozzles on our underside.
Braked momentum slammed down on me at 6 g's. I though we'd hit the surface, but Piet had instead opened the throttles at the last instant. The ground effect of our
:j,!, i~    rebounding exhaust rocked the Oriflanune violently from
akl,'   side to side. Then our extended skids hit the surface.
    A
AWN
THROUGH THE BREACH  171

Everybody in the hold fell down like pieces of a matchstick house. I was under at least two men. Somebody's gauntlet was across my visor. I supposed I should be thankful that he'd forced the visor shut instead of ramming his armored fingers directly into my eyes.
I'd thought we could remain standing no matter how hard we hit. Man proposes, God disposes ...
The men on top of me got up. One of them was Stephen, identifiable because he carried both his flashgun and a rifle. Somebody else tried to step across my body. I pushed him back as I lurched to a squat. I found my cutting bar beside me and stood up with it. I clipped the weapon to an equipment stud again. I should have left it there until it was time to use the blade.
The hatch unsealed. Air charged by our exhaust swirled around the edges of the ramp in a radiant veil. As the lip lowered, I saw Our Lady of Montreal looming like a vast curved wall before us. She was at least fifty meters tall through her vertical axis, and no farther than that from us. The hatches that could open out from the great sphere's base were closed, but I saw unshuttered gun ports on the lower curve.
A 15-cm plasma cannon fired directly overhead. Its brilliance was so dazzling that it rocked me back against the men behind. My faceshield reacted instantly, saving my vision by filtering black everything except the ionized track itself Even combed by the filter, the bolt was bright enough to turn the massive shock wave five milliseconds later into anticlimax.
A fireball shrouded Our Lady of Montreal. Her own vaporized hull metal had exploded into white flame.
The bubble of light lifted away on the gases expanding it. Our bolt had punched a hole a meter in diameter in the Montreal's lower quarter. The edges of the gap glowed for a moment; then the Oriflamme's second gun blew a similar blazing hole beside the first.
Stampfer was firing our battery with a two-second pause between bolts-time to dissipate the ionized haze which would lessen the effect of an instantly following round.
e Oriflamme rocked at each discharge. The recoil of a
va
P'
T' 't ' 0 Mon f( ,
)r , sjmi be S1 tM ou e
            172 David Drake
            few grams of ions accelerated to light speed was enough
            to shake even a starship's hundred tonnes.
                The Long Tom fired. Its discharge was heavier than
N       the midships guns' by an order of magnitude. The Ori
            flamme's bow shifted a centimeter on the landing out
            riggers.
                The lower quarter of the Federation vessel was a fiery
            cavity. The hatch had been blown completely away, but the
            mist of burning metal beyond was as palpable as marble.
                The end of our ramp was still a meter and a half in the
            air. The blast of the main guns had deafened me. I couldn't
            even hear my own voice shouting, "God and Venus!" as I
            leaped to the ground.
                I crashed down on my face. The plasma cannon firing
            from the Montreal hit the sailor behind me instead and
            blew him to vapor. Bits of his ceramic armor scattered
            like grenade fragments.
                I got to my feet. Stephen aimed his flashgun up at a
            45' angle. His laser bolt, so bright under most conditions,
            was lost in the greater brilliance of the plasma weapons
    0       moments before.
                I stumbled toward the cavity Stampfer's guns had blast
            ed for our entry. It roiled with ionized residues of the
            cannonfire and the ordinary conflagrations which the bolts
            had ignited in the compartments beyond. With my visor
    I k     down, I was breathing from the suit's oxygen bottle.
    .4 1h,          An explosion above us almost knocked me down again.
            Stephen's bolt had punched into the cannon's 5-cm bore,
            damaging the nearly spherical array of lasers within the
            chambered round. The lasers were meant to implode a
        UP  deuterium pellet at the shell's heart and direct the resulting
            plasma down a pinhole pathway aligned with the axis of
            the gun barrel.
                Instead, the cannon's breech ruptured. The blast was
            more violent than the one which killed the man behind
            me, and I doubted whether Federation armor was as good
            as our Venerian ceramic.
                The rocky soil beneath the Montreal was glazed by
            exhaust and our heavy cannon. The hatch had been
wrenched away, but the lintel was square and a eter
In,
t

THROUGH THE BREACH  173

and a half above ground level. Stalactites of nickel-steel plating hung from the lower edge of the wound.
The white glare of the vessel's interior had dulled to a deep red. Fluid dribbling from the ruptured hydraulic lines burned with dark, smoky flames.
I gripped the lower lip of the opening and kicked myself upward. To my amazement, I wobbled into the hold despite thirty kilos of hard suit and weakness from the days we'd spent in free fall.
The vessel's cylindrical core held tanks of reaction mass and liquefied air behind plating as thick as that of the external hull. Shock waves had started a few of the seams, but the structure in general was still solid. Dual cornpanionways to the higher decks were built into the core structure.
The horizontal deck was I -cm steel. Blasts generated by our plasma bolts had hammered the surface downward as much as twenty centimeters between frames. The hold's internal bulkheads were flattened, and the hatches that should have closed the companionways had been blown askew.
Five Federation crewmen in the lower hold were in netal hard suits when our first 15-cm bolt penetrated the hull. The suits remained, crushed and disarticulated. From the top of a thigh guard stuck the remains of a femur burned to charcoal. That bone was the only sign of the people who'd been wearing the suits.
I looked behind me. Several men in armor were trying to clamber up with one hand hampered by weapons. I clasped the nearest man under the right shoulder and heaved. His face was down, so I don't know who he was. He skidded aboard, got to his feet, and clumped toward a companionway.
Half the assault party still straggled between the Oriflamme and the Federation vessel. We'd landed on an Apanse of stony desert, well inland of Ivestown. I doubt the Montreal's captain had chosen the site deliberately, but at least we weren't going to fry the colonists and their hundred or so Molt slaves as a byproduct of the fighting.
174     David Drake

Stephen, his flashgun slung over the rifle on his left shoulder, heaved himself upward. I grabbed him and brought him the rest of the way. Other sailors were pairing, one to form a stirrup for the foot of the second.
fired. I saw
    A plasma cannon, too light to be one of ours
    the reflected flash but not the point of impact.
        A bullet whanged down a companionway and ricocheted
    from the deck. I reached the helical stairs ahead of Stephen.
    He grabbed my shoulder to stop me, then stuck his flashgun
    up the vertical passage. I unclipped my cutting bar and
    switched it on.
        Stephen fired. Sparks of metal clipped by the laser pulse
    spat down the shaft in reply. The bolt wasn't likely to have
    hit anybody, but it might clear the companionway for a
    few seconds. Stephen clapped me forward. His gauntlet
    cracked like gunfire on my backplate. I started up the
    steps.
        The hatch to the next deck upward had either been
    open or blown open by gouts of plasma belching up the
    companionway every time our cannon hammered the hold.
17 7    The compartment beyond, once an accommodation area,
    was a smoky inferno.
        Plastic and fabrics of all sorts burned in the air the fire
    sucked from the companionway. The atmosphere of the
    sealed deck must have been exhausted within a few min
    utes o  -ignited everything
            f the moment our cannon flash
    flammable.
        I could have charged into the blaze, protected by my
    hard suit, but there was nothing there for us. The fires
    would destroy all life and objects of value before they
    burned themselves out. If the Montreal's decks were
    pierced by too many conduits and water lines, the blaze
    here was likely to involve the whole ship.
        The hatch to the third level was closed. I passed it by
    and continued climbing. The gunports were higher on the
    hull. We had to silence the Montreal's plasma cannon.
        A bare-chested man with a short rifle stuck his head
    from the next hatchway, saw me three rungs below him,
    and ducked back. A Molt with a cutting bar lunged otit
    instead. I slashed through his legs between the upper and
THROUGH THE BREAcH  175

lower knee joints. He fell backward in a spray of brown ichor. I crushed his weapon hand against the flooring, then stepped over him into the cargo deck beyond.
The Montreal's fourth deck was stacked with bales and crated goods within woven-wire restraint cages. There were no internal bulkheads. At the end of an aisle between ranks of cargo were three Molts wearing oxygen masks and padded garments of asbestos or glass fiber. They were trying to pivot a light plasma cannon away from the gunport so that it could bear on me.
The man with the rifle leaned over a row of crates and fired. His bullet hit me in the center of the chest and
plashed upward, staggering me. I recovered and charged the Molts at a shambling run.
One of them swung at me with the kind of long forceps the Feds use to load their solid-breech plasma cannon. My bar screamed through the levers in a shower of sparks.
The alien scrambled away. I chopped the back of a Molt's head, then reversed my stroke through the right arm and into the chest of his fellow who was tugging on the gun's tiller.
The surviving Molt flung the handles of his forceps at me. They bounced off my helmet. I cut him in half. My bar's vibration slowed momentarily, then spun up again through a spray of body fluids.
The human stepped around a row of cargo and aimed at me. The butt of Stephen's flashgun crushed his skull from behind.
The cannon that'd exploded was ten meters farther along the curve of the hull. The blast had crushed the stacks of cargo outward in a wide circle. The feet of three Molts and another human were carbonized onto the deck near the gun's swivel, but nothing above the ankles remained of the crewmen.
I couldn't see any other Feds in the jumble of cargo. My whole body was on fire. I lifted my faceshield to take an unconstricted breath.
Stephen slammed my visor back down. He reached past me to tilt the plasma cannon toward the ceiling a meter above our heads.
176     David Drake

I turned away. The world went white with a blast that
    spreadeagled me on the deck. Stephen was still standing,
Z I     I don't know how.
I pushed myself to a crouch, then stood in a fog of swirling metal vapors. The point-blank charge of plasma had blown a two-meter hole into the level above. Fires burned there and among the cargo around us.
Stephen restacked one crate on another beneath the hole. A Molt fell through from the deck above. A bubble of vaporized metal had seared the creature's thorax white.
I wasn't sure I could lift Stephen, so I hopped onto the crates and raised my right foot. Stephen made a step of his hands. His powerful thrust popped me through onto the deck above.
The large compartment was Molt accommodations. I
guessed the aliens were crew rather than cargo. Though
the facilities were spartan, there were hammock hooks and
cages for the Molts' personal belongings.   J
The plasma bolt had blown out half the lights. I co
uldn't
see more than twenty Molts huddled in space meant to
quarter a hundred.
I reached for Stephen with my left hand. I had to jab
the
tip of my bar down like a cane to keep from overbalancing.
Every heartbeat swelled me tighter against the oven of my
armor.
Stephen crashed upward. I staggered toward the single hatch out of the compartment. My vision was so focused that I didn't know whether Stephen was behind or beside me. Molts had squeezed against the internal bulkhead when the deck burst in a fireball near the curve of the hull. They scattered to either side of my advance like chickens running from the axe.
I pushed at the hatch. It didn't move. I raised my bar to cut through. Stephen reached past me and pulled the handle open.
I lurched into a corridor ten meters long. It was full of Fed personnel, human and Molt. A four-barreled cannon on a wheeled carriage faced one companionway; a tripodmounted laser whose separate power pack must weigh fifty kilos was aimed at the open hatch of the other.
n

th
e e
e n
y g

of on

)d~
THROUGH THE BREACH  177

An officer wearing gold-chased body armor turned and pointed his gun at me. The weapon had a thick barrel with only a tiny hole in the middle of it, and the stock fitted into a special rest on the breastplate.
I swung my bar at the Fed. He was too far away for me to reach before he fired. A starship hit and spun me around. I bounced onto the floor on my back. My faceshield was unlatched, but the helmet had rotated sideways 20' to cut off part of my vision.
Stephen stepped across my body with his flashgun raised. I threw my left arm across my eyes. Side-scatter from Stephen's bolt glared off the corridor's dingy white walls. A crate of shells for the cannon blew up like so many grenades. Stephen fell over me.
I twisted out from under his legs. The blast had knocked down the nearest Feds as well, though the crew of the laser five meters away at the opposite end of the corridor was trying to swing its weapon onto us. The cable to the power pack wasn't flexible enough for them to change front without repositioning all their equipment.
I jerked off my helmet and flung it at the Feds. The four Molts gripping the power pack's carrying handles continued stolidly to walk it around.
I could see again and I could breathe. The officer's projectile had hit the top of my breastplate at a flat angle. It shattered the plate and tore loose the clamps holding plastron, gorget, and helmet together.
Half my breastplate flopped from the waist latches. Ceramic continued to crumble away in bits from the broken edge, because the shock had completely shattered the plate's internal structure. Breath was a sharp pain. I didn't know whether the chest muscles were bruised or if cracked ribs were ripping my lungs every time I moved.
I walked toward the laser. I would have run, but my backplate clanked behind me like a ceramic cape and caught my heels.
A human sailor with a full mustache and sideburns that swept up to bright chestnut hair gaped at me. He was wearing padded protective gear like that of the gunners on the deck below. He dropped his side of the laser and

--------------------------
Aim,
178     David Drake

sprang toward the companionway batch.
His human officer shot him in the back with her doublebarreled pistol. She aimed at me past the power supply. Her head jerked back, and she fired the pistol into the ceiling as her nerves spasmed.
Her body toppled forward. There was a bullet hole over her right eye, and her brains splashed the bulkhead behind her.
I hacked at a Molt. He staggered back, bleeding from the stump of an arm and the deep cut in his carapace.
The nearest Molt wrapped his hard-surfaced arms around me while the others scrambled toward the cross-corridor at the end of the main one. They kept the power pack between me and them. Stephen fired his rifle again, but not in my direction. I cut awkwardly at the Molt's back. My limbs were still in their jointed ceramic cylinders, and the damned backplate dragged at me like an anchor.
The Molt moaned through the breathing holes along his lateral lines. My bar wouldn't bite-the battery was wl
drained. I screamed in frustration, pounding the Molt ith the pommel. He slipped down under the impacts, but his arms wouldn't release. His skull was a mush of fluids and broken chitin, but he wouldn't let go.
Stephen grabbed the Molt's shoulder with his left
red.
gauntlet and flung the corpse away from me. I stagge against the jamb of the hatchway. I wanted to get rid of the backplate, but I couldn't turn the studs behind me. I stripped off my right gauntlet instead as Stephen closed the firing contacts of the Federation laser and hosed its throbbing light across the other gun crew.
Stephen's flashgun was a monopulse weapon. This tripod-mounted unit had two separate tubes. It sequenced its output through them in turn to avoid the downrange vapor attenuation that reduced continuous-beam lasers'
Eli
effectiveness.
The Fed officer who'd shot me was loading another fat cartridge into the breech of his weapon. The beam glanced from his polished breastplate in dazzling highlights, then hit him in the neck and decapitated him.
I flung away my left gauntlet. My hands curled with

AW
THROUGH THE BREACH  179

pleasure at being free. The backplate latches turned easily.
Two Molts were starting to rise. Their thoraces burst soggily as the beam vaporized soft parts within the chitin shell.
A man in Venerian armor with his chest burned out lay just within the companionway hatch. He was probably the fellow who'd gone on while I helped Stephen into the hold. He held a rifle, and a cutting bar was clipped to his armor.
Exploding ammunition had knocked the multibarrel cannon sideways in the corridor. Stephen concentrated his flux on the breechblocks. The laser's feedline was beginning to smoke. The unit should have been allowed to cool every few seconds between bursts. Stephen was deliberately destroying both the weapons that could endanger a man in a Venerian hard suit.
Shells in the four cannon barrels cooked off in quick succession. Three of the weakened breeches failed, flinging fragments of jagged tool steel across the corridor and shredding two of the Molts who'd been crippled by the initial blast. There had been another human gunner also, but she must have run down the end corridor.
I took the cutting bar from the dead Venerian's waist stud and started up the companionway. My armored boots clanged on the slotted metal treads. I hadn't had time to take off the leg pieces.
The important thing was that my face and chest were free. The weight didn't matter so much, but days of constriction had driven me almost mad.
Or beyond almost.
The companionway was full of smoke from the fire on the lower deck, but because the air wasn't circulating the conditions weren't as bad as I'd thought they would be. I wished I'd thought to detach the oxygen bottle from my suit; but I hadn't, and anyway the projectile that smashed the breastplate had likely damaged the regulator as well.
Shots and screams echoed up the tube. Some of what sounded like human agony probably c7ame from machines. I wondered if other members of the assault party had climbed
180     David Drake

Ling,
this high. Movement in hard suits was brutally exhau&
ad other men hadn't had Stephen to help them forward.
n
    The hatch onto the next deck was closed but not dogged
    tight. I could hear people raggedly singing a hymn on the
    other side. The leader was a female, and hers was the
    only voice that didn't sound terrified. I passed the hatch
    by and turned up the final angle of the companionway to
the highest deck.
    The hatch was sealed. I tugged at an arm of the central
    wheel. They'd locked it from the inside. I paused, think
    ing about the hatches I'd seen on the Montreal's lower
decks.
    A bullet howled up the companionway. It or a bit of it
    dropped at my feet, a silvery gleam, before it rattled its
    way back down through the stair treads.
    The locks were electrical, activated by a button in the
    center on the inner dogging wheel. The powerline ran
through the upper hinge.
    I set my bar's tip on the hatch side of the hinge and
4   squeezed the trigger. Nothing happened. I was dizzy from
    smoke and fatigue, I'd forgotten that the dead man wouldn't
    have slung his bar with the power switch on.
    I thumbed the slide and tried again. The blade screamed
    angrily and sank into the tough steel. Chips, yellow and
1 1 Tit,    blazing white, spewed from the cut. The severed power
    cable shorted through the hatch metal in a brief halo of
blue sparks.
    I tugged again on the wheel. This time it spun freely,
    three full turns to withdraw the bolts which clamped the
    hatch to its jamb. I grasped the vertical handhold, pulled
    the hatch toward me, and charged onto the bridge of Our
Lady of Montreal.
    I thought they'd be waiting for me, alerted by my bar's
    shriek and the inner wheel spinning as I undogged the
    hatch. I'd forgotten how much else was going on. There
    were six humans and maybe ten Molts in the domed cir
    cular chamber. They turned and stared at me as if they'd
    just watched the Red Death take off his mask.
AP I suppose they were right.
    Nearest to me were a pair of humans in white tunics. I
THROUGH THE BREACH  181

thrust rather than slashing at the face of the woman who held a cutting bar. She staggered backward. The man tried to point his rifle but I grabbed it by the fore-end and twisted the muzzle upward. He shrieked and pulled away, but I held him by the weapon he didn't think to drop. My bar cut spine-deep in his neck, drowning his cry in his own blood.
The bridge instrumentation was a ring of waist-high, double-facing consoles. The three human officers in the center of the ring wore metal helmets and gleaming backand-breast armor. One of them shouted an order.
Molts sitting at the outer positions lurched toward me from seats configured to their alien torsos. None of them had weapons, though one Molt picked up a portable communicator and threw it at my head.
I chopped a Molt'9 skull, then backhanded a deep gouge across the belly plates of another. I watched my body in amazement. The animal controlling me moved with the relentless fury of a storm against cliffs.
I still held the rifle like an oar in my left hand. I jolted a Molt back with the butt, then sawed through his ankles with a stroke that buried my bar momentarily in the pelvis of the creature who'd grabbed my forearm. I kicked the Molt free with an armored boot.
A bullet hit the back of the Molt toppling beside the cut-off feet. One of the officers was shooting at me with a handgun. His two fellows had ducked behind the ring of consoles. When he saw me turn toward him, he dropped flat also.
The screen of the nearest console showed a real-time image of the Oriflamme. Our five big plasma cannon had cooled enough to be reloaded and run out, but Stampfer hadn't fired again for fear of hitting those of us aboard the Montreal.
Additional men in ceramic armor trudged across the fused plain toward the Federation vessel. They looked pathetically small compared to the Oriflamme, much less the Montreal.
Molts threw themselves on me from right and left. I twisted my arm to saw the carapace of one with the back
        182 David Drake
        of my bar. The Molt's hard thorax jolted against me as
        gun fired and an awl of red pain stabbed through my uppe
        abdomen. The Fed soldier with his back to the other hatc
        had fired his shotgun.
            I punched the Molt holding my right arm with the cut
        ting bar's pommel. I broke the chitin, making the cre
        move back enough that I could draw the blade down throug
        his right thigh.
            Two of the Fed officers rose from behind the console
        again. My legs were mired in thrashing Molts whose mus
        cles contracted as they died. I dropped the cutting bar an
        brought the butt of the rifle I'd grabbed around to my righ
        shoulder.
            The woman fired her pistol at me from three meters awa
        and missed. The man who'd shot at me before gripped hi
        pistol with both hands as he pointed it. I thrust the muzzl
        of my rifle in his direction and jerked the trigger.
            My bullet blew apart the screen of the console a mete
        to the right of him. The woman behind that console gas
        and doubled up, clutching her groin. Instead of shootin
        me, the man threw himself under cover again.
            I couldn't move my legs. The soldier with the shotgu
        closed the breech over a fresh cartridge and raised hi
        weapon again. My rifle had a tube under the barrel so
        was probably a repeater, but I didn't know how to cha
        a new round. I threw it at the soldier and missed. The F
        ducked for an instant anyway.
            I squatted on the pile of spasming Molts, trying to fin
    ;q  my cutting bar or some other weapon. The Fed soldie
        dropped his shotgun and raised his hands over his head.
            Stephen and Piet Ricimer stepped past me. They sti
        wore their hard suits, but their visors were raised. Stephe
        deliberately fired into the curving outer bulkhead to rico
        chet a bullet behind the ring of consoles. A Molt hidin
J       there jumped up. A charge of buckshot from Piet's s
        gun knocked the Molt back with a ragged hole in hi
        plastron.
            The officer with the handgun raised his head to see
        what was happening. The second bullet from Stephen'
        revolving-chamber rifle hit the man in the forehead and
THROUGH THE BREACH  183

spun his helmet into the air in a splash of brains.
        The Fed sprang fully upright, his arms flailing. Stephen
    shot him again, this time through the upper chest, but when
    the man turned and fell we could see his skull had already
been opened like a soft-boiled egg.
        The Montreal's bridge was thick with gunsmoke and
    blood. I was beginning to lose color vision, and I didn't
seem to be able to stand up even though the Molts had
    finally become shudderingly flaccid.
        "I suffender!" a man screamed from within the ring of
    consoles. I remembered that there had been three officers
    there when I burst into the compartment. "In the name of
    Christ, have mercy!"
        "Stand with your hands raised, then!" Piet ordered with
    his shotgun still butted on his shoulder. He stepped aside,
    putting his back to a bulkhead rather than the open hatch
    way.
        Stephen knelt beside me. His rifle gestured the Fed sol
    dier farther away from the shotgun the man had dropped.
    Somebody hammered on the sealed hatch. They'd pay
    hell trying to break in like that.
        The third Fed officer rose from his hiding place. He
    peered from behind the helmet he'd taken off to hold in
    front of his face. There was a pistol holstered at his side,
    but I'm sure he'd forgotten it was there.
        Stephen traded the rifle for his flashgun. He nodded
    toward the hatch. "Open it," he said to the captured soldier.
    Stephen was ready, just in case whoever was on the other
    side came in wearing metal rather than ceramic armor.
        "Order your men to stop fighting," Piet said to the cap
    tured officer. The Fed was the youngest of the three on
    the bridge. He was pudgy, and his hair was so fine and
    blond that his pink scalp showed through it. "There's no
    need for more deaths."  0
        "How bad are you hit?" Stephen asked, his eyes focused
    on the hatch the prisoner was undogging.
        Tm just tired," I said. "None of this is my blood."
        Dole stamped through the hatchway with a cutting bar
    and a chrome-plated rifle. The gun's muzzle had been
    sheared off at an angle, but I supposed it would still shoot
        184 David Drake
        at the ranges we'd been fighting here.
            The stink of opened bodies was making me dizzy. I had
        to get out of the stench, but I was too dizzy to stand.
            "The hell it's not," Stephen said. "Dole, come here and
        give me a hand. We need to get him back to Rakoscy."
            His gauntleted fingers tore the side of my tunic the rest
        of the way open. There were two puckered, purple holes on
        the side just below my rib cage. The Molt hadn't shielded
        me completely from the shotgun pellets after all.
            "Surrender!" the Federation officer called into a micro
        phone flexed to his side of a console. "Captain Alfegor is
        dead! Surrender! Surrender! They'll kill us all!"
            Echoes of his voice rumbled up the companionways. I
        could still hear shots, though.
            "Didn't know where you'd gone to," Stephen said qui
A       etly. He reached around my back and under my knees.
        Dole knelt to link arms with him. "Had a dozen of them
        charge around the back corridor just when I'd drained that
        damned laser. Could have been a problem if Piet hadn't
        come up the companionway about the same time."
            "I know how you felt," I said; or I tried to, because
    ILI I   about that time the stink of death swelled over the last of
        my consciousness in a thick purple fog.
NEW VENUS

Day 140

The planet was uncharted. Piet had located it at a good time. The last day of the run, we'd used personal oxygen bottles because a patch had cracked badly.
I didn't have enough energy to run out with the others as soon as the ramp lowered. I sat in the hold on a pallet of chips, far enough back that the heat still radiating from the glazed soil didn't bother me. The naming ceremony on e side was over, and the crowd of relaxed sailors was breaking up.
At the base of the ramp, ten men under Salomon argued bitterly among themselves about the hoses we'd taken from Our Lady of Montreal to replace the set damaged when we fled Templeton. The Federation equipment was the correct diameter, but both ends of the hoses had male connectors-as did the fittings of our water tanks. We'd have to make couplers to use the hoses. That job could have been done during the long run from Quincy if anybody'd noticed the problem before.
I got up very carefully and walked down the ramp. I'd be in the way if I stayed in the hold. Salomon would have enough problems doing shop work without offloading the treasure first.
The chips had come cheap enough, I suppose. Three dead, only two wounded. The Feds hadn't been equipped to deal with our hard suits. Smetana had lost his legstupidly-by getting it caught in the mechanism of the Montreal's cargo lift. My wound was pretty stupid too.
The men fell silent as I walked past them. "Good to see

A
186     David Drake

you, Mister Moore," Salomon said formally. I gave him a deliberate nod.
The story'd gotten around. More than the story, the way it usually happens. The men seemed to think I was a hero. I thought-
The soldier's face dissolving in a red spray as I rammed my bar through her teeth and palate, then jerked the blade sideways.
I tried not to think at all, and it didn't help.
Piet, Stephen, and Guillermo were chatting at the lakeside. I joined them. Nearby, men had started laying out the temporary houses they'd live in while we were on New Venus.
"Feeling better, Jeremy?" Stephen asked to welcome my presence.
"I'm all right," I said. "Just tired. You know, the bruises I got from the back of my breastplate when the bullet hit me are worse than the little shot holes."
I waggled my left hand in the direction of where Rakoscy had removed the buckshot. I could move my arms well enough, but it still hurt to twist my torso.
"And if Rakoscy hadn't clamped off the vein those shots punctured," Piet said with a cold smile, "you wouldn't have felt any pain at all from your ribs. I hope the next time you'll remember you have nothing to prove. Nor did you on Quincy."
I shook my head. Shrugging was another thing I had to avoid. "It just happened," I said. "I wasn't trying . .
I wasn't human when it happened. I didn't want to say that. "The ground cover doesn't have a root structure to bind turf," I said. I pointed to the men surveying the ground beside the Oriflamme. "How are they going to make houses?"
"Oh," said Piet, "a frame of brush, then a spray glaze to seal and stabilize it. We won't be here but a week at the most."
He looked back at the Oriflamme and frowned. "The patch that failed could have killed us. It was my fault."
"Piet," Stephen said forcefully, "the only way we could've checked the substructure-which is what failed,
THROUGH THE BREACH  187

not the patch-is to have removed the inner hull in sections. Which would've taken us three months, sitting on the ground beside the Montreal and wondering when the next Fed ship'd pass by and snap us up. I still don't believe that a fifty-millimeter Fed popgun cracked a frame member that way."
"'Well, it was probably the strain of the Breach," Piet said. "I know, I know ... But not only can't we afford mistakes, we can't afford bad luck."
"I'd say our luck had been fine," I said. "At least half the Montreal's cargo was of current production chips, not pre-Collapse stock. There's enough wealth to . .
The value was incalculable. I would have shrugged. I turned my palms up instead.
"The value is roughly that of the gross domestic product of the Free State of Venus," Stephen said quietly.
I looked at him: the scarred gunman, the consummate killer. It was easy to forget that Stephen Gregg had once been in the service of his uncle, a shipping magnate. I suspected that he'd been good at those duties too.
Piet grinned, his normal bright self again. "I think I'll cast a plaque claiming the world for Governor Halys," he added. "Do it myself, I mean. We can weld it to one of those rocks."
He pointed. Three natives-Rabbits-who certainly hadn't been on the clump of boulders twenty meters away when Piet started speaking took off running in the opposite direction. The two males were nude except for body paint. The female wore a skirt of veins combed from the sword-shaped leaves of a common local plant. Her flaccid breasts flopped almost to her waist.
Piet and Stephen darted to the side so that they could watch the Rabbits past the boulders. Guillermo and I followed slowly. It hurt me to move, and I doubt the Molt saw any reason for haste.
Several of the crewmen noticed the fugitives as well. Kiley shouted and started to run, though he didn't have a prayer of catching them.
"Let them go!" Piet ordered. I was always surprised how loud his voice could be when it had to.
188     David Drake

Brush grew down to the lakeshore a little north of where w 'd landed. The Rabbits vanished into it.
e
"I thought I'd seen a village in that direction while we were making our approach," Piet said.
"There are no industrial sites on this world," Guillermo said. If he'd been human, his voice would have sounded surprised. "I examined infrared scans. Even overgrown, the lines of human constructions would show up."
Stephen looked at him. "You do that regularly?" he asked. "Check on IR while we're orbiting9"
"Yes," the Molt said simply.
orld isn't in the chart Jeremy
            Piet shrugged. "This w
        found for us," he said. "Even though the Federation car
        tographers had access to pre-Collapse data."
            Stephen was the only one of us who was armed. He'd
        unslung his flashgun when the Rabbits appeared, though
    U   he'd kept the muzzle high. Instead of reslinging the weap
        on, he cradled it in his arms.
            "During the Collapse," he said, "colonies pretty much
        destroyed themselves. It wasn't Terran attacks, certainly
    kc, not here on the Back Worlds. Maybe their ancestors-"
            He nodded in the direction the Rabbits had fled.
    t           came from Templeton or the like as things were
        breaking down there. Trying to preserve civilization."
            Piet sighed. "Yes," he said. "That could be. But you
        don't preserve civilization by running from chaos."
            He glanced back at the ship. Dole headed a crew work
        ing on the section damaged by the Montreal's plasma
        cannon, and Salomon's men had already stretc
N: I i  hed the
hoses to the lake.
    "I think we can be spared to visit the native village,"
he said, smiling again. "They don't appear dangerous.
    Stephen shrugged. "If we go," he said, "we'll
armed."
    He glanced at me, I guess for support. My mind was
lost in the maze of how you preserve civilization by
cutting apart the face of a woman you hadn't even seen
five seconds before.
THROUGH THE BREACH  189

"The Montreal carried a couple autogyros," Stephen said as we broke out of the path through the brush. "You know, one of those would have made scouting around our landing sites a lot simpler."
The Rabbit village was in sight beneath trees that stood like miniature thunderheads. Up to a dozen separate trunks supported each broad canopy.
"Woof!" said Maher, the last of the six in our party. "'Bout time we got clear of that!" Not only was Maher overweight, he'd decided to wear crossed bandoliers of shotgun shells and to carry a cutting bar. His gear caught at every step along a track worn by naked savages.
"You were going to fly the autogyro, Stephen?" Piet asked mildly. "Or perhaps we should have brought along one of the Federation pilots to do our scouting for us."
The Rabbits lived in a dozen or so rounded domes of wattle-and-daub. There were no windows, and they'd have to crawl on hands and knees to get in through the low doors. I wondered whether they had fire.
Stephen laughed. "Well, they're supposed to be easy to fly," he said. "Not that we had room to stow another pair of socks, the way we're loaded with chips."
Rabbits began to congregate in front of the huts as we approached. There were more of them than I'd expected from the number of dwellings, perhaps two hundred. The adult males carried throwing sticks, shell-tipped spears, and what were probably planting dibbles, though they would serve as weapons.
"Open out," Piet ordered in an even voice. "Don't point a weapon.,,
We fell into line abreast as we continued to saunter at the pace Piet set toward the village. He and Maher carried shotguns. Loomis had a rifle, Stephen his flashgun, and even Guillermo wore a holstered pistol, though I doubt he'd have been much use with it.
I held a cutting bar in both hands like a baton. Even its modest weight strained my abdomen if it hung from one side or the other.
190     David Drake

"Stephen," I said. "Will you teach me to shoot?"
"Yes," he said, the syllable pale with lack of affect.
"We won't need weapons now," Piet said briskly. "Wait here."
He strode ahead of the rest of us with his right hand raised palm-outward. "We are peaceful travelers in your land," he called in Trade English. "We offer you presents and our friendship."
Piet was still ten meters from the Rabbits when they threw themselves to the ground. The men lashed themselves with their own weapons; the women tore their skirts into tufts and tossed them in the air with handfuls of dirt. Small children ran screaming from one adult to another, demanding reassurance which wasn't to be found.
"Wait!" Piet boomed in horror as he sprang forward. "We aren't gods to be worshipped, we're men!"
He forcibly dragged upright a Rabbit who was drawing a barbed spearhead across his forearm. "Stop that! It's blasphemy!"
Stephen pushed his way against Piet's side, though if the Rabbits had turned on us, there wasn't a lot he could have done. I'd have been even more useless, but I stood to Piet's right and grabbed the polished throwing stick that a Rabbit was beating himself across the back
:Ij with. I wasn't about to try lifting anybody in my present
condition, but the Rabbit didn't fight me for the stick. It
was a beautifully curved piece. The wood was dense and
had a fine, dark grain.
"Stop!" Piet thundered again.
This time the Rabbits obeyed, though for the most part they huddled on the ground at our feet. The children's shrieks seemed louder now that the adults weren't drowning them out.
An old woman came from a hut, leaning on the arm of a young man. She wore a pectoral and tiara made from strings of colored shells.
The youth supporting her was nude except for a genit cup, like most other males. A middle-aged man walked a step behind and to the right of the woman. He wore a translucent vest of fish or reptile skin. I could see the
. . ............

JW`

THROUGH THE BREACH  191

impressions the scales had left after they were removed.
The ordinary villagers edged back. They crawled until they'd gotten a few meters away, then rose to a crouch. Except for the man in the vest, the villagers looked illnourished. That fellow wasn't fat, but he had a solid, husky build. He stepped ahead of the old woman, keeping enough to the side that he didn't block our view of her.
We shook ourselves straight again. I still held the throwing stick. I stuck my cutting bar under the front of my belt to have it out of the way.
The two sailors ostentatiously ported their guns. I'd been too busy to look, but I'd bet they'd been aiming into the crowd and now hoped Piet hadn't seen them. Piet probably had seen them, the way he seemed to see everything going on, but he didn't choose to comment. Could be he thought Loomis and Maher showed better judgment than the rest of us had.
The old woman stretched out both arms and began speaking in a cracked voice. Her words were in no language I'd ever heard before. She paused after each phrase, and the man in the vest thundered what seemed to be the same words. They didn't make any more sense the second time at ten times the volume.
Maher looked at me and frowned. I nodded the throwing stick as a shrug. I didn't know how long this was going to go on either. At least it wasn't an attack.
After ten minutes of stop-and-go harangue, the old
woman started to cough. The youth tried to help her, but
S' h swatted at him angrily. The man in the vest looked
baeck in concern.
The woman got control of her paroxysm, though she swayed as she lifted the clicking pectoral off. She handed it to the youth, mumbled an order, and then removed the tiara as well. It had been fastened to her thinning hair with bone pins.
The youth walked to Piet, holding the objects at arm's length. The Rabbit was shivering. His knees bent farther
-19,    with every step, so that when he'd reached Piet he was almost kneeling.
192     David Drake

"We thank you in the name of our governor," Piet said as he took the gifts. "We accept the objects as offered by one ruler to another, not as the homage owed only to God."
He turned his head and hissed, "Loomis? The cloth."
Loomis hastily pulled a bolt of red fabric out of his pack. He'd forgotten-so had I-the gift we'd brought. The cloth came from the Commandatura on Trehinga, but it might well be Terran silk. Stephen had suggested it would be useful for trading to Rabbits and free Molts.
Piet held the bolt out to the youth. The youth turned his head away. The man in the vest snarled an order. The youth took the cloth. He stumbled back from Piet, crying bitterly.
Piet's mouth worked as though he'd been sucking a lemon. "Well," he said. He turned and nodded back the way we'd come. "Well, I think we've done all we can here."
That was true enough. Though I for one wasn't about to bet on what we had done.
NEW VENUS

    Day 143
The moon was up, so I hadn't bothered to take a light
when I went walking. The satellite was huge, looking
    almost the size of Earth from Luna, though it had no
    atmosphere and its specific gravity was only slightly
    above that of water.
        The four crewmen's lodges were laid out as sides of a
    square. A bonfire leaped high in the middle and a fiddler
    played dance music. Repairs to the Oriflamme's hull were
    complete,'or as complete as possible. Liquor acquired on
    Trehinga and Templeton competed with slash the motor
    crewmen brewed from rations.
        Being able to walk for the past three days had loosened
    up my chest muscles. I still got twinges if I turned too
    suddenly, and when I woke up in the morning my low
    er abdomen ached as though I'd been kicked the night
    before; but my body was healing fine.
        I was returning to the Oriflamme. I'd continued to bunk
    aboard her. The minimal interior illumination hid rather
    than revealed the ground beneath the starship, but the
    moon was so bright that I noticed the hunching figure
    while I was still fifty meters away.
        "Hey!" I shouted. I wasn't carrying a weapon. I ran
    toward the figure anyway. Adrenaline made me forget
    the shape my body was in as well as damping the pain
    that might have reminded me. "Hey!"
        The figure sprang to its feet and sprinted away. When   J
    it was out of the Oriflamme's shadow I could see that it
    was a Rabbit-a female; judging from the skirt.
            193
194     David Drake

Piet opened the forward hatch holding a powerful light in his left hand and a double-barreled shotgun by the pistol grip in his right. The light blazed onto the Rabbit and stayed there despite her attempts to dart and twist out of the beam. Furrows dribbling fresh blood striped her back.
The Rabbit finally vanished into the brush. None of the men celebrating at the shelters had taken notice of my shout or the Rabbit.
Running-jogging clumsily-actually felt good to me, though I didn't have any wind left. The short spurt to the ramp left me puffing and blowing.
I knelt beneath the ship where the Rabbit had hidden. She'd dropped or thrown away something as she fled. I doubted it was a bomb-fire was high technology for these savages-but I wasn't taking chances.
Piet flared his lens to wide beam. "Anything?" he asked as he hopped down beside me.
"This," I said, picking up the handle of a giant comb: a carding comb for stripping leaf fibers so they could be woven into cloth. The teeth were long triangles of shell mounted edgewise so that they wouldn't snap when drawn through tough leaves.
The teeth were smeared a finger's breadth deep with blood so fresh it still dripped. Piet switched off the handlight. I crawled carefully from beneath the Oriflamme; it'd be several minutes before I had my.night vision back, and I didn't want to knock myself silly on,~ a landing strut.
"Perhaps we should set guards," Piet said. "Of course, we'll be leaving tomorrow. If all goes as planned."
I flung the comb in the direction of the village a kilometer away. There were drops of blood on the glazed soil where"I the Rabbit had hidden for her ceremony. I sat down on the
ramp. I felt sick. Part of it was probably the exertion.
Piet sat beside me. "You wouldn't have had to go as far as the village to find a woman for your desires," he said. "You could just have waited here."
There was nothing in his tone, and his face-soft~ned' by the moonlight-was as calm as that of a statue of
    




                      THROUGH THE BREACH     195
    
    Justice. The fact that he'd spoken those words meant the
    incident had bothered him as much as it did me. Wine let
    the truth out of some men; but for others it was stress that
    made them say the things that would otherwise have been
    hidden forever in their hearts.
    "I was just walking, Piet," I said quietly. "There's some
    of the men gone up to the Rabbit village, I believe; but I
    was just working the stitches out of my side."
    He nodded curtly. "It doesn't matter," he said. "That
    sort of thing is between you and the Lord."
    I got up and raised my face to the moon. "I haven't
    lied to anybody since I came aboard the Porcelain, Piet,"
    I said. My voice shuddered with anger. With all the things
    I'd done, before and especially after I met Piet Ricimer,
    to be accused of this-
    I thought about what I'd just said, and about the cloak
    of moral outrage I'd dressed myself in. I started to laugh.
    Some of my chest muscles thought I shouldn't have, but
    it was out of their control and mine.
    ePiet stood with a worried look on his face, Maybe he
    11thought I'd snapped, gone mad in delayed reaction to 
    n to too many things.
    "No," I gasped, "I'm all right. I was just going to say, I
    haven't been lying to anybody except maybe myself. And
    ie I'm getting better about that, you see9"
    4-We sat down again. "Jeremy," he said, "I'm sorry. I
    ht shouldn't have spoken."
    )nI shrugged. I could do that again. "If you hadn't," I said,
    44 you'd have gone the rest of your life thinking that's what
    ;e,I was doing out there tonight. When I was just going for
    a walk."
    terFifty meters away in the temporary 'accommodations,
    Irethe fiddler was taking a break. A chorus of sailors filled
    in a cappella, "A mighty fortress is our God, a bulwark
    he
          never failing. .
    as                                         They might as easily have swung into The Harlot of
     he   Jerusalem.I started to laugh again. This time my ribs
          forestalled me.
    .ied  infine," I repeated. I was beginning to wonder,
     of   though, and it wasn't my body that caused me the concern.

    




                 194            David Drake
                   Piet opened the forward hatch holding a powerful light
                 in his left hand and a double-barreled shotgun by the
                 pistol grip in his right. The light blazed onto the Rabbit
                 and stayed there despite her attempts to dart and twist
                 out of the beam. Furrows dribbling fresh blood striped
                 her back.
                   The Rabbit finally vanished into the brush. None of
                 the men celebrating at the shelters had taken notice of
                 my shout or the Rabbit.
                   Running-jogging clumsily-actually felt good to me,
                 though I didn't have any wind left. The short spurt to the
                 ramp left me puffing and blowing.
    0              1 knelt beneath the ship where the Rabbit had hidden.
                 She'd dropped or thrown away something as she fled. 1
                 doubted it was a bomb-fire was high technology for
                 these savages-but I wasn't taking chances.
                   Piet flared his lens to wide beam. "Anything?" he asked
                 as he hopped down beside me.
                   "This," I said, picking up the handle of a giant comb:
                 a carding comb for stripping leaf fibers so they could be
                 woven into cloth. The teeth were long triangles of shell
                 mounted edgewise so that they wouldn't snap when drawn
                 through tough leaves.
                   The teeth were smeared a finger's breadth deep with
                 blood so fresh it still dripped. Piet switched off the
                 handlight. I crawled carefully from beneath the Ori-
                 flamme; it'd be several minutes before I had my.night
                 vision back, and I didn't want to knock myself silly on
                 a landing strut.
                   "Perhaps we should set guards,
                                        Piet said. "Of course,
                 we'll be leaving tomorrow. If all goes as planned."
                   I flung the comb in the direction of the village a kilometer
                 away. There were drops of blood on the glazed soil where
                 the Rabbit had hidden for her ceremony. I sat down on the
                 ramp. I felt sick. Part of it was probably the exertion.
                   Piet sat beside me. "You wouldn't have had to go as
                 far as the village to find a woman for your desires," he
                 said. "You could just have waited here."
                   There was nothing in his tone, and his face-softened
                 by the moonlight-was as calm as that of a statue of

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH     195
    
       Justice. The fact that he'd spoken those words meant the
       incident had bothered him as much as it did me. Wine let
    t  the truth out of some men; but for others it was stress that
    L  made them say the things that would otherwise have been
    I hidden forever in their hearts.
       "I was just walking, Piet," I said quietly. "There's some
    f  of the men gone up to the Rabbit village, I believe; but I
    f  was just working the stitches out of my side."
       He nodded curtly. "It doesn't matter," he said. "That
    sort of thing is between you and the Lord."
       I got up and raised my face to the moon. "I haven't
       lied to anybody since I came aboard the Porcelain, Piet,"
       I said. My voice shuddered with anger. With all the things
       I'd done, before and especially after I met Piet Ricimer,
    ir to be accused of this-
       I thought about what I'd just said, and about the cloak
    d
       of moral outrage I'd dressed myself in. I started to laugh.
       Some of my chest muscles thought I shouldn't have, but
    it was out of their control and mine.
    ie Piet stood with a worried look on his face. Maybe he
       thought I'd snapped, gone mad in delayed reaction to 
    to too many things.
       "No," I gasped, "I'm all right. I was just going to say, I
       haven't been lying to anybody except maybe myself. And
    te I'm getting better about that, you see?"
       We sat down again. "Jeremy," he said, "I'm sorry. I
    ht shouldn't have spoken."
      )nI shrugged. I could do that again. "If you hadn't," I said,
       14 you'd have gone the rest of your life thinking that's what
      e,I was doing out there tonight. When I was just going for
    a walk."
      erFifty meters away in the temporary 'accommodations,
      rethe fiddler was taking a break. A chorus of sailors filled
      4ein a cappella, "A mighty fortress is our God, a bulwark
    never failing. .
      asThey might as easily have swung into The Harlot of
      heJerusalem. I started to laugh again. This time my ribs
    forestalled me.
      ed"I'm fine," I repeated. I was beginning to wonder,
      ofthough, and it wasn't my body that caused me the concern.

    




                    196            David Drake
    
                    "If President Pleyal establishes the rule he wants over
                    all mankind," Piet said, "his fall will be a collapse worse
                    than the Collapse. Because we don't have the margin for
                    survival that men had risen to a thousand years ago. Folk
                    like these-"
                      He waggled a finger northward.
                    -mistaking men for gods, they'll be all that remains
                    of humanity. We have to succeed, Jeremy."
    4! 1              "I'll be glad when we lift," I said. I looked at, Piet,
                    leaning back with his arms braced on the ramp. "Because
                    you're wrong, you know. It's not gods they think we
                    are. They're not worshipping, they're trying to placate
                    demons."
                    I shuddered, closed my eyes, and opened them again
                    on the vast, raddled face of the moon. "Which is why," I
                    went on, "that quite apart from standards of hygiene, the
                    women here are in no danger from me. I'm not interested
                    in a woman who thinks she's being raped."
                    I clasped my hands together to keep them from shak-
                    ing. "Particularly one who thinks she's being raped by a
                    minion of Satan."
                    And if God was Peace, then she would surely be cor-
                    rect.

    




    INK
    
                      DUNEEN
    
         Day 155
    
         My rifle roared, lifting the muzzle in a blast of gray
         smoke.'l now knew to hold the weapon tight against
         me, The first time I'd instinctively kept the buttplate
         a finger's breadth out from my shoulder. The rifle had
         recoiled separately andfast. Instead of pushing my torso
         back, it whacked me a hammerblow.
         "Did I hit it?" I asked, peering toward the target-a
         meter-square frame of boards twenty meters away. The
         aiming point was a circle of black paint. My bullet holes
         spread around it in a shotgun pattern against the rough-
         sawn yellow wood.
         "You hit it," Stephen said. "Reload and hit it again.
         Remember you want to be solid, not tense. You're using
         a tool."
         I cocked the rifle, then thumbed the breech cam open
         and extracted the spent cartridge for reloading. "It'd be
         easier if all our guns were the same kind, wouldn't it?"
         I said. I nodded toward the revolving rifle in the crook of
         Stephen's left elbow.
         "All machine work instead of craftwork?" Stephen said.
         "Where that thinking ends is another Collapse-a system
         of automatic factories so complex that a few hit-and-run
         attacks bring the whole thing down. Everybody starves or
         freezes."
         I pulled a cartridge from my belt loop but held it in
         my hand instead of loading. "That's superstition," I said,
         more forcefully than I usually spoke to Stephen. This was
         important to me. "Civilization isn't going to fall because
    
                         197
                                         V,
                                         V~
                                      
    
    




                    198           David Drake
    
                   every gunsmith on Venus bores his rifle barrels to the
                   same dimensions."
                   If man was ever really to advance, we had to design
                   and build our own electronics instead of depending on
                   the leavings of pre-Collapse civilization. That required
                   something more structured than individual craftsmen like
                   P
                    iet's father casting thruster nozzles.
                   Stephen shrugged. I couldn't tell how much it mattered
                   to him. "It isn't the individual aspect," he said. "It's the
                   whole mind-set. On Earth they're setting up assembly lines
                   again.
         I           "But for now. . ." I said as I slid the loaded round into
                   the chamber sized to it and not--quite-to that of any
                   other rifle aboard the Oriflamme, "I'll learn how to use
                   whatever comes to hand."
                   During the voyage from New Venus, Stephen had
                   showed me how to load and strip each of our twenty-
                   odd varieties of firearm. It gave us both something to
                   concentrate on between the hideous bouts of transit. This
                   was the first time I'd fired a rifle.
                   I thought of the officer on the Montreal's bridge
                   clutching the hole in her groin as she fell. The first
                   time I'd practiced with a rifle.
                     One of the local herbivores blundered into the clearing.
                    A peck of fronds was disappearing into its mouth. Spores,
                    unexpectedly golden~ showered the beast's forequarters
    TH,             and the air above it.
    :P1
                   The creature saw us. The barrel-shaped body froze, but
                   the jaws continued to masticate food in a fore-and-aft
                   motion. My shots hadn't alerted the creature to our pres-
                   ence. The local animals didn't seem to have any hearing
                   whatever.
                     "We have plenty of meat," Stephen said. "Let it go."
                   The creature turned 270' and crashed away through the
                   vegetation. I could track its progress for some distance by
                   the spores rising like a dust cloud.
                   I glanced down at my rifle. "I wasn't going to shoot it,"
                   I said.
                   I meant I wasn't going to try. The board target was c
                   siderably larger than the man-sized herbivore. The skill

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     199
    
    demonstrated thus far wasn't overwhelmingly high.
     "it gets easy to kill," Stephen said. His voice was
    slipping out of focus. "Don't let it. Don't ever let that
    happen."
     "One more!" I said loudly. I closed the breech with a
    distinct cluck, seating the cartridge, and raised the butt to
    my shoulder again.
     Conc ntrate on theforesight. The barrel wobbled around
    the target, let alone the bull's-eye. Squeeze the trigger,
    don'tjerk it. My whole right hand tightened.
     I tried to hold the rifle as I had the cutting bar as
    we sawed boards for the target, firmly but without the
    feeling of desperate control that the firearm brought out. I
    wasn't making something happen. I was easing the trigger
    back against the rough metal-to-metal contact points of a
    mechanism made by a journeyman rather than a master.
     The muzzle blast surprised me the way Stephen said
    it was supposed to. Splinters flew from a hole a few
    centimeters left of the bull's-eye.
     "Yeah," Stephen said. "You're beginning to get it. In
    another day or two, you'll be as good as half the crew."
     He shook his head disgustedly. "They think they can
    shoot, but even when they practice, they plink at rocks or
    ration cartons. If they miss, they don't have a clue why.
    They'll make the same damned mistake the next time, like
    enough."
     I extracted the empty case. Powder gases streamed
    through the open breech. "What does it take to get as good
    as you are, Stephen?" I asked, careful not to meet his eyes.
     "Nothing you can learn," he said. He sat down on the
    trunk of a fallen tree with bark like diamond scales. "And
    it's not something you'd think was worth the price, I
    suspect.
     I sat beside him. I couldn't hear the Oriflamme's pumps
    anymore. They must have completed filling our water
    tanks. "Do you know how long Piet intends to lay over
    here?" I asked. "It seems a comfortable place, if you don't
    mind muggy."
     I flapped the front of my tunic, sopping from the wet
    heat.

    




                200            David Drake
    
                "The only thing that worries me is the Avoid notation
                in the database you found for us," Stephen said. He half
                cocked his rifle and began to rotate its five-shot cylinder
                with his fingertips, checking the cartridge heads. The pawl
                clicked lightly over the star gear. "There's nothing wrong
                with the air or the biosphere, so why avoid it?"
                "There's a hundred charted worlds with that marker,"
                I said. "Maybe Pleyal woke up on the wrong side of the
                bed the morning the list was handed him."
                "Come on back and we'll clean your weapon," Stephen
                said as he rose. "Don't leave that to somebody else to-"
                I was staring skyward. Stephen followed my eyes to the
                glare of bright exhaust. "God damn it," he said softly. "It's
                a starship landing, and it sure isn't from Venus."
                We ran through the forest as the Oriflamme's siren
                sounded.
                The strange vessel drifted down like a dead leaf
                Starships-the starships I'd seen landing-tended to do
                so in a controlled crash because the forces being balanced
                were so enormous. This ship must have a remarkably high
                power-to-weight ratio, even though its exhaust flames were
                the bright blue-white of oxy-hydrogen motors rather than
                the familiar flaring iridescence of plasma.
                Dole was leading a party of twenty men from the main
                hatch into the forest. "Mister Gregg, do you want to take
                over?" the bosun shouted when he saw us. All the men
                were armed, but several of them hadn't waited to pull on
                their tunics when the alarm sounded.
                "No, go ahead," Stephen ordered as he sprang up the
                steps to the cockpit airlock.
                Dole's section would hide in the forest so that we
                weren't all bottled in the Oriflamme if shooting started.
                It would take anything from ten minutes to half an hour
                for the ship to lift. In the meanwhile, the Oriflamme was
                a target for anybody in orbit who wanted to bombard us.
                To a degree that worked both ways. The Oriflamme's
                gunports were open, though of course our guns couldn't
                sweep as wide a zone as could those of an orbiting ves-
                sel able to change its attitude. Stampfer was raising the
                17-cm gun into firing position. The violent blasphemy he
    
    Jill

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     201
    
    snarled during the process, only a meter from Piet's couch,
    showed how nervous the gunner was.
     Stephen grabbed the flashgun slung from the same hook
    as his rolled hammock. I think if he'd had his favored
    weapon, he would have stayed with Dole outside, Stephen
    took a repeating rifle with him when we left the ship
    beca"' se the dog-sized local predators hunted in packs of
    three or more.
     Piet glanced aside from his console. "They've an-
    nounced they're friendly," he said. "And I presume they
    are or we'd know it by now, but. . . "
     Because the strangers didn't use plasma motors, they
    could communicate by radio even while they were land-
    ing. That didn't seem a sufficient trade-off for the greater
    power of fusion over chemical energy, but it had its
    advantages.
     Stephen donned his helmet as he stepped out the airlock
    again. Piet smiled and returned to his plot.
     I followed Stephen. I still carried the slung rifle. I'd
    picked up my cutting bar also, as much for the way it
    focused me as for any good I'd be able to do with it
    against a starship.
     The strange vessel was no bigger than a featherboat,
    though it was shorter and thicker than the Nathan, say,
    had been. It settled only twenty meters from the Ori-
    flamme, bow to bow. Its combustion engines were loud
    by absolute standards, but they whispered in comparison
    to those of a normal starship. Plasma thrusters mixed
    low-frequency pulses with the hiss of ions recombining
    across and beyond the upper auditory band, creating a
    snarl more penetrating and unpleasant than I could have
    imagined before I heard it myself.
     The ship's four stubby legs seemed to be integral rather
    than extended for landing. Portions of the scaly brown
    hull were charred from heat stress during reentry, but
    the material didn't look like the ablative coatings I was
    familiar with. It looked like tree bark.
     The strange vessel had no visible gunports or hull open-
    ings of any kind. I walked toward it; either leading Stephen
    or following him, it was hard to say. A spot grew in the

    




       iv
    
                    202            David Drake
                    mid-hull. At first I thought a fire smoldered on the coating,
                    but it was a knot opening as it spun slowly outward.
                      The hole froze when it reached man-size. The figure
                    that stepped out of the ship was humanoid but certainly
                    not human, though most of its body was covered with a
                    hooded cape of translucent fabric. It had reptilian limbs
                    and a face covered with patterned nodules like those of
                    a lizard's skin. The jaw was undershot, the eyes pivoted
                    individually, and the hands gripped a stocked weapon with
                    a ten-liter pressure tank.
        all           "I'd worry," Stephen murmured, "if they weren't
                    armed." His voice was in the husky, dissociated mode
    M               in which I knew he didn't worry at all; only planned
                    whom to kill first.
                      The second person out of the ship was a human, though
                    he wore a flowing cape like that of the guard who pre-
                    ceded him. Tiny flowers filled the socket of his left eye
                    like a miniature rock garden, and his right leg beneath the
                    cape's hem was of dark wood with a golden grain. When
                    the cape blew close to his body, I could see a handgun of
                    some sort tucked against the front of his right shoulder.
                      "Hello, Gregg," the man said. It was hard to think of
                    someone with flowers growing from his face as being
                    human, and the fellow's rusty voice didn't help the impres-
                    sion. "I thought the ' Feds had killed you on Biruta."
                      Two more reptiles, armed as the first had been, got out
                    of the strange ship. Their capes were a uniform dull gray,
                    but the human's had underlayers which returned sunlight
                    in shimmers across the whole optical spectrum.
                      "Hello, Cseka," Stephen said. "They tried, but we got
                    away."
                      Cseka glanced beyond us. Piet stood in the cockpit hatch,
      TV1,          "Ricimer too, eh?" Cseka said. "Well, I didn't get away
                    They caught me on Biruta and they made me a slave. Hov
                    long's it been, anyway? Standard years, I mean."
                      "Five years, Captain," Piet said. "Would you com,
         f k
                    aboard the Oriflamme? Your friends, too, if they car
         A I        to."
                      "Aye, we'll do that," Cseka said. He spoke a few tbroat
                    words to his guards and- stumped forward. "These are tf

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     203
    
     Chay," he said, again in Trade English. "And I'm no longer
    a captain, Ricimer, I'm chief adviser to the Council of On
     Chay."
      Cseka walked with a stiffness that the false leg didn't
     fully explain. I wondered what other injuries the cape
     concealed.
      "And I'm the worst enemy Pleyal and his bastard Fed-
     eration will ever have," Cseka added as he climbed the
     cockpit ladder. He spoke quietly, but his voice squealed
     like chalk on slate.                        3
      The Chay walked with quick, mincing steps, though
     there was nothing birdlike about their erect bodies. Their
     bulging eyes swept at least 240' even when they faced
     front, and they continually rotated their heads to cover the
     remaining arc.
      "The mummy on Respite," I murmured to Stephen as
     we followed the guards back aboard the Oriflamme.
      "I was thinking that," he said. "And now I really wonder
     how long ago he was buried."
      Stephen was still distant from his surroundings. Per-
     haps it was mention of Biruta, where Pleyal's men had
     treacherously massacred Venerian traders. For reasons of
     state, there was still formal peace between the Free State
     of Venus and the North American Federation; but because
     of Biruta, there was open war beyond Pluto, and survivors
     like Piet and Stephen were the shock troops of that war.
      Piet and Stephen and Captain, now Chief Adviser,
     Cseka.
      The Long Tom was aligned with the bow port-and the
     Chay vessel-but not run forward to battery. Stampfer
     was still with the gun, but he'd sent his crew aft so that
     only he and the navigation officers waited for us in the
     bow compartment. Piet had dropped the table which hung          it,
    on lines from the ceiling. Men watched through the hatch
    and from an arc outside the cockpit.
     "Five years," Cseka said. "You lose track. Five years."
     He took the tumbler of cloudy liquor Piet offered him:
    slash distilled from algae. This was a bottle we'd brought
    from Venus rather than what the motor crews brewed
    whenever we landed, but there wasn't a lot of difference.

    




                  204            David Drake
    
                  "We have, ah, wines and such," Piet said. "Loot, of
                  course."
                  Cseka drained his tumbler in three wracking gulps.
                  Slash proved anywhere from fifty to eighty percent etha-
                  nol. "A taste of home, by God," he muttered. "The Chay,
                  they can do anything with plants, but they can't make
                  slash that's real slash."
                  "Perhaps they're too skillful," Stephen said. I don't
                  know whether he was joking. "Slash doesn't permit sub-
                  tlety."
                  "I was their slave for . . ." Cseka said. He frowned
                  and refilled his tumbler. "Years. You can't measure it.
                  Pleyal's slave, bossing gangs of Molt slaves all across
                  the Back Worlds. The eye, that was from Biruta. They
                  took my leg off on a place that hasn't any name. Pleyal
                  doesn't waste medicines on slaves when amputation will
                  do
                  He swallowed another three fingers of slash. Cseka's
                  eye was fixed on the bottle, but I can't guess what his
                  mind saw.'
                  "And then the Chay raided the plantation I was running
                  on Rosary." Cseka gave us all a broad, mad grin. The tiny
                  flowers wobbled in his eye socket as he turned his head.
                  "I escaped with them. They might have killed me before
                  they understood. That would have been all right, I'd still
                  have been free of Pleyal."
                    The Chay had a sweetish odor like that of overripc
    oil 1~,       fruit. I couldn't tell whether it was their breath or theii
                  bodies. They looked silently around the compartment
                  One of them reached toward the 17-cm cannon, but hi!
                  long-fingered hand withdrew before it quite touched tho
                  gun. Stampfer, squat and glowering, relaxed minusculely
                  "I've been guiding On Chay ever since," Cseka said
                  "Not leading-the Council leads. But I know the Fedo
                  and I help the Chay fight them. The bastards."
                  "We came through the Breach," Piet said, "but we')
                  have to return the long way to Venus. We'll carry yo
                  back with us and give you a full share of-"
                  "No!" Cseka shouted. His hand closed on the neck
                  the bottle. I thumbed the power switch of my cuttin
    P

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     205
    
    bar and opened my left hand to grab the nearest Chay's
    weapon before he could-
     Cseka relaxed and beamed his clownface grin at us
    again. "No, I'm where I belong," he said. He spoke now
    in a cracked lilt. "Killing Feds. Killing all the Feds, every
    one of the bastards, every one."
     He poured more slash. Stephen almost hadn't moved,
    but "almost" was the amount he'd tucked the flashgun
    into his side to have a full stroke when he swept the butt
    across the heads of Cseka and the guard nearest him. Piet
    had reached across the back of his couch, where a double-
    barreled shotgun hung by its sling, and the lever from the
    plasma cannon's collimator was in Stampfer's hand.
     "I want you to come back to On Chay with me," Cseka
    said, sipping this time instead of tossing the liquor off.
    "I told our scouts to look for ceramic-hulled ships, you
    know. To report to me at once and not to attack. And here
    you appear in this system."
     He seemed to be oblivious of what had almost hap-
    pened. Perhaps he didn't remember. The Chay hadn't
    moved, but their facial skin had shifted from green/brown
    to mauve.
     "We appreciate the offer . . ." Piet said. "But-"
     "No, it's not out of your way," Cseka said with a dis-
    missive wave of his hand. "The fourth planet here."
     "That's a gas giant," Salomon said sharply from his
    console.
     "Yes, the second moon out," Cseka agreed. He was all
    sweet reason now. The sharpness was gone, but his voice
    still sing-songed. "It'll be worth your time. The Chay grow
    tubular fullerenes, grow them, any length you want. Kilo
    for kilo, they're worth more than new-run chips."
     Piet's face grew blankly quiet. He wasn't looking at
    anyone. We all waited for him to speak. The Oriflamme
    wasn't a democracy.
     He smiled dazzlingly. "Yes, all right," he said to Cseka.
    "We'll follow you, then?"
     Cseka nodded, the flowers bobbing in his eye socket.
    "Yes, yes, that's what we'll do," he said. Suddenly, fierce-
    ly he added, "I knew there'd be ships from Venus sooner

    




    206           David Drake
    
    or later. Between us, we'll kill them all!"
     He turned and slammed out through the open airlock
    without further comment. The three guards exchanged
    glances, only their eyes moving, before they strutted after
    their human leader.
     Stephen relaxed slightly., "Cseka was always a bit of a
    hothead," he said in an emotionless voice.
     Piet watched the castaway climb back aboard the vessel
    in which he had arrived. "That was a different man, the
    one we knew," he said.
     "You trust him, then?" I said. I switched off the cutting
    bar and hung it, so that I could work life back into the
    hand with which I'd been gripping the weapon.
     "No," said Piet. The port of the Chay vessel began to
    rotate closed before the last of the guards hopped through.
    "He's obviously insane. But he's different from the man
    Stephen and I knew."
     He pushed the button controlling the Oriflamme's siren,
    cIling the men aboard for liftoff.
     I dropped my rifle and ammo satchel on the deck ' "I'm
    going with them," I said. I jumped from the airlock instead
    of using the steps. Over my shoulder I called, "We need
    to know more about the Chay than we do now!"
     Men piling aboard via the ramp looked in surprise as I
    sprinted to the alien vessel. Nobody tried to call me back
    from the bridge. Piet and Stephen weren't the sort to waste
    their breath.
     "Cseka!" I shouted. "Open up! Let me ride with you!"
     The port continued to spin slowly closed. It had shrunk
    to the size of my head. I stuck the blade of my unpowered
    cutting bar into the opening.
     The port stopped closing. I waited. The Chay vessel's
    hull pulsed slowly as I stood beside it with my hand on
    the grip of my bar.
     After a minute or so, the knot rotated the other way
    again. When the opening was large enough, I climbed
    aboard.

    




                                    - ---------
    
                     ON CHAY
    
        Day 156
    
        The engines' firing level reduced gradually, as though
        someone was shutting down the fuel valves by micro-
        adjustments as we settled toward the moon's inhabited
        surface. Some thing was, but not a person, unless the
        Chay vessel herself had personality as well as life.
        One of the reptiles chewed a banana-shaped fruit that
        dribbled purple juice down his jaw and the front of his
        cape. It seemed to have a narcotic effect. The Chay's
        eyes hadn't moved since he began eating; translucent lids
        slipped back and forth across them at intervals.
        Cseka lay on his back, staring at the frameless screen
        that covered the cabin ceiling. Instead of a real-time scan,
        adjusted images swept over the display area at one- or two-
        second intervals.
        None of the vessel's crew was anywhere near the con-
        trols aft. The ship was landing itself.
        "Are those irrigated lands?" I asked, gesturing toward a
        swatch of blue-green on the surface swelling toward us. It
        could as easily have been a lake. I wasn't sure whether the
        patterns I saw in the colored area were real or an artifact
        of the unfamiliar optical apparatus.
        "We live on mats of vegetation," Cseka said in a
        drugged voice. He didn't look at me when he spoke.
        "On Chay has too many earthquakes to live directly
        on the ground, The mats slide when the earth shakes,
        you see."
        "Life couldn't arise on a planet-'moon'-so unsta-
        ble," I said, speaking the thought I'd had ever since I
        connected the Chay with the mummy on Respite. "It must
    
                        207
    'maim

    




                  208           David Drake
    
                  have been colonized from somewhere else. Perhaps in the
                  far past."
                  "Yeah, that's probably so," Cseka agreed without inter-
                  est. "There's maybe a hundred Chay worlds. They all call
                  themselves On Chay. I suppose the Chay had a Collapse
                  too."
                  Translucent circles like strings of frog eggs clung to one
                  another within the mat we were approaching. Elsewhere,
                  larger circles differed in hue from the neighboring vegeta-
                  tion. The primary lowered in the sky above us, a turgid
                  purple mass shot with blues and yellow.
                  The controls spoke in a guttural, blurry voice. The two
                  sober Chay looked around. Cseka roused himself from his
                  couch and growled toward the controls.
                  The engines fired at high output. We accelerated side-
                  ways, and I fell against a bulkhead. The resilient surface
                  cushioned me, then formed into a grip for my furious
                  hand.
                  "I'm to guide your friends down outside the city," Cseka
                  grumbled. "I forget the way plasma thrusters tear up every-
    j~            thing around."
                  The Chay vessel was smaller inside than I'd expected.
                  The thick hull contained everything necessary for the
                  starship's operation and the well-being of the crew, but
                  it didn't leave much internal volume.
                    "The Oriflamme is already in orbit?" I asked.
                  Cseka looked at me as if he were trying to remember
                  where I'd come from. I hadn't noticed anything odd when
                  I ate rations prepared for Cseka-none of the food was
                  meat, according to him, though I'd have sworn otherwise.
                  Most likely, the castaway's problems had nothing to do
                  with his present diet.
                  "You said we were guiding my friends down," I prodded.
                  "So they were waiting for us?"
                  "Yeah, sure," Cseka said with an angry frown. "Look,
                  we got here, didn't we? Our ships don't process course
                  equations as fast as the Feds do, maybe, but they don't
                  come down sideways because a cosmic ray punched the
                  artificial intelligence at the wrong time."
                    We'd transited from above Duneen almost as soon as

    




               THROUGH THE BREAcH     209
    
    we reached orbit. A human vessel-even the Oriflamme
    with Piet running the boards-would have taken at least
    half an hour to calibrate.
     The next transit, from a point so removed that the sys-
    tem's sun was only a bright star when it rotated across the
    ceiling screen, had taken what I think was the better part
    of a day. I was used to transits in quick series, several to
    several score insertions in sequence, followed by periods
    of an hour or more to recalculate. Chay vessels used a
    completely different system.
     The advantage-it minimized the horrible sickness of
    transiting through nonsidereal universes-was balanced by
    the fact that the Chay didn't continue accelerating during
    calibration. We were in free fall all the time we waited for
    the brain built into the vessel's hull to prepare for the
    next transit. Combustion rockets weren't as fuel-efficient
    as plasma thrusters, and the navigational system obviously
    didn't cope with small, sudden changes as well as humans'
    silicon-based microprocessors did.
     "They were met in orbit," Cseka murmured, settling
    back onto his couch. "But they didn't want to land until
    we'd arrived. You bad."
     The ceiling visuals were more like mural paintings than
    the screens I was used to. The mat of vegetation covered
    the bow third of the image. There were circular fields of
    varying size within the general blue-green mass. Occa-
    sional bright, straight lines suggested metalwork. From
    what Cseka had told me about Chay culture, I assumed
    they were biologically formed as well.
     I'd thought the castaway would be babblingly glad of
    human company after his years among aliens. Instead,
    Cseka remained in his own world throughout the voy-
    age. He gave verbal orders to the controls when the ship
    demanded them. My questions were answered in mono-
    syllables or brief phrases, the way a busy leader snaps at
    an importunate underling; responses only in the technical
    sense, which in no way attempted to give me the under-
    standing I'd requested.
     Despite that, I'd learned a great deal about the Chay to
    guide Piet when he dealt with the race. A day's discomfort
                                                 ~i, J1

    




    210           David Drake
    
    was nothing compared to what we'd been through already;
    and the risk-
     I'd made that decision when I came aboard the Porce-
    lain. So had we all.
     The vessel was settling to the west of the mat. As we
    neared the ground I realized that resolution of the Chay
    optics was amazingly good, more like still photographs
    than the scanned images I was used to. The visuals were
    real, too, not data cleaned up by an enhancement program.
    The surface had all the warts and blemishes of a natural
    landscape.
     The soil beneath us was russet, yellow, and gray. There
    were dips and outcrops, but no significant hills. Frequent
    cracks jagged across the surface, often streaming sulphur-
    ous gases. Vegetation outside the large mats was limited
    to clumps and rings. None of it was high enough to cast
    a shadow from the primary on the eastern horizon.
     "Is it breathable?" I asked as I watched a fumarole just
    upwind of where we trembled in a near-hover. "The air."
     "What?" Cseka said. He blinked, then frowned. "Of
    course it's breathable. A little high in carbon dioxide,
    that's all. These-"
     He plucked the cowl of his cape. It stretched across his
    face as a veil.
     "-filter it. I'll have some brought to your ship."
     He spoke to the vessel's controls again. We resumed
    our descent at less than three meters a second.
     "The Chay wear them also," I said. We would land
    in a shallow depression hundreds of meters in diameter,
    half a Mick from the inhabited vegetation. Atmosphere
    vessels-platforms supported by three or more translucent
    gas bags-drifted from the city toward the spot.
     "When they're out of their domes, yes," Cseka said.
     I squatted against the bulkhead's lower curve, not that
    we were going to land hard enough to require my cau-
    tion. If the Chay couldn't breathe the atmosphere of On
    Chay without artificial aids, there was no question at all
    that they were the relicts of a past civilization rather than
    autochthons.
     The engines roared at higher output and on a distinctly

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH     211
    
    JY;       different note. I recalled how the nozzles had dilated as
              the Chay vessel landed on Duneen. The exhaust spread
              to reflect from the ground as a cushion against the low-
              er hull.
    I we       "Do you have a filter for me?" I asked, pitching my
    ay        voice to be heard over the engines. How quickly didC02
    lis       poisoning become dangerous? Could I run to the Ori-
    ~re       flamme after she landed?
               "Christ's blood," said Cseka. He wiped his good eye
    -a]       With theback of his hand, then waved toward the guard
              whose muscles had frozen while the last of the fruit was
              a centimeter from his mouth. "Take his!"
    re         Cseka growled a few additional words to the Chay. The
    nt
    r_        mobile guards unfastened their fellow's cape by running a
    ~d        finger down a hidden seam. They pulled the garment away
              from him as we landed lightly as thought.
               One of them handed the cape to me. I wrapped it around
    st        my shoulders, avoiding the patch of sticky purple juice.
    "I        The edges sealed when I pressed them together, though the
    )f        fabric felt as slick as the surface of the Oriflamme's hull.
               The Chay's naked body was skeletally thin. The pebbly
              frontal skin was light gray-brown, while the sides and back
    .s        were a darker shade of the same drab combination. The
              color variations of the face and arms were absent.
               The creature wore a net garment similar to a bandeau
              across its midriff. A few small objects hung from the
              meshes. I couldn't guess what their human analogs
              might be.
               One of the Chay spoke. It was the first time I'd heard
              one of their voices. The word or words seemed sharper
    t         than those of Cseka speaking the language, but obviously
              he managed to communicate.
               The whorled patch of bulkhead spun slowly outward,
    t         opening to a dark sky and the coruscation of the Ori-
              flamme's thrusters descending. I smoothed the sides of
              my borrowed cape over my nose and mouth, then ducked
              through the hatchway as soon as it had opened enough to
              pass me.
               The Oriflamme dropped in a wide circle of Chay ves-
              ssels, ten or a dozen of them. These ships were constructs,
               as
                s
               Th,
               e S, I

    




     ICY
                    212           David Drake
    
                    three to six pods linked by tubes fat enough that a man or
                    Chay could crawl between them.
                    The individual hulls were similar to the one that had
                    carried me to On Chay. I had a vision of giant pea vines
                    festooned with starships. I suppose that was pretty close
                    to the truth.
                    The Oriflamme wobbled slightly like a man walking
                    on stilts, though anyone who'd seen another starship land
                    would be amazed at how skillfully Piet balanced the thrust
                    of his eight engines. The Chay escort kept formation around
                    him like fish schooling rather than individually-controlled
                    machines. They dropped with less than a quarter of their
                    jets lighted, further proof of how much less massive they
                    were than human vessels.
                    I'd used my hand to block the glare of the Oriflamme's
                    thrusters. When Cseka got out behind me, he'd sealed the
                    front of his cowl up over his eyes. I tried the same thing.
                    The fabric blocked the high-energy-UV and blue-por-
                    tion of the exhaust and dimmed the whole output to com
                    fortable levels, without degrading the rest of my vision
                    more than ten or twenty percent. That was about as good
                    as our helmet visors.
                    The dirigibles I'd seen on our vessel's screen sailed
                    nearer. The supporting gas bags were the size and shape
                    of the starship hulls, though the walls were thin enough
                    to be translucent. Eight to ten meters beneath each set of
                    bags hung a platform, some of which were large enough
                    to hold several score Chay.
                    The bigger dirigibles mounted a plasma cannon at the
                    bow. The weapons were metal and of small bore, swivel
                    guns like those Our Lady of Montreal had carried.
                    I nudged Cseka. "Where do they get the cannon?" I
                    shouted over the Oriflamme's hammering roar.
                    "Trade," he said. "For fullerenes. We've got embassies
                    from most of the states of Earth here, but the shipments go
                    through too many hands. That's why we want Venerians.
                    To set up our own foundries."
                    About half the Chay riding the dirigibles wore plain
                    gray capes like those of Cseka's guards. The remain4er
                    were clad in a variety of other metallic hues. Most of
    41

    




                     THROUGH THE BREACH     213
    
    these were shades of silver, but cinnabar reds and blues as
    poisonous as that of copper sulfate were dazzlingly pres
    ent. A few Chay gleamed with the same gold undertones
    as Cseka's cape.
    A hundred meters up, the Chay vessels increased thrust
    and hovered while the Oriflamme dropped out of their cir
    cle. Moving in a single flock, the escorts pulsed sideways
    through the sky in the direction of the mat of vegetation.
    The Oriflamme landed nearby in an explosion of dirt.
    Each of the thruster nozzles acted as a shaped charge blast
    ing straight down. The soil was friable, without enough
    sand in the mixture to bind it into glass.
    I hunched and covered my head with my arms. Cseka
    remembered to duck a moment later, but the two guards
    who'd followed us out of the ship continued gaping at the
    Oriflamme until the dirt cascaded over us. It was like being
    caught in a rugby scrum.~
    I fell over on my right side. One of the rocks that
    bounced off my forearm would have knocked me silly if
    it had hit my head instead. Pebbles settled while the wave
    of lighter dust traveled outward in an expanding doughnut.
    A dirigible nosed toward us through the cloud.
    I shook the hem of my cape free of the dirt loading it and
    jogged toward the Oriflamme. Cseka shouted something,
    but I couldn't understand the words. Maybe he was calling
    to the Chay in their own language.
    The forward airlock opened as I neared the Oriflamme.
    Stephen, identifiable even in a hard suit by his size and
    the slung flashgun, swung down the integral steps and
    stamped toward me across the glowing crater the plasma
    motors blew around the vessel.
    He raised his visor when he was clear of the throbbing
    boundary. "I'll carry you," he said.
    s"I hoped you might," I said, but he didn't hear me
    because he had to lock his visor down again to draw a
    breath.
    I stepped into his arms and, like Saint Christopher car
    rying our Lord, Stephen tramped back across the blasted
    rsoil and up the steps into the Oriflamme. The ground had
    fcooled below the optical range, but radiant heat baked the

    




                 214            David Drake
    
                 sweat from my calves and left arm in the few seconds I
                 was exposed.
                 Both valves of the airlock stood open until Stephen set
                 me down. The forward compartment was closed off from
                 the rest of the ship. Piet and half a dozen senior members
                 of the complement waited for us in oxygen masks.
                 "This is a filter," I said, plucking the hood down from
                 my eyes. I realized how strange I must look. "How high
                 is the carbon dioxide?"
                 "Five and a half percent," Piet said. The outer door
                 had closed, so he took his mask cautiously away. "I'm
                 surprised the Chay breathe Duneen's atmosphere when
                 their own is so different."
                 "They're as alien here as we are," I said. "From what I
                 could drag out of Cseka-believe me, he's crazy. It's like
                 his mind was dropped and all the pieces were put together
                 blind."
                 I hawked to clear my throat. My cape's filter mecha-
                 nism didn't seem to bind the ozone formed by plasma
                 exhausted into an oxygen atmosphere. On the main screen,
                 three dirigibles moved toward the Oriflamme. Cilia on the
                 platforms' undersides rowed the air. They raised some dust
                 from the ground, but less than turbines of similar thrust.
    
                 "There's no overall direction-they're as likely to fight
                 "There's a hundred or so Chay worlds," I resumed.
                 with each other as trade.".
                   "How unlike humans," Piet said dryly.
                 "Some of them do trade with the Feds," I said. "And
                 it sounds like the Feds have taken control of some Chay
                 worlds. Most of the Chay, though-like this system, they're
                 marked 'Avoid' on the pilotry chart because a Fed ship gets
                 handed its head if it messes with the locals."
                   One of the dirigibles swung broadside to the Oriflamme;
    -Bill        it hovered with its platform on a level with the cockpit
                 hatch. The six supporting gas bags loomed above us. Their
                 total volume was several times that of the starship. Low-
                 ranking Chay stood near bales of gray capes like those
                 they themselves wore, waiting for our hatch to open.
                 "I didn't see a single piece of metalwork, much less
                 ceramic, on the ship," I said. I nodded toward the image

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     215
    
    of the armed dirigible. "They've got cannon-"
     "Southern Cross work," said Stephen without bothering
    to look again at the weapon he'd already assessed. "And
    about as dangerous at one end as the other, I'd judge."
     "They can do anything with plants," I said. "They can
    sequester lanthanides in fullerene tubes a meter long, Cseka
    swears."
     "What good is that?" Stephen asked.
     "On Earth, they're starting to use them to replace dam-
    aged nerves," I replied. "Cseka wants us to set up a cannon
    foundry here. In exchange, they'll provide either biological
    products or the plant stocks that make them. He's serious,
    but-"
     "Us, to set up a foundry?" said Piet. "Or Venus?"
     I nodded with my lips pursed. "Yeah, that's the thing.
    I think maybe he means us. We could convince him that
    we don't have the expertise ourselves, but--2'
     "Unless he remembers what my father does for a living,"
    Piet said with a smile.
     "We can't train this cack-handed lot to cast cannon!"
    I snapped. "Any more than I could teach them to build
    silicon Als. Or breathe water! But I don't know how well
    Cseka is going to bear anything that doesn't agree with
    what he wants to hear."
     Piet nodded. "Not a unique problem," he said. "Fhough
    I think we'd better meet with his leaders. Compressed
    fullerenes are what give our hulls-"
     He tapped Stephen's breastplate affectionately.
     -and armor hardness that Terran metallurgists can't
    equal. If the Chay are so much better at creating fullerenes
    than we are with our sputtering techniques-"
     Piet smiled.
     "--then we owe it to Venus to learn what we can."
     He fitted the mask back over his face. "Our hosts have
    waited long enough," he said. "I'll take a few men and
    some gifts to meet with them. And we'll see what we see."
     Stephen frowned at "I'll take"; but as I'd noticed before,
    he didn't waste his breath in futile argument. "I'm one of
    the men," he said.
     "And I'm another," I added.

    




                     216           David Drake
                     "Yeah, those are food crops," Cseka agreed, peering over
                     the edge of the platform at the brown and ocher vegetation
                     twenty meters below. "The inside stems and the leaves
                     both. You wouldn't know it was the same plant."
                      The platform didn't have a guardrail, but Piet seemed
                     equally nonchalant as he leaned forward to view the fields.
                     Chay agriculture was labor-intensive: at least a hundred
                     gray-clad figures stooped over the sinuous crop, pruning
                     and cultivating. The vines were as big around as my thighs,
                     but the relatively small leaves looked more like fur than
                     foliage.
    46,               Stephen and I stayed back a step from the edge. He gri-
                     maced every time Piet overhung the platform, and his free
                     hand-the one not on the grip of his flashgun-was poised
                     to snatch his friend back if a jolt sent him toppling.
                      However, the dirigible rode as solidly as a rock. The
                     platform was suspended on hoselike tubes that stretched
                     and compressed as the gas bags lifted or fell in the breeze.
                     The deck undulated only slightly as cilia beneath stroked
                     us forward.
                      We slid between two brown-tinged domes together cov-
                     ering nearly a hectare. "Workers' housing," Cseka volun-
                     teered, gesturing with his elbow toward the dome on our
                     side of the platform. I could see the dim outlines of tiered
                     buildings under the curving surface. Cseka had spoken
                     more during the ride from the Oriflamme's landing site a
                     kilometer away than he did during the day's voyage from
                     Duneen.
                      I carried a flashgun too, but just as a gift to the council.
                     Our ceramic cassegrain lasers were far superior to the
                     nearest Terran equivalents, though not many Venerians
                     cared to use weapons so heavy and unpleasant for the
                     shooter. I sometimes wondered whether Stephen carried
                     a flashgun because each round was so effective, or if a
                     part of him liked the punishment.
                            dome far larger than those housing th,
                      A clear                              e. Chay
                     workers loomed before us. The structures inside looked
                     like mushrooms with multiple caps one above another on a'

    




               -_.Now
    
               THROUGH THE BREACH    217
    
    single central shaft. Those near the middle of the enclosure
    had eight or nine layers.
     Our dirigible settled to the ground. Rather, settled onto
    a living surface of hair-fine leaves woven as tightly as car-
    peting. The arched opening in the dome was big enough for
    three or four people to walk abreast. The passage writhed
    like an intestine instead of going straight through to the
    interior.
      Come," said Cseka. "The council will be waiting for
    US"
     He stepped from the platform to the carpet of vegeta-
    tion. Stephen and Piet fell in to either side of the cast-
    away, while the three of us carrying presents-Dole and
    Lightbody with me-followed closely behind. Chay on
    the dirigibles wheezed a fanfare on horns several meters
    long driven by four musicians squeezing bellows simul-
    taneously.
     There wasn't a door at either end of the tunnel, but its
    walls were lined with fine hairs that greatly increased the
    surface area. That and the winding course-the dome's
    wall was only three meters through even here where it was
    thickened, but the passage was a good twenty-served to
    filter the carbon dioxide down to levels the Chay
                                                               found
    comfortable.
     A crowd of Chay with their cowls thrown back lined
    both sides of the route inside the dome. At least half of
    them wore the colored garments I'd come to associate with
    higher ranks. As we six humans entered the enclosed area,
    the spectators began to stamp their feet in a slow rhythm.
    The flooring was as hard and dense-grained as a nutshell,
    and the dome reverberated.
     We walked along a boulevard a hundred meters wide,
    thronged with stamping Chay. Musicians from the dirig-
    ibles followed us, wheezing on their horns. Additional
    spectators leaned from the upper stories of buildings.
     "Do they have radio, do you suppose?" I said. I was
    speaking mostly to myself at first, but I added loudly
    enough to be heard by the men ahead of me, "Captain
      seka, do the Chay have radio?"
      A party in silvery capes marched to meet us. They
     P,

    




                  218           David Drake
                  played instruments a meter and a half long; bangles on
                  either end clattered like the beads of an abacus when the
                  musician plucked his one string. These strings, the bellows
                  trumpets, and the stamping crowd each kept an individual
                  rhythm. Only the cacophony aboard Absalom 231 in the
                  atmosphere of Decades approached the result.
                    Cseka turned his head. "Only to talk to human ships,"
                  he shouted. "We use beans that vibrate the same as others
                  from the same pod instead."
                    He shrugged. "The range is only a few light-seconds
                  and they aren't faster than light, nothing like that. But
                  they work."
                    The string players reversed course to precede us down
                  the boulevard. The towers were arranged in three rings of
                  increasing height. At the center of the enclosure, a low
                  building sat in a circular court several hundred meters
                  across.
                    Near the entrance to the central structure was a cage,
        fid       grown rather than woven in a lattice with about a hun-
    _4            dred millimeters across openings. The two lines of string
                  players parted around it. A man-a human being in the
                  remnants
                         of a Federation uniform--clutched the bars to
                  hold his torso upright.
                    There were-three at least, maybe more-human
                  corpses in the cage with the living man. One of them
                  had been dead long enough that the flesh had sloughed
                  to bare his ribs. The stench of death and rotting waste was
                  a barrier so real that I stumbled three steps away.
                    Piet stopped and touched his hand to Cseka s arm,
                  "What's this?" Piet asked, exaggerating his lip movements
                  to be understood without bellowing.
                    "Sometimes we take Feds alive," Cseka said noncha-
                  lantly. "They're brought here for entertainment."  ei
                    His right hand came out from beneath his cape with
                  the handweapon I'd seen outlined there. Grip, receiver, bu
                  and barrel were one piece of dark brown, black-grained  b&
                  wood. A lanyard growing from the butt quivered back in  slit
                  a springy coil which held the pistol out of the way when     insi
                  it wasn't in use.                              'V
                    Cseka fired. A snap of steam lifted the gun muzzle. The    seve
     i ~iw

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     219
    
    prisoner screamed and arched convulsively. He skidded on
    his back, thrashing across a floor slippery with filth.
     Cseka held his weapon up for us to see. "Darts," he
    said. "They're not fatal, not usually. But they drop a
    fellow quicker than bullets. And they-"
     He aimed again toward the prisoner. The procession
    halted when we did, but the wracking music continued.
     Piet put two fingers under the barrel of the dart gun
    and lifted it away. "Please don't," he said. "The things
    we have to do in war are terrible enough."
     "Nothing could be enough!" Cseka shouted. He raised
    the pistol and brought it down in a slashing stroke at Piet's
    bead. Stephen blocked the blow with his left forearm,
    catching Cseka's wrist numbingly. The pistol flew loose
    and slithered back under the cape.
     Cseka began to giggle. "Nothing could be enough,"
    he repeated. "Some day we'll have them all here, with
    your help."
     He strode around the left side of the cage. We five
    Oriflammes scrambled to catch up, but the Chay in the
    procession resumed marching without missing a step.
     The Chay hadn't reacted to the momentary human con-
    flict. The Fed prisoner lay quiescent. His eyes were open,
    and his chest trembled like that of a dog panting.
     "Our rifles throw fireballs a hundred meters," Cseka
    said, his voice raised only to be heard over the background
    noise. The maniacal rage switched itself off and on in
    an eyeblink. He tapped the barrel of Stephen's flashgun.
    "Within their range, they're better than this."
     "Within their range," Stephen repeated. There was noth-
    ing in his tone to suggest he believed the Chay shoulder
    weapons-they certainly weren't rifled-were really as
    effective as his laser at any range.
     The string players flared to either side of the central
    building. The structure was nearly cylindrical, as if a
    balloon had been inflated in a tube. The walls slanted
    slightly inward and the roof edge was a radiused curve
    instead of square.
     We walked into the building. The single chamber held
    several score Chay in golden capes and at least a dozen

    




                   220           David Drake
                   humans. Like us, the humans wore the gray local gar-
                   ment, but their hats were of a number of Terran styles.
                   I recognized a pair of Southerns, a large man in a kepi
                   with United Europe military insignia, and a pair of women
                   from the Independent Coastal Republic. Their state had
                   been fighting for thirty years against Pleyal's federated
                   remainder of North America.
    M                There was an open aisle down the center of the room.
                   Cseka led us toward the empty dais at the end. The music
                   and stamping outside stopped, but the chamber sighed
                   with the spectators' breathing. The walls were lighted
                   from within, giving the effect of translucence which the
                   black exterior belied.
                     We halted two paces from the dais, as close as any of
                   the spectators stood. A human leaned close to me and said
                   in Trade English, "You're from Venus, is it not so? You're
                   bringing arms to trade?"
                                                    though
                     "We're passing through," I replied; in a whisper
                   the questioner had spoken normally. I think he was a
                   European. United Europe had no extra-solar colonies, but
                   several of its states engaged in trade beyond Pluto.
                     He sniffed. "There's nothing they want but arms, can-
                   non especially," he said. "Well, there's enough for all."
                     The wall behind the dais rotated open like the port in
                   the Chay starship. Ten Chay carried through three others
                   on a litter whose wooden surface gleamed like polished
                   bronze.
                     The trio were completely naked and very old. They
                   hunched like dogs sitting up. Their skins were nearly
                   white. Their three tails twisted together and appeared to
                   have fused into one flesh.
                     The silver-caped porters lowered the trio to the dais.
                   The spectators shouted. The voices of the Chay were
                   more or less in unison though of course unintelligible.
                   The humans-the man next to me, at least-cried, "Hail,
                   the all-powerful council!"
                     The trio's mouths opened as one. "Greetings to t~is
                   worshipful assembly," boomed the front wall of the cham-
                   ber while the two side walls were snarling something in,
                   the language of the Chay themselves. The Trade English
     ~ik

    




                    THROUGH THE BREACH     221
    
         words seemed synchronized with the lipless mouth of the
         center councilor.
          The room stilled. The walls had been suffused with
         amber light. The floor level was now emerald green,
         and the hue was slipping upward as if by osmosis.
         The councilors focused their independently-rotating eyes
         on us.
          "We have discussed you with Lord Cseka," said the
         center figure. His voice through the front wall was under-
         standable despite the sidewalls' accompanying harsh gut-
         turals. "Your enemies are our enemies. Together we will
         drive the Federation pirates out of existence except as our
         slaves and your slaves."
          The trio paused. The councilors were as thin as mum-
         nues, pebbly skin sunken drumhead-tight over an armature
     t   of bi ne. Their ribs fluttered when they breathed.
           0
          P ~t
           e lifted his arms forward to call attention to himself
         without advancing into the cleared zone before the dais.
         "All-powerful council!" he said in a voice pitched to be
         heard in a larger arena than this one. "We bring you
         the greetings of Venus and our ruler, Governor Halys.
         We ourselves are but chance travelers, but permit us to
         0ff r a few trifles as a foretaste of the trade the future
         I e
         will b ing between your people and ours."
           He twisted his head back toward me. "Jere-" he mur-
         mured. I gave him the flashgun before he finished the
         request.
           "A laser with a range of kilometers," Piet called. The
         weapon weighed nearly twenty kilos, as I well knew, but
         he balanced it on the palm of one hand so that he could
         deploy the charging parasol from the butt with the other.
           "In good light, you can fire every three minutes at full
         power!" he added. We weren't providing spare batteries
         as a part of this gift. "Your enemies and ours of the
         Federation have no handweapons so effective."
           A porter took the gift from Piet and set it on the dais
         beside the council. Lightbody held his load out. Piet shook
         his head curtly and gestured to Dole instead.
           Dole handed forward a round bowl a meter in diam-
         eter. Piet raised it overhead and turned it so that all the
          a
          s
           a
          Feder
           A
             p
             a
            p
            bde
          esl
                                         t
                                         0
             ar
    
             t
              r
              h
              0
    
          Is
              t
    
              e
               e
               n
    
              c
               0
    
    r
    c
    ~h head u
           Dole han
          eter. Piet ra

    




                  222           David Drake
    
                 assembly could see Governor Halys' gray pearl charge on
                 a field of creamy translucence.
                 "As your folk with plants, so ours with ceramics," Piet
                 said. "This is merely a symbol of-"
                 He flung the bowl down on the floor as hard as he
                 could. It bounced back into his hands with the deep,
                 throbbing note of a jade gong. The assembly, Chay and
                 humans alike, gasped with surprise.
                 "-the skill with which our experts, experts whom I
                 can encourage to journey here from Venus, cast plasma
                 cannon!"
                 The sidewalls rumbled phrases in the local tongue,
                 though the councilors weren't speaking. Chay spectators
                 whispered among themselves. The human ambassadors
                 eyed us with speculation and some disquiet.
                 "One last thing," Piet said as a porter took away the
                 undamaged bowl. He was emphasizing thai we were geese
                 who would lay golden eggs, a prize for what we would
                 bring rather than what we were. "Like the others, this is
                 only a symbol of the trade that will start upon our return
                 to Venus."
                 Piet took from Lightbody the navigational computer
                 we'd stripped out of one of the Federation ships captured on
                 Trehinga. I'd have reduced the simple unit to components
                 for ease of storage, but Piet stopped me for reasons I now
                 understood.
                 "In order to capture a vessel in transit," Piet said, "your
                 AT must solve the same equations the other vessel's does.
                 We of Venus will supply you with electronic artificial
                 intelligences that will allow you to track Federation ships
                 across the bubble universes instead of being limited to
                 attacking those you find grounded or in orbit. There will
                 be no safety for the enemies of On Chay and Venus!"
                   This time the Chay spectators stamped their feet as the
    4il           translation boomed to them from the sidewalls. It was
                  almost a minute after a porter took the-crude-Al that
                  the chamber quieted again.
                 The walls replied in the councilors' three voices, "Men
                 of Venus, our folk are already delivering to your vessel
                 phials of drugs, fabrics, and the tubular fullerenes we

    




                   THROUGH THE BREACH    223
    
       know your folk especially prize. Trade for the future,
       yes ... But we will propose to you other arrangements
       as well. Go now, and tomorrow we will meet with you
       again."
         Piet bowed low. I knelt and tugged Dole and Lightbody
       down with me. The aisle through the assembly had closed,
       but the spectators squeezed aside again to let us pass. The
       Chay were stamping their enthusiasm.
         I was in the lead of our party, walking with the steady
       arrogance that befitted a gentleman of Venus. I'd never
       before in my life wanted so badly to get out of anything
       as I did that drumming council chamber.
       "I wonder if this balloon can go faster than it has so far?"
       Piet said, looking over the fittings of the dirigible carrying
       us back to the Oriflamme. We were traveling at about 20
       kph, the speed of a man jogging.
    t    He raised an eyebrow in question as he swept his glance
       over the airship's crew. The dozen Chay present on the
       return journey wore the gray of common laborers. They
       continued to ignore Piet and the rest of us.
         "The big ones with guns," Dole said, answering the
       surface question. "They've got more legs on the bottom
       than these do." He thumped his bootheel on the platform.
         "They might speak English anyway," I said.
         "My thought as well," Piet agreed in a satisfied tone.
       This was no place to discuss our real intentions.
         The primary was past mid-sky, flooding the land with
       soft blue light. On Chay was a warm world for all its
       distance from the sun. The planet it circled was nearly
       a star in its own right, and vulcanism spurred by the gas
       giant's gravity warmed the satellite significantly.
         Another pair of small dirigibles passed ours on their
       way back to the city. Tents of thin sheeting had sprung
       up around the Oriflamme during our absence, and bales
       of unfamiliar material were stacked near the main hatch.
       The council had been as good as its word when it promised
       gifts.
         "They really want to be our friends," I said. Even if the

    




                 224           David Drake
    
                 Chay understood English, they weren't going to pick up
                 my undertone of concern.
    17j          "On their terms," Stephen said, "they certainly do."
                 Men wearing Chay capes moved out of the way so that
                 the dirigible could land beside the open forward airlock.
                 The ground had cooled, so we didn't have to hop from
                 the platform to the ship in reverse of the way we had
                 disembarked.
                 The first thing I noticed when I stepped down was that
                 the ground wasn't still. Microshocks made the surface
                 tremble like the deck of a starship under way.
                 Dole must have thought the same thing. He nodded to
                 the tents crewmen were building from fabric the Chay had
                 brought and said, "Even if we get a big one and they come
                 down, it's not going to hurt nobody."
                 I nodded agreement, then grinned. A seasoned spacFr
                 adapted to local conditions; the landsman I'd been six
                 months ago would have been terrified. On Venus,
                 ground shocks might rupture the overburden and let in
                 the hell-brewed atmosphere.
                 "Guillermo?" Piet called to the Molt who'd been
                 directing outside operations during our absence. "Turn
                 things over to Dole and join us on the bridge, please."
                 The Chay crew paid us no attention. They backed the
                 dirigible from the Oriflamme before turning its prow
                 toward the city. Again I noticed the delicacy of the
                 driving cilia. Mechanical propellors or turbines would
                 have scattered the tents our crew had just constructed
                 Salomon waited for us alone in the forward section,
                 though as we entered a pair of sailors carried bedrolls
                 toward the main hatch while discussing the potential of
                 converting Chay foodstocks, into brandy.
                 "I've run initial calculations for an empty world twenty
                 days from here," the navigator said. "We'll have to refine
                 them in orbit, of course."
                 "I don't know that it's come to that, exactly," Piet said
                 cautiously. I'm sure he would have started the calculations
    IN           himself if Salomon hadn't already done so.
                 "Cseka scares the hell out of me," I said. "The Chay
                 scare me even worse. They-"
    a
    
    41

    




                  THROUGH THE BREACH     225
    
        "They're friendly," Piet said.
       "They're not human," I said. "An earthquake may not
       hurt you, but it isn't your friend. There's nothing I saw
       in there today-"
        I waved in the direction of the city.
       '~-that convinces me they won't decide to eat us
       because, because Stampfer's got red hair."
       "I haven't had a chance to look over the goods they've
       brought us. . ." Stephen said. He took off his helmet and
       knea ed his scalp with his left hand. "But I don't think
       theirels much doubt that trade-in techniques, at least,
       given the distance-could be valuable."
       He gave us a humorless grin. "Of course, that's only if
       the Chay decide to let us go. Jeremy's right, there."
       Guillermo had said nothing since he entered behind
       us. He was seated at his usual console. His digits were
       entering what even I recognized as a sequence to lift us
       to orbit.
       Piet laughed briefly. "So you all think we should take
       off as soon as possible," he said. "Even though Chay
       knowledge could give Venus an advantage greater than all
       the chips the Federation brings back from the Reaches?"
       "What we think, Piet," Stephen said, "is that you're in
       charge. We'll follow whatever course you determine."
       "I'm not a tyrant!" Piet snapped. "I'm not President
       Pleyal, 'Do this because it's my whim!'"
       I swallowed and said, "Somebody has to make decisions.
       Here it's you. Besides, you're better at it than the rest of us.
       Not that that matters."
       I grinned at Stephen. His words hadn't been a threat,
       because the big gunman accepted that all the rest of us knew
       the commander's decision was the law of this expedition.
       As surely as I knew that Stephen would destroy anything
       or anyone who tried to block Piet's decision.
       "Yes," said Piet. He sat down at his console and checked
       a status display. "Air and reaction mass will be at capacity
       within the hour. We'll check the gifts, see what's worth
       taking and what's not, but we'll leave the bales where
       they are for the time being. We don't want to give the
       impression that we're stowing them for departure."
    
                                                      A~,,J
        0
    
    ~a

    




                     226           David Drake
    
                     He looked up at the rest of us and smiled brilliantly.
                     "Primary set is in six hours. An hour after that, we'll
                     inform the crew to begin loading operations. When they're
                     complete-another hour?-we'll close the hatches and
                     lift."
                     Piet rubbed his forehead. "I didn't," he added as if idly,
                     much care for the way our hosts treat their prisoners."
                     The Oriflamme shuddered as another shock rippled
                     through the soil beneath us.
    
                     The primary was just below the horizon. The sun at zenith
                     in the clear sky was only a blue-white star, though it cast
                     a shadow if you looked carefully.
                     Three dirigibles rested outside the entrance to the
                     domed city, their partially deflated gas bags sagging.
                     The airships and their crews were armed, but the Chay
                     all wore gray. None of their officers were present, and
                     the guards themselves didn't bother to look at me as I
                     walked into the dome.
     Half a dozen Chay in orange and pastel blue capes
    preceded me by twenty meters. A group of gray-clad
    laborers followed at a similar distance, chattering~2
                     themselves. Like me, some of the laborers left their cowls
                     up and the veils over their faces even after they entered
                     the dome.
                     I hadn't done a more pointlessly risky thing since the
                     night I went aboard the Porcelain. Though ...
                     Boarding the Porcelain hadn't made me a man, perhaps,
                     but it had made me a man I like better than the fellow
                     who'd lived on Venus until then. I wasn't going to leave
                     a human prisoner here to be tortured to death.
                     The hard floor of the dome was a contrast to the springy
                     surface of the mat on which it rode. The cape hung low
                     enough to cover my feet, but I was afraid somebody
                     wuld notice that the sound of my boots differed from
                      o
                     the clicking the locals made when they walked. I took
                     deliberately quick, mincing steps.
                     There were hundreds of pedestrians out, but the broad
                     boulevard seemed deserted by comparison with what I'd
                                                        FJ J

    




                    THROUGH THE BREACH     227
    
        seen in the afternoon. Though the dome was clear, it
        darkened the sky into a rich blue that concealed all the stars
        except the sun itself The walls of overhanging apartments
        wicked soft light from within, but even the lower levels
        weren't bright enough to illuminate the street.
         I could see the cage ahead of me. I gripped the cutting
         bar beneath my cape to keep it from swinging and calling
         attention to itself; and because I was afraid.
         I could claim to be looking around; but the Chay would
         want to carry me back to the Oriflamme, and if they did
         that they'd see we were loading the ship to escape. To
         save the others, I'd have to insist on staying overnight
         in the city. What would the Chay do with me when the
         Ori
           flamme lifted?
         Lord God of hosts, be with Your servant. Though I'd
         been no servant of His; a self-willed fool, and a greater
         fool now because I wouldn't leave an enemy of mine to
         die at the hands of enemies of his.
         I'd slipped away from the Oriflamme without causing
         comment. I told Dole I was going for a walk to calm
         my nerves. I didn't want my shipmates to worry if they
         noticed I was gone.
         It didn't seem likely they would notice, what with the
         work of preparing for departure. I was only in the way.
         There were no guards around the Council Hall or the
         cage in front of it. Occasional Chay strode across the
         court, on their way from one boulevard to another, but
         they didn't linger. Even those in bright garb were hard to
         see. My gray cape would be a shadow among shadows.
         A Chay in silvery fabric walked out of the Council Hall
         carrying a bundle. I paused beside a tower, close against
         the wall. If the fellow had been a moment slower, I'd have
         been crossing to the cage myself. The grip of my bar was
         slick with sweat.
         The Chay thrust his bundle into the cage. He had to
         wiggle it to work it through the mesh. It fell with a
         slapping sound to the floor within. The Chay called
         something obviously derisory in his own language, then
         went back the way he'd come.
    
    AW-01

    




     Bill           228           David Drake
    
                   Feeding time at the zoo. The prisoner didn't move. I
                   couldn't even be sure which of the still forms within the
                   lattice was the living man.
                   There wouldn't be a better time. I walked to the cage,
                   keeping my steps short. Out of the comer of my eye I
                   saw a Chay laborer start across the courtyard. I continued
                   forward, my heart in my throat. The Chay disappeared past
                   or into a neighboring residential tower.
                   I took the cage in my left hand and shook it to test
                   the structure. The bars were grown as a unit, not tied
                   together where they crossed. They were finger-thick, hard
                   and obviously tough; but my bar would go through them
                   like light through a window.
                   "Ho! Federation dog!" I snarled. I pitched my voice low
                   though loud enough for the prisoner to hear. I could still
                   brazen out my presence if I had to. "Come close to me
                   or it'll be the worse for you!"
                   "I don't think he can move, Jeremy," Piet said from
                   behind me. "We'll have to carry him."
                   I turned, my mouth open and the tip of the bar sliding
                   from beneath my cape. Piet was indistinguishable from a
                   Chay in his gray cape, but his voice was unmistakable.
                   "Yeah, well," I said. I switched my bar on. "I'll drag
                   him out, then."
                   The blade zinged across the bars. I cut up, across and
                   down, then bent to slash through the base of the opening.
                   I wondered how the Chay had created the cage to begin
                   with, since it didn't appear to have a door anywhere.
                   I couldn't believe they'd simply grown it around their
                   prisoners.
                   Piet caught the section as it started to fall. He held a
                   cape to me as I hung my bar. I'd brought an extra garment
                   myself, so Piet tossed his spare onto the cage floor to be
                   rid of it.
                   My boot skidded on the slimy surface. I had to grab the
                   frame to keep from falling. One of the prostrate figures
                   moaned softly. I raised his torso, tugged the cape around
                   him, and lifted him in a packstrap carry.
                   The cut section now hung from the hinge of tape Piet
                   had wrapped around it. When I ducked out, he taped the
    ~.. , Im

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     229
    
    other side so that our entry wasn't obvious.
     The prisoner was a dead weight, though a modest one.
    It was like carrying an articulated skeleton, more awkward
    than heavy. Piet took the man's other arm and we strode
    back the way we'd come.
     "Do Chay get drunk, do you suppose?" I said.
     "Let's hope so," Piet said. "We're a couple of fools to
    do this."
     The few remaining pedestrians scurried along with their
    heads down. "If the Chay have a curfew . . ." Piet said,
    speaking my thought.
     "The dome wall isn't very thick except where the door
    is," I replied. "I can cut a way out if the gate's closed,
    We can."
     The tunnel was open. A Chay in a violet garment
    entered as we neared it. We passed him in the other
    direction. He called out in his language. We ignored him.
    I walked on my toes to approximate the mincing Chay gait
    until we were around the first bend in the gateway.
     The sunlight outside was as faint as my hope of salvation.
    I drew a great breath through my filter and said, "So far, so
    good."
     The crews of the airships on guard didn't challenge us.
    Some of the Chay were eating beneath their veils. The mat
    of vegetation rolled underfoot, absorbing high-frequency
    ground shocks and smoothing them into gentle swells.
     A tall figure strode toward us from the shadow of a
    translucent brown dome. "I'll carry him, if you like,"
    Stephen offered in a low voice.
     "He's not heavy," Piet said.
     We walked on. Stephen fell into step behind us and a
    little to Piet's left, where he could watch our front as well
    as guarding the rear. This final part of the route was over
    an organic causeway crossing scores of circular fields only
    ten or twenty meters in diameter,
     The ground rumbled. A line of dust lifted in the distance,
    kicked into motion by the quake. The causeway swayed
    gently. Beneath us, plants waved their zebra-striped foliage
    at us.
     "I hadn't expected that the two of you would do this

    




       q1111
    
                   230            David Drake
    
                   together," Stephen said in a pale voice. We hadn't spoken
                   during the trek, but we could see that now there were no
                   Chay between us and the edge of the mat.
                   "We weren't, Stephen," Piet said. "Jeremy made a
                   foolish decision quite independently of me."
                     "I jumped out of a year's growth when he spoke t
                                              0 me,"
                   I said.
                   My voice sounded almost normal. That surprised me.
                   I'd just learned that Stephen thought I'd supplanted him
                   in Piet Ricimer's friendship. I'd known there were a lot 'm
                   of ways this jaunt could get me killed, but that one hadn't
                   occurred to me.
                   "Tsk," said Stephen. "I don't lose control of myself,
                   Jeremy."
                   I stumbled, then stared at him past the sunken form of
                   the man we carried. "Do you read minds?" I demanded.
                     "No," said Piet. "But he's very smart."
    J 1             "And a good shot," Stephen said with a throaty chuckle.
                     I laughed too. "Well, nobody sane would be doing this,"
                   I said aloud.
                   Though the mat felt like a closely woven carpet to walk
                   on, it was actually several meters thick. The edge was a
                   sagging tangle of stems, interlaced and spiky. There were
                   no steps nor ramp off the island of vegetation; the Chay
                   never walked on bare soil. The ground beyond bounced
                   the way tremors shake the chest of a sleeping dog.
     L,-,            Stephen hopped down ahead of us. "Drop him to me,'
    lffi~ I L      he said, raising his arms. "I'll take him from here."
                   I looked at Piet. He nodded. "On three," he said. "One,
                   two, three-"
                   Together we tossed the moaning prisoner past the border.
                   Stephen caught him, pivoting to lessen the shock to the
                   Fed's weakened frame. The landscape heaved violently.
                   Stephen dropped to his knees, but he didn't let his charge
                   touch the ground.
                   My cape tore half away on brambles as I clambered
                   down, baring my legs to the knee. There was no longer
                   need for concealment, only speed.
                   Stephen strode onward with the Fed held lengthways
                   across his shoulders like a yoke. Small shocks were

    




                THROUGH THE BREACH     231
    
     incessant now. I had to pause at each pulse to keep from
     falling when the ground shifted height and angle.
     "I should have allowed more time," I muttered. The
     Oriflamme was still out of sight beyond the rim of the
     bowl in which we'd landed.
      "You were there before I was," Piet reminded me.
     "Don't worry," Stephen said, "They aren't going to
     leave without us."
      Piet laughed. "I suppose not," he agreed.
     "I'd thought . . ." I said. "Maybe I'd just put him out
     of his misery. But I couldn't do that,"
     Stephen gave an icy chuckle. "We've brought him this
     far," he said. "We may as well take him the rest of
     the way."
     We reached the lip of the bowl. The center of the
     depression was only twenty meters or so lower than the
     rolling plain around it, but that was still enough to conceal
     a starship. Sight of the Oriflamme warmed my heart like
     the smile of a beautiful woman.
     A squeal similar to that of steam escaping from a huge
     boiler sounded behind us. It was more penetrating than a
     siren and so loud that it would be dangerous to humans
     -any closer than we were.
     I turned. Three cannon-armed dirigibles lifted above
     the city.
     "Here," said Stephen, swinging his burden to Piet as
     if the Fed were a bundle of old clothes. "I'll watch the
     rear.9~
     He locked a separate visor down to protect his eyes. A
     full helmet would have been obvious even under his cowl.
     Stephen parted his cape and threw the wings back over his
     shoulders, clearing his flashgun and the satchel of reloads
     slung on his left side.
     I seized the Fed's right arm. "Run," Piet said, and we
     started running.
     The Oriflamme was three hundred yards ahead of us.
     The ground had been still for a moment. Now On Chay
     shook itself violently. I stumbled but caught myself. The
 1iprisoner9s legs swung like a pendulum to trip Piet and
     send him sprawling.

    




                  232           David Drake
                   As Piet picked himself up, I glanced over my shoulder.
                  The Chay dirigibles were a hundred meters high. Stephen
                  walked sedately twenty meters behind us, watching our
                  pursuers over his shoulder. The alarm still screamed from
                  the Chay city.
                   Piet and I ran on. We'd taken only three strides when
                  the bolt from a plasma cannon lit the soil immediately
                  behind us into the heart of a sun.
                   The shock wave flung us apart. I smashed into a waist-
                  high bush that might have been the ancestor of the mat
                  on which the city was built. It clawed my chest and my
                  legs as I tore myself free.
                   The cannon that had fired was a bright white glow in
                  the bow of the center dirigible. Stephen swung his own
                  weapon to his shoulder. A meters-long oval of soil blazed
                  between him and us where the slug of plasma struck.
      J            Stephen fired. The bolt from his laser was a need
                                                     le
                  of light against retinas already shocked by the plasma
                  discharge.
                  The underside of a gas bag supporting the right-hand
                  dirigible ruptured in a veil of thin blue flames. The Chay
                  used hydrogen to support their craft. The fire spread with
                  the deliberation of a flower opening, licking the sides of
       i          the bags adjacent to the one the bolt had ignited. The craft
                  sank out of sight. The crew was trying desperately to land
                  before the conflagration devoured them as well as their
                  vehicle.
                  Piet stumbled forward alone with the prisoner. I grabbed
                  the Fed's free arm and shouted, "D'ye have a gun?"
                  "Only a bar!" Piet said. "I didn't want to hurt the Chay,
                  just free this poor wretch."
                   A laser pulse plowed glassy sparkles across the ground'~
    -11E          ahead of us. The bastards were shooting at us with the
                  flashgun we'd given them that morning!
                  Stephen fired. A microsecond following the snqp of his
                  bolt, our world erupted in another plasma discharge.
                  The shock threw Piet and me sprawling, but this time
                  the cannoneers were aiming at Stephen. Dirt fused into
     lit,
                  shrapnel and blew outward in a fireball which kicked,
                  Stephen sideways with his cape afire.

    




            --------- MMMMNMMMM~
                                              All~
               THROUGHTHEBREACH       233
    
     Fifty meters from us, Salomon or Guillermo lit the
    Oriflamme's thrusters momentarily to check the fuel feeds.
    Bright exhaust puffed across the encampment, blowing
    down tents and disturbing the piles of Chay goods we
    were abandoning. Grit sprayed the back of my neck.
     We had no secrets now. Stampfer would be screaming
    curses as he tried to rerig the Long Tom for combat,
    but that would take minutes with the Oriflamme laden
    as heavily as she was now.
     I started toward Stephen. His flashgun had ignited a
    bag of the left-hand dirigible an instant before its plasma
    cannon fired, Blue hydrogen flames, hotter than Hell's
    hinges for all their seeming delicacy, wrapped the mid-line
    gas bag and involved the sides of the bags adjacent to it.
     I'd seen Stephen shoot before. If he hadn't hit the Chay
    gunner, even at five hundred meters, it was because he
    didn't choose to kill even at this juncture.
     The dirigible's crew dumped their remaining lift to
    escape. The platform dipped out of sight, taking with it
    the white glare of the plasma cannon's stellite bore. Only
    the center vehicle was still aloft; its cannon would be too
    hot to reload for some minutes yet.
     Stephen rolled to his feet before I could reach him.
    His fingers inserted a charged battery in the butt of his
    flashgun and snapped the chamber closed over it before
    he tore away the blazing remnants of his cape. The rocky
    soil still glowed from the second plasma discharge, and a
    nearby bush was a torch of crackling orange flames.
     I turned again. Piet was beside me. The Fed had managed
    to lift his torso off the ground. We snatched him up again
    and bolted for the Oriflamme's ramp, dragging the fellow's
    feet. Stephen staggered behind us like a drunk running.
     Twenty men spilled out of the Oriflamme's main hatch.
    Those with rifles banged at the dirigible. Given the range
    and light conditions, I doubt any of them were more
    effective than I would have been.
     "Get aboard!" Piet screamed. Kiley and Loomis each
    took the prisoner in one hand and one of us in the other,
    as if they were loading sacks of grain. "Don't shoot at the
    Chay,they're-"

    




                  234            David Drake
    
                  The sky behind us exploded. A sheet of fire flashed
                  as bright for a moment as if the primary had risen. I
                  looked back. Bits of the last dirigible cascaded in a red-
                  orange shower while hydrogen flames lifted like a curtainIh
                  rising.
                  A Chay plasma cannon would cool very slowly because
                  of its closed breech and the high specific heat of the
                  metal from which it was cast. The gunners had tried to
                  reload theirs too soon, and the round cooked off before
                  it was seated. The thermonuclear explosion shattered the
                  platform, rupturing all six hydrogen cells simultaneously.
                  Parts of the fiery debris were the bodies of the dirigible's
                  crew.
                  We tumbled together in the forward hold. The ramp
                  began to rise. Dole was shouting out the names of crewmen
                  present. I hoped nobody'd gone so far from the hatch that
                  he was still outside.
                  The Oriflamme lifted before the hatch sealed. Reflected
                  exhaust was a saturated aurora crowning the upper seam.
                  Men of the support party disappeared up the ladderway
                  in obedience to the bosun's snarled orders. I lay on my
                  back, too wrung out to move or even rise. Piet bent
                  over the rescued prisoner, so Piet at least was all right.
                  Rakoscy ripped away Stephen's smoldering trousers with
                  a scalpel.
                  I rolled over, but my stomach,heaved and I could barely
                  lift my face from the deck. Molten rock had burned savage
                  ulcers into Stephen's calves above the boot tops. Bloody
                  serum oozed as Rakoscy started to clean the wounds
                  Stephen rested on one elbow, holding his flashgun muzzle
                  high so that the hot barrel wouldn't crack from contact
                  with the cooler deck.
                  "Christ's blood, I shouldn't have gone back to the city!"
                  I said. Piet was there to free the prisoner also, but that
                  didn't change my responsibility. "Now I've made the
                  Chay enemies for all their soldiers we killed."
                  "Dole," Piet ordered, "send this man up to the forward
                  cabin and get some fluids in him. We don't want him to
                  die on us now."
    A~,
                    "We didn't kill anybody, Jeremy," Stephen said. He

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     235
    
    wasn't looking at me. He wasn't looking at anything,
    though his eyes were open.
     "Ferris and Lightbody!" Dole snapped, "You heard the
    captain. And a bath wouldn't hurt him, neither."
     I managed to sit upright. I didn't speak. Maybe
    Stephen hadn't seen the third dirigible explode, hadn't
    seen the Chay bodies trace blazing pinwheels toward the
    ground ...
     "As for what the plasma cannon did. . Stephen
    continued in an emotionless voice. "I'll take responsibility
    for my own actions, Jeremy, but not for what others choose
    to do,"
     "Here, I've got your flashgun, Stephen," Piet said, gently
    lifting the weapon from his friend's hand.
     "I've got enough company in my dreams as it is,"
    Stephen said as our thrusters hammered us toward orbit.

    




                                NEW ERYX
    
                   Day 177
     mill,:
     01 T          The portable kiln chuckled heavily on the far side of
                   the Oriflamme, spraying a smooth coat of glass onto the
                   cracks in the hull. The run from On Chay hadn't been
                   unusually stressful, but the Oriflamme was no longer the
                   vessel that had lifted in maiden glory from Venus.
                     The constant drizzle didn't affect the kiln, but I already
                   felt it was going to drive me mad in much less time than.
                   the week Piet said we'd need to refit. "Does it ever stop,
                   do you think?" I muttered. "The rain, I mean."
                     "The globe was almost entirely Overcast when we
                                                    thro
                   orbited," Piet said mildly. He smoothed the
                   closure of a Chay cape. Because of the confusion
                   loading, we had fifty-odd of the garments aboard. They
                   turned out to be waterproof. "There's no pilotry data, of
                   course."
                     The world he'd named New Eryx-after the factorial
                   hold of Stephen's family on Venus-was uncharted, at
                   least as far as the Federation database went. Piet and
                   Salomon had extrapolated the star's location by examining
                   the listed gradients and found a planet that was technically
                   habitable. Even if it was driving me insane.
    Jff                                "I've never gotten used to a bright sky," Stephen said.
                    "Too much Venus in my blood, I suppose. I like the
                    overcast, and I don't mind the rain."
                                       Lacaille, the prisoner we'd rescued, came by with a file
                    of sailors who carried the trunk of one of the squat trees
                    growing here in the dim warmth. They didn't notice the
                    three of us sitting on a similar log.
                                       236
                                                       at
       6iT                                             of
                                                       'd

    




    1v
    
                    THROUGH THE BREACH     237
         Lacaille had been first officer on a ship in the Earth/Back
         Worlds trade, a year and a half's voyage in either direction     5
         for Federation vessels. Now he was talking cheerfully with
         men who'd helped kill a hundred like him the day we
         boarded Our Lady of MontreaL
         "I'm glad we rescued him," I said. "He's a. .
         "Human being?" Piet suggested. There was a smile in
         his voice.
         "Whatever," I said. Trees like the one the men with
         Lacaille carried had a starchy pith that could be eaten
         or converted to alcohol. Lacaille said identical trees were
         common on at least a score of worlds throughout the
         region. New Eryx wasn't on Federation charts; but some
         body'd been here, and a very long time ago.
         "He's fitting in well," Stephen said. "Of course, we
         saved his life. You did."
         I snorted. "I can't think of a better way to make a man
         hate you than to do him a major favor," I said. "Most men.
         And damned near all women."
         Stephen stood and stretched powerfully. He'd slung a
         repeating carbine over his right shoulder with the muzzle
         down to keep rain out of the bore. The only animal
         life we'd seen on New Eryx---if it was either animate
         or alive-was an occasional streamer of gossamer light
         which drifted among the trees. It could as easily be phos
         phorescent gas, a will-o'-the-wisp.
         "Think I'll go for a walk," Stephen said without looking
         back at us. He moved stiffly. The bums on his legs were
         far from healed.
         "Do you have a transponder?" Piet warned.
         "I'll be able to home on the kiln," Stephen called,
         already out of sight. "Low frequencies travel forever."
         "Because he seems so strong," Piet said very softly,
                                                       J'R~i~
         "it's easy to overlook the degree to which Stephen is in
         pain. I wish there was something I could do for him."
              r
         He turned and gave me a wan smile. "Besides pray, of
         course. But I wouldn't want him to know that."
         "I think," I said carefully, "that Stephen's the bravest
         man I'll ever know." Because he gets up in the morning
         after every screaming night, and he doesn't put a gun in

    




    238           David Drake
    
    his mouth; but I didn't say that to Piet.
     I cleared my throat. "What'll happen with the Chay, do
    you think?" I said to change the subject.
     "There's enough universe for all of us, Chay and Molts
    and humans," Piet said. "And others we don't know about
    yI wouldn't worry about what happened at On Chay, if
    et.
    that's what you mean. There'll be worse from both sides
    after we've been in contact longer, but eventually I think
    we'll all pull together like strands in a cable. Separate,
    but in concert."
     "Optimist," I said. Christ! I sounded bitter.
     Piet laughed and put his hand over mine to squeeze
    it. "Oh, I'm not a wide-eyed dreamer, Jeremy," he said.
    "We'll fight the Chay, men will, just as we fight each o
                                        t
    er. And the Chay fight each other, I shouldn't wonder."
     His tone sobered as he continued, "The real danger isn't
    race or religion, you know. It's the attitude that some men,
    some people-Molts or Chay or men from Earth-have
    to be controlled from above for their own good. One day
    1 believe the Lord will help us defeat that idea. And the
    lion will lie down with the lamb, and there will be peace
    among the nations."
     He gave me a smile; half impish, half that of a man
    worn to the edge of his strength, uncertain whether he'll
    be able to take one step more.
     "Until then," Piet said, "it's as well that the Lord has men
    like Stephen on His side. Despite what it costs Stephen, and
    despite what it costs men like you and me."
     The kiln chuckled, and I began to laugh as well. Anyone
    who heard me would have thought I was mad.

    




          UNCHARTED WORLD
    
    6ay 232
    
    'We touched the surface of the ice with a slight forward
    way on instead of Piet's normal vertical approach. For this
    landing, he'd programmed a ball switch on his console to
    control the dorsal pairs of attitude jets. He rolled the ball
    upward as his other hand chopped the thrusters.
     The three bands of attitude jets fired a half-second pulse.
    Their balanced lift shifted enough weight off the skids to
    let inertia drag us forward. Steam from the thrusters' last
    spurting exhaust before shutdown hung as eight linked
    columns in the cold air behind us as the Oriflamme ground
    to a halt.
     Salomon unlatched his restraints and turned to face Piet's
    couch. "Sir," he said, "that was brilliant!"
     I swung my feet down to the deck. Men with duties dur-
    ing landing had strapped themselves to their workstations.
    The rest of us were in hammocks on Piet's orders. No
    matter how good the pilot, a landing on an ice field could
    turn into disaster.
     The reaction-mass tanks were almost empty, though.
    Our choice had been to load a nitrogen/chlorine mixture
    from the moon of one of the system's gas giants, or to risk
    the ice. The gases would have given irregular results in the
    plasma motors as well as contaminating the next tank or
    two of water. Nobody had really doubted Piet's ability to
    bfing us down safely.
     "Thank you, Mister Salomon," Piet said as he rose from
    his console. "I'm rather pleased with it myself."
     He glanced at the screen, then touched the ramp control.
    
                    239

    




                     240            David Drake
    
                      "At least we don't have to wait for the soil to c
                                             ool," he
                     added.
                     The center screen was set for a 360' view of our sur-
                     roundings. There was nothing in that panorama but ice
                     desert picked out by rare outcrops of rock. Irregular fis-
                     sures streaked the surface like the Oriflamme's hull crazing
                     magnified. The ice crevices weren't dangerously wide.
                     Most of those I could see were filled with refrozen melt-
                     water, clearer and more bluish than the ice surrounding.
                     "I'll take out a security detail," Stephen said. He clasped
                     a cape of some heavy natural fabric around his throat and
                     cradled his flashgun. I didn't have warm clothing of my
                     own. Maybe two or three of the Chay capes together ...
                     "Security from what, Mister Gregg?" Salomon asked in
                     surprise.
                     "We don't know," Piet said. "We haven't been here
                     before."
                     I picked up my cutting bar and snatched a pair of capes
                     as I followed Stephen aft. Crew members weren't going
                     to argue the right of a gentleman to appropriate anyth ng
       oil            that wasn't nailed down. Besides, this wasn't a world at
                      even men who'd been cooped up for seven weeks were in
                      a hurry to step out onto.
                     The ground beneath the Oriflamme collapsed with the
                     roar of breaking ice. We canted to port so violently that I
                     was flung against the bulkhead. Men shouted. Gear we'd
                     unshipped after our safe landing flew about the cabin.
                     The vessel rocked to a halt. I'd gotten halfway to m),
                     feet and now fell down again. The bow was up 15' and
                     the deck yawed to port by almost that much. I was afraid
       :7,            to move for fear the least shift of weight would send the
                      Oriflamme down a further precipice.
                     Piet stood and cycled the inner and outer ai I C
                     doors simultaneously from his console. "Mister Salo
                                                       ZOO,
    
                      Guillermo," he said formally. "Stay at your control,
    10                please. I'm going to take a look at our situation fro
                      outside."
                      Stephen and I followed Piet through the cockpit hatc
                      Elsewhere in the ship, men were sorting themselves out
                      Their comments sounded more disgruntled than afraid.
    
    AN
                                                        th

    




                       THROUGH THE BREACH     241
    
            I was terribly afraid. I'd left the capes somewhere in the
            cabin, but I held my cutting bar in both hands as I jumped
            the two meters from the bottom of the hatch ladder to the
            ground.
            The wind was as cold as I'd expected, but the bright sun-
            light was a surprise. Unless programmed to do otherwise,
            the Oriflamme's screens optimized light levels on exterior
            visuals to Earth daytime. This time the real illumination
            was at least that bright.
            The Oriflamme's bow slanted into the air; her stem was
            below the surface of the shattered ice.
            "We're on a tunnel," Stephen said, squatting to peer
            critically at the ground. "We collapsed part of the roof.
            Do you suppose the sunlight melts rivers under the ice
            sheet?"
            "Can we take off again?" I asked. The wind was an
            excuse to shiver.
            "Oh, yes," Piet said confidently. "Though we'll all have
            blisters before we dig her nozzles clear . .
    
    ,,~e c
            x
    
            blis

    




              LORD'S MERCY
    
    Day 233
    
    The sweat that soaked my tunic froze at the folds of the
    garment. The mittens I'd borrowed were too large. We'd
    reeved a rope through the tarp's grommets to serve as
    handles. It cut off circulation in my fingers even though
    there were four of us lifting the hundred-kilo loads of ice
    and scree away from the excavation.
     At least we weren't going to be crushed if we slipped.
    Stampfer headed a crew of ten men, off-loading the broad-
    side guns using sheerlegs and a ramp. If a cannon started
    to roll, it was kitty bar the door.
     We reached the crevice fifty meters from the Oriflamme.
    Maher and Loomis at the front of the makeshift pallet were
    staggering. Dragging the tarp would have been a lot easier,
    but the gritty ice would have wom through the fabric in
    only a trip or two.
     "Stand clear," I ordered.'The sailors in front dropped
    their comers. Lightbody and I tried to lift ours to dump
    the load down the crevice. I could barely hold the weight;
    Lightbody had to manage the job for both of us. Next load
    Maher and Loomis would have that duty, but the load after
    that-
     "About time for watch change, isn't it, Mister Moore?"
    Maher asked 'In a husky whisper.
     "One more trip,~l I muttered. I didn't have any idea
    how long we'd been working. Blood tacked the mittens
    to my blistered palms, and I'd never been so cold in
    my life.
     "Yes, sir!" said Maher.
    
                     242                 im,

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     243
    
     We started back to the excavation. I could barely see,
    but the route was clear of major obstacles.
     In the pit, men worked with shovels, levers, and cut-
    ting bars to clear the thruster nozzles. The whole plain
    was patterned with tunnels chewed through the ice by a
    creature several meters in diameter. It had moved back
    and forth like a farmer plowing a square field, each swing
    paralleling without touching the one laid down previously
    in the opposite direction.
     I suppose Piet was right to name the world Lord's
    Mercy. If we'd set down exactly parallel to the tunnel
    pattern, the Oriflamme might have flipped upside down
    when the roof collapsed. On the other hand, if we'd landed
    perpendicular to the tunnels, we might never have known
    they were there.
     The Oriflamme's siren moaned briefly: it was time to
    change watches after all. We were working two hours on,
    two hours off. I didn't dare think about how much longer
    the process would have to go on.
     "I'll take it," I said. The men dropped their comers
    of the emptied tarp; I started to drag it alone toward the
    excavation.
     "Dear God I'm tired," I muttered. I didn't know I was
    speaking aloud.
     "You got a right to be, sir," Lightbody called appre-
    clatively as he and the others slanted away toward the
    hatch.
     The common spacers were each of them stronger than
    me and knew tricks that made their effort more productive
    besides. I was helping, though, despite being by birth a
    gentleman. A year ago I'd have found that unthinkable.
     "We'll take that now, sir," said Kiley, at the head of
    the team from the starboard watch replacing, mine. I gave
    him the tarp. Our replacements looked stolid and ready to
    work, though I knew how little rest you could get in two
    hours on a ship being stripped of heavy fittings.
     I thought of Thomas Hawtry, Would he and his clique
    have been out working beside the sailors if they'd made
    it this far on the voyage?
     Stephen limped up the ramp from the excavation. He

    




                     244           David Drake
                     hadn't been directing the work: Salomon did that. Stephen
                     was moving blocks that only one man at a time could
                     reach, and nobody else on the Oriflamme could budge.
                      I laughed aloud.
                      "Eh?" Stephen called.
                      "Just thinking," I said. Oh, y~s, Hawtry would have
    M                obeyed any order that Stephen Gregg was on hand to
                     enforce.
                      Stephen sat down on a stack of crates, loot from Our
                     Lady of Montreal; for the moment, surplus weight. I sat
                     beside him. "Are you feeling all right?" he asked.
                      His flashgun was in a nest of the crates, wrapped in a
                     Chay cape to keep blowing ice crystals from forming a
                     rime on it. I'd set my cutting bar there too when Salomon
                     'Put me on the transport detail. Stephen wore his bar
                     slung. He'd used it in the excavation, so refrozen ice
                     caked the blade.
                      "I feel like the ship landed straight on top of me," I said.
                     I heard Dole snarling orders to the men in the excavation.
                     "You look a stage worse than that."
                      "I'll be all right," Stephen said. His voice was colorless
                     with fatigue. "I'll drink something and go back down in
                     a bit. They need me there."
                      He glanced at the closed forward airlock. Piet hadn't
         1j,         moved from his console since he'd organized the pro-
                     cedures. He even relieved himself in a bucket. If the
                     Oriflarnme started to shift again, it would be Piet's hand
                     on the controls-balancing risk to the ship and risk to
                     the men outside, where even exhaust from the attitude
                     jets could be lethal.
     41               "They'll need you when the port watch comes back on."
                     I said forcefully. "Until then you're off duty."
                      I was marginal use to the expedition as a laborer, but=
                     I could damned well keep Stephen from burning him-
                     self out. Having a real purpose brought me back from
                     the slough of exhaustion where I'd been wallowing tk
                     past hour.
                      Stephen shook his head, but he didn't ar
                                      gue. After t
                     moment, he removed a canteen from the scarf in which
                     he'd wrapped it to his waist cummerbund-fashion. Body

    




                THROUGH THE BREACH     245
    
     heat kept it warm. He offered it to me. I took a swig and
     coughed. Slash that strong wasn't going to freeze at the-
     temperatures out here in any case.
       ~~ephen drank deep. "There's algae all through this
     ice, he said, tapping his toe on the ground. "That's why
     it looks green."
       He offered me the canteen; I waved it away. Kiley's
     men stepped briskly toward the crevice with their first
     tarpaulin of broken ice. They'd be moving slower by the
     end of their watch 
       "There was a lot of rock in some of the loads we
     brought out," I said. "We're not down to the soil, are
     we?"
       Stephen laughed. He was loosening up, either because
     of me or the slash. "Frass," he said. "Worm shit. The
     tunnel was packed solid for a meter or so like a plug.
     If we'd landed just a little more to the side, the skid
     would've been on top of it and we might-"
       Three hundred meters from where we sat, ice broke
     upward as if it were being scored by an invisible plow.
     I jumped to my feet and shouted, "Earthqua-"
       It wasn't an earthquake. The head of a huge worm
     broke surface. The gray body, flattened and unsegmented,
     continued to stream out of the opening until the creature's
     whole forty-meter length writhed over the plain.
       The transport crewmen dropped their tarp to stare. Dig-
     gers climbed from the excavation, summoned by shouts
     and the sound the worm made breaking out. Stephen had
     unwrapped his flashgun, but the worm didn't threaten us.
     It was undulating slightly away from the Oriflamme.
    t  "I doubt it even has eyes," I said. "Maybe it hit a dike
     of rock that it's going to cross on the surface."
       "All right, all right," Dole hectored. "You've had your
     show, now let's get this bitch ready to lift, shall we?"
       Something dark green and multilegged. climbed out of
     the opening the worm had made. This creature was about
     three meters long. Its mandibles projected another meter.
     Th.ey curved outward and back like calipers so that their
       points met squarely when the jaws closed.
       The predator took one jump toward the worm it had been

    




                     246            David Drake
    
                     pursuing through the tunnel, then noticed the Oriflam e
                     and the men outside her. The beast turned, hunched mon
                     three of its six pairs of legs, and leaped toward us.
                     "Back to the ship"' Dole bellowed. The men of his
                     watch turned as ordered and ran for the excavation.
                     I unhooked my cutting bar. The main hatch couldn't
                     be closed because of ice wedged into the hinge. There'd
                     seemed no need to clean it while the excavation was still
                     in process ...
                       A second beast like the first hopped from the tunnel; a
     11-2            third member of the pack was directly behind the second.
                     The worm wriggled into the distance, perhaps unaware
                     that its pursuers had suddenly turned away.
                       The leading predator covered ten meters at each hop.
                     Because its legs worked in alternate pairs, the creature
                     no more than touched the ice before it surged forward in
                     another flat arc.
                       Stephen's flashgun whacked. The bright sunlight of
                     Lord's Mercy dimmed the weapon's normally dazzling
                     side-scatter.
                       The bolt hit the predator's first thoracic segment and
       J1,           shattered the plate in a spray of creamy fluid. The head,
                     the size of a man's torso, flipped onto the creature's back.
    r    i           It was attached by only a tag of chitin. The enormous
                     mandibles scissored open and loudly shut.
                       A fourth hard-shelled predator crawled from the tunnel.
                     The three living members of the pack hopped toward us,
                     ignoring the thrashing corpse of their fellow.
                       Either the creatures thought the Oriflamme was pre
                                                         Y,
                     or they were reacting to us individual humans as interlop-
        IF           ers in their hunting territory. Either way, their intentions
                     weren't in doubt.
                       Stephen clicked up the wand that supported his laser's
                     solar charger, then spread the shimmering film. He hadn't
                     brought spare batteries with him this time.
                       "I'll draw them away from the hatch," I said. I began
                     walking out onto the ice field. I didn't trust the footing
                     enough to run.
                       Stephen set his flashgun on the crates with the panel
                      tilted toward the sun. He left it there and strode parallel

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     247
    
    to me, triggering his cutting bar briefly to spin the blades
    clear of ice. The predators angled toward us, one after
    another.
     Ice powdered beneath the creatures every time they
    sprang. The bottoms of their feet were chitin as jagged
    as the throat of a broken bottle. It gave the beasts good
    purchase on any surface soft enough for it to bite.
     A band of single-lensed eyes gleamed from a ridge
    curving along the top and front of each predator's
    headplate. Though the individual eyes didn't move, the
    array gave the creatures vision over three-quarters of the
    arc around them.
     The nearest creature focused on me. Its mandibles swung
    a further 30' open, like a hammer rising from half to full
    cock. Its deliberately short hop put me exactly ten meters
    away for the final spring.
     I threw myself forward, holding my bar vertical in
    front of me. The predator slammed me down, but I was
    insidi~ the circuit of its mandibles instead of being pierced
    through both sides when the tips clashed together.
     The knife-edged chitin was thicker than that of a Molt's
    carapace, but my bar's ceramic teeth could have sheared
    hardened steel. The blade screamed as I cut the left mandi-
    ble away. The creature stood above me, ripping my thighs
    with its front pairs of walking legs.
     I held my bar in both hands and cut into the predator's
    head. Side-hinged jawplates cracked and crumbled on the
    howling bar.
     The creature sprang back. White fluid gushed from the
    wound in its head. The creature's abdomen was slender
    and hairy, like that of a robber fly. It twisted around under
    the, thorax as the creature went into convulsions.
     Stephen was holding the second predator's mandibles
    away from his chest with both hands. The beast shook him
    violently, trying to break his grip. Stephen had dropped
    his cutting bar. It lay beneath the creature's scrabbling
    back legs.
     I rose and slashed at the base of the right mandible,
    again using both hands. My feet slid out from under me.
    I caught the target in the belly of my blade, but my long

    




    248           David Drake
    
    draw stroke cut into the joint at a flatter angle than I'd
    intended.
     Weakened chitin cracked like a fifle shot. Stephen
    tossed the mandible away. A ribbon of pale muscle flut-
    tered behind it.
     Stephen still had to hold the remaining mandible to
    prevent it from impaling him. I stood and fell down again
    immediately. I was slipping on my own blood and fluids
    from the creatures I'd butchered.
     The last predator poised ten meters from Stephen for
    the leap that would cut him in half. A laser bolt stabbed
    through its open jaws. The flux lit the creature's exploding
    head through translucent flesh and chitin.
     Piet flung down the flashgun. The solar panel that had
    recharged it quivered like a parachute. He raised a cutting
    bar. "Handweapons only!" Piet shouted as he charged the
    wounded predator. Twenty men carrying tools from the
    excavation followed him, slipping on the ice.
     Stephen let the creature throw him free. It poised to leap
    onto him again, predator to the last. Piet sawed three of
    its legs apart in a single swipe. In a few seconds, all the
    left-side legs were broken or sheared. Men hacked with
    clumsy enthusiasm into the creature's thorax.
     I stood up, then fell over again. Hall and Maher ran to
                                           JL
    me. Stephen crawled on all fours behind them.
     "Rakoscy!" Piet shouted. "Rakoscy, get ovei here I
     "Christ's blood, his legs've been through a fucking
    meat grinder!" Dole cried. "Bring that fucking tarp over
    here' We need to get him into the fucking shipt"
      Mister Moore," somebody said with desperate earnest- aw
    ness. "Please let go of your bar. Please. I'm going to take
    it out of your hand."
     The last voice I heard was Stephen's, snarling in a
    terrible singsong, "He'll be all right and I'll kill any
    whoreson who says he won't!"
    
                                         ML

    




                WEYSTON
    
    Day 249
    
    Piet lifted the cutter's bow so that we wouldn't stall
    even though the thruster feed was barely cracked open.
    The display held a 30* down angle to our axis of flight,
    paralleling the barren ground a thousand meters below.
     "You know. . ." Stephen said, one leg braced against
    the sidewall and his left hand gripping the central bench
    on which the two of us sat. "You're going to feel really
    silly if you have to explain how you got yourself killed
    on a sandhill like this."
     "Tsk, don't call it a sandhill," Piet said cheerfully. "The
    name honors your uncle, remember. Besides, it's not a
    stunt, I saw something when I brought the Oriflamme in."
     "And why shouldn't the officers go on a picnic?" I said.
    My legs were straight out, but I was trying my best not to
    let them take any stress. Though the shins were healing
    well, they hurt as if they were being boiled in oil if I
    moved the wrong way.
     Lightbody's lips moved slowly as he watched the screen
    from the jump seat and separate attitude controls behind
    Piet's couch. I think he was murmuring a prayer. From
    Lightbody, that would be normal behavior rather than a
    comment on the way the cutter wallowed through the air.
    1 doubt it occurred to Lightbody to worry when Piet was
    the pilot.
     "Found him!" Piet said./"Eleven o'clock!" Stephen said,
    pointing. P'There it is!" I said.
     Metallic wreckage was strewn along hundreds of meters
    of sandy waste, though the ship at the end of the trail looked
    
                    249
                                                  'I Is

    




    7
    
                   250           David Drake
    
                   healthy enough. It was a cheaply-constructed freighter of
                   the sort the Feds built in the Back Worlds to handle
                   local trade.
                  "They came in on automated approach," Piet guessed
                  aloud. He boosted thrust and gimballed the nozzle nearly
                  vertical. "Hit a tooth of rock, ripped their motors out, and
                  there they sit since. Which may be fifty years."
                  The cutter dropped like an elevator whose brakes had
                  failed. Piet made a tight one-eighty around the crash site,
                  killing our momentum so that he didn't have to overfly
                  for the horizontal approach normal with a single-engined
                  cutter.
                  "Not very long," Stephen said. "Light alloys wouldn't
                  be so bright if they'd been open to the atmosphere any
                  length of time."
                    We crossed the trail of torn metal, then blew
                                                    out a
                   doughnut of dust as we touched down within wen y
                                                   t    t
                   meters of the freighter's side hatch.
                    Piet turned his head and smiled slightly. "If I don't keep
                   my hand in, Stephen," he said, "I won't be able to do it
                   when I have to."
    JE              "You could fly a cutter blindfold on your deathbed,
                   Captain," Lightbody said. "Begging your pardon."
                    Lightbody squeezed by to undog the hatch. I could have
                   done that job if anybody's life had depended on it, but
                   none of us still aboard.the Oriflamme needed to prove
                   things to our shipmates.
                    Weyston's air was thin and sulfurous, unpleasant with-
                   out being dangerous. The system was charted but unoc-
                   eupied. Federation cartographers hadn't even bothered to
                   give the place a name, since there was nothing beyond the
                   planet's presence to bring a vessel here.
                    We needed to reseal the Oriflamme's hull; this was
                   the suitable location closest to Lord's Mercy. We had
                   sufficient reaction mass for some while yet-which was a
                   good thing, because observation supported the note in the
    R              pilotry data that the planet had no free water whatever.
                    I stood deliberately as Lightbody swung himself onto
                   the coaming of the dorsal hatch. "Give you a hand, sirT
                   he asked, reaching toward me.
    ILI

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     251
    
     "I'm not proud," I said. I clasped the spacer's shoulders
    and paused, steeling myself to flex my legs and jump.
     "I've got him, Lightbody," Stephen said. He clasped me
    below the rib cage and lifted me like a mannequin onto the
    cutter's hull.
     I laughed. "All right," I said, "you've convinced me I'm
    bloody useless and a burden to you all. Can we look over
    the wreck, now?"
     Stephen handed Lightbody a rifle and his own flashgun
    as I slid down the curve of the hull to the ground. This
    flight was basically recreation, but there was no place
    on the Back Worlds where we were safe. By now, it
    didn t strike any of us as silly to go armed on a lifeless
    world
     There was movement inside the wreck.
     "Hello the ship!" Piet called. No one responded. I pow-
    ered my cutting bar.
     A man in gray trousers and a blue tunic hopped from the
    hatch. Stephen presented his flashgun. "No!" the stranger
    shouted. "No, you can't shoot me!"
     "We don't have any intention of shooting you, sir,"
    Piet said. He crooked his left index finger to call the man
    closer. The fellow had a sickly look, but he was too plump
    to be ill fed. "Are there any other survivors?"
     "No one, I'm the only one," the Fed said.
     I walked around him at two arms' length. I wouldn't
    have trusted this fellow if he'd said there was a lot of sand
    hereabouts. He'd been relieving himself out the hatch; and
    almost out the hatch.
     "Anybody aboard?" I called, waiting for my eyes to
    adapt to the dim interior. The power plant was dead, and
    with it the cabin lights.
     The chamber stank. Blood and brains splashed the for-
    ward bulkhead above the simple control station.
     Ijerked my head back. Piet and Stephen were behind me.
    The castaway squatted beneath the muzzle of Lightbody's
    rifle.
     "His name's McMaster," Stephen said, nodding toward
    the Fed. "He was the engineer. Doesn't seem as happy to
    be rescued as you'd think."

    




             252            David Drake
    
             "Let's check the other side," I said, walking toward the
             freighter's bow. "Is there any cargo?"
             The hatch from the cabin to the rear hold had warped
             in the crash, though there was probably access through
             the ship's ripped underside.
             "Windmills," Stephen said. "They lost the starboard
             thrusters maybe a month ago on a run from Clapperton
             to Bumphrey. This was the nearest place to clear the feed
             line, but the Al wasn't up to the job of landing."
             Piet said, "Two Molts and the human captain were
             killed in the crash. I don't think McMaster is complete-
             ly ...
             "Oh, he's crazy," Stephen said. "But he started out a
             snake or I miss my bet."
             The graves were three shallow mounds in the lee of the
             wreck. I prodded with the blade of my cutting bar and
             struck mauve chitin ten centimeters below the surface.
             Stephen dragged the corpse of a Molt out by its arm. The
             creature's plastron was orange and had a spongy look.
             "She hit the bulkhead during the crash," Piet said. "I
             don't think we need disturb the others."
             Together we scooped tawny sand over the corpse again.
             I used my bar, the others their boots. "Decided where the
             next landfall is going to be?" Stephen asked.
             "Clapperton," said Piet. "There's a sizable Fed colony
             there, but Lacaille and the pilotry data agree that only one
             of the major land masses is inhabited. We can fill with
             water and maybe hunt meat besides."
             We had the Molt covered as well as it had been when
             we started. Stephen stepped back from the grave and sur-
             veyed the landscape. "What a hell of place to be buried,"
             he said.
               "It's only the body," Piet said in mild reproof
             We all felt it, though. This was a world with no life of
             its own, that would never have life of its own. Being bur- t
             ied here was like being dumped from the airlock be41
             stars.
             Stephen frowned. He stepped to the third mound and
             pulled something from the sand.
               I squinted. "A screwdriver?" I said.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     253
    
     Stephen held it out to us. "That's what it was made for,"
    he said softly.
     The shaft was stained brown. Sand clung to the dried
    fluid. Not blood, but very possibly the copper-based ichor
    that filled a Molt's circulatory system.
     Stephen wagged the tool delicately in the direction of
    the castaway on the other side of the wreck. "Didn't trust
    there'd be enough food to last till ... whenever, do you
    think?" he said.
     "The crash unhinged him," Piet said.
     Stephen raised an eyebrow. Piet grimaced and said,
    "We can't leave a human being here!"
     Stephen flung the screwdriver far out in the sand. "Then
    let's get back," he said mildly. "Only-let's not name
    this place for Uncle Ben, shall we? He won't know,
    but I do."
    
                                                 IN

    




                              CLAPPERTON
    
                   Day 290
    
                   Air heavy with moisture and rotting vegetation rolled into
                   the hold as the ramp lowered. Though we'd landed after
                   sunrise so that the glare of our thrusters wouldn't alert
                   distant Fed watchers, the thick canopy filtered light to
                   a green as deep as that reaching the bottom of a pond.
                   Treetops met even over the river-by which we'd entered
                   the forest.
                   We piled out of the vessel. Our exhaust had burned
                   the leaf mold to charcoal traceries which disintegrated
    'Hit           when a boot touched them. Black ash spurted to mix
                   with steam and the gray smoke of tree bark so wet that
                   it only smoldered from a bath of plasma.
                   There were twenty of us to start, though another crew
                   would lay hoses to the river as soon as we were out
                   of the way. Six of the men were armed. The rest of
                   us carried tools and the net which, once we'd hung it
                   properly, would camouflage the Oriflamme's track. Piet
                   had nosed us between a pair of giant trees and almost
                   completely into the forest, but the starship's stem could
                   be seen from an autogyro following the river at canopy
                   height.
                   "Good Christ!" said Stampfer, pointing his rifle with
                   both hands. "What d'ye call that!"
                   Piet had taken the Oriflamme straight over the bank at
                   a point that the river kinked. Bobbing belly-up in the slight
                   current at the bend was a creature twenty meters long. Its
                   four short legs stuck up stiffly; the toes were webbed, but
                   the forefeet bore cruel claws as well.
    
                                     254
        lip

    




    AW,
    
                          THROUGH THE BREACH 255
       The smooth skin of the creature's back was speckled
       black over several shades of brown, but the original
       ly white underside now blushed pink. We'd boiled the
       monster as we coasted over it.
       Its head was broad and several meters long. The skull
       floated lower than the creature's distended belly, but I
       could see that the long, conical teeth would interlock when
       the jaws were closed.
       The big predators here live in the water," Lacaille said.
       He gestured with his three-hooked grapnel. He and I were
       one of the two teams who'd climb to anchor the top of
       the net. "That's good that that one's dead. It'll be a month
       before another big one moves into the territory."
       The Federation officer chewed his lower lip. "I didn't
       know they got that big," he said. "They don't around
       North Island base."
       "Let's go, you lazy scuts!" Dole ordered. "Quicker we
       get this hung, the likelier you are to get home and sling
       your neighbor off the top of your wife!"
       Strictly speaking, the bosun was talkin to the men
                                              .9
       dragging the net out of the hold. Everybody knew that
       the likely delay was in getting lift points twenty meters
       up the tree boles, though.
       I waved acknowledgment and walked back to the left
       hand tree of the pair at the Oriflamme's stem. Stampfer
       started with us. Stephen called, "I'll keep an eye on this
       end," and waved the master gunner toward the center of
       I the track.
       "Are there many dangerous animals?" I asked Lacaille
       with a nod toward the predator floating in the shallows. A
       The corpse had bloated noticeably since I'd first seen it.
       Unlike McMaster, Lacaille had become a willing ship
       mate. He was a real ship's officer, not a noble who'd had
       authority but no skill. I think he was glad to serve with
       a company of spacers as good as Piet Ricimer's. There
       wasn't a better crew in the human universe.
       "No big carnivores on land," Lacaille said. "There's
       dangerous animals, sure, and some of the plants are poi
       son. The garrison bums back the jungle for a hundred
       meters around the base."

    




    256           David Drake
    
     He shrugged. "A soldier got bitten on the foot and had
    his leg swell up till they cut it off. But it could've been a
    thorn instead of a sting. Liquor's killed twenty-odd that I
    know of."
     We'd told both Federation officers that we'd drop them
    with their own people when we could. I don't think that
    affected either Lacaille's helpfulness or McMaster's surly
    silence. People's dispositions were more important than
    their attitudes.
     The tree Lacaille and I were to climb had shaggy but-
    tress roots that spread its diameter at the base to almost
    twenty meters. The three of us walked carefully to the far
    side of the bole where plasma hadn't scoured the hairy
    surface.
     I'd insisted on being one of the climbers, because I
    needed to convince myself that my shins had healed
    properly. Maybe Lacaille had something similar in mind.
    The Chay had certainly handled him worse than the bug
    on Lord's Mercy had done me.
     The Oriflamme didn't carry climbing irons, so Lacaille
    and I wore boots with sharpened hobnails. This tree's
    shaggy bark and the stilt roots of the giant on the other
    side of the Oriflamme ought to make it easy to get to the
    height required.
     "Trade me for a moment," Stephen said. I didn't know
                                    Slipp A
    what he meant till he handed me the flashgun and ed
    the grapnel and coil from my belt. Stephen stepped back
    and swung the hooks on a short length of line.
     The trunk started to branch just above where the top
    of the buttress roots faired into the main trunk. Leaves
    fanned toward the light seeping through the thin canopy
    over the watercourse. The lower limbs were stubby and
    ig t.
    not particularly thick, but they'd support a man's we
    Our exhaust had shriveled some of the foliage.
     Stephen loosed the grapnel at the top of its arc. The
    triple hook wobbled upward, stabilized by the line it drew.
    It curved between the trunk and the upraised tip of a limb.
    As the line fell back, it caught on rough bark and looped
    twice around the branch. The hooks swung nervously
    beneath the limb with the last of their momentum. If the

    




    k
    
                         THROUGH THE BREACH     257
    
              line started to slip under my weight, the points should lift
              and bite into the wood.
              I returned Stephen's flashgun. I hadn't brought a weap-
              on; my cutting bar would just have been in the way as
              I climbed. The weight of the cassegrain laser felt good.
              Among the forest sounds were a series of shrill screams
              that made me think of something huge, toothy, and far
              more active than the predator now bloating in the river.
              Lacaille started up the line ahead of me. Hey, I thought,
              but I didn't say anything. He ought to be leading, because
          i   he still had a grapnel to toss to a higher branch.
                I followed the Fed, walking up the top of a buttress
              root like a steep ramp. The 8-mm line was too thin for
              comfortable climbing. Lacaille and I wore gloves with the
              fingers cut off, but my palms hurt like blazes whenever
              I let my weight ride on the line. I used my hands only
              to steady myself Fine for the first stage, but there were
              another ten meters to go.
                Lacaille got out of my way by stepping to the next limb,
              15* clockwise around the tree bole though only slightly
              higher. He tried to spin his grapnel the way Stephen had.
              The hooks snagged my branch.
                "Hey!" I shouted-more sharply than I'd have done
              if I hadn't still been pissed at Lacaille taking the lead.
              Besides, I was breathing hard from the exertion, and my     J
              shins prickled as though crabs were dancing on them.
                "Sir!" Lacaille said. "I'm sorry!"
                He slacked his line. Weight pulled the hooks loose for
              Lacaille to haul back to his hand.
                 Look," I said, "neither of us is"-I shrugged-"an
              exp"ert. Just toss the damned thing over a branch a couple
              meters up. That's all I want to climb at a time on the
              straight trunk anyway."
                I crossed my legs beneath the branch as I worked my
              own grapnel loose for the next stage. The line had cut a
              powdery russet groove in the bark. Sticky dust gummed
              both the line and my fingers.
                Lacaille tossed his grapnel, this time with a straight
              overann motion. More our speed. He set his hooks in a
              limb not far above him and scrambled up, panting loudly.
               C

    




                                                            Ar,
    
                    258            David Drake
    
                    That was a three-meter gain, a perfectly respectable por-
                    tion of the ten we needed.
                    I stuck the grapnel's shaft under my belt and shifted
                    to the branch Lacaille had just vacated. My line dangled
                    behind me like a long tail. I paused to brush sweat out of
                    my eyes. I saw movement to the side.
                    Three creatures the size of bandy-legged goats peered
                    down at me from a limb of an adjacent tree. Two were
                    mottled gray; the third was slightly larger. It had a black
                    torso and a scarlet ruff that it spread as I stared at it.
                    "Holy Jesus!" I shouted. I snatched at my grapnel, the
                    closest thing to a weapon I was carrying.
                    The trio sprang up the trunk of their tree like giant
                    squirrels. They vanished into the canopy in a handful Of
                    jumps. Divots ripped from the bark by their hooked claws
    lit IT          pattered down behind them.
                      "Are you all right?" Stephen shouted. "What's hap-
                    pened?"
                      "We're all right!" I shouted back. I couldn't see the
                    forest floor, so Stephen couldn't see us, much less the
                    creatures that had startled me. "Local herbivores is all."
                      That was more than I knew for certain, but I didn't want
           J
                   Stephen to worry.
                     "There's something sticky here," Lacaille warned. "I
                   think it's from the tree. Sap."
                     I peered upward to make certain that Lacaille was out
                   of the way before I started to climb. This portion of the
                   trunk was covered with a band of some mossy epiphyte.
                   Tiny pink florets picked out the dark green foliage.
                     Something was pressed against the bark a few degrees
                   to Lacaille's left and slightly above him. I doubted that he
                   could see the thing from his angle. It eased toward him.
       P             "Freeze, Lacaille!" I shouted.
                     "What?" he said. "What?" His voice rose an octave on
                   the second syllable. He didn't move, though.
                     The thing was a dull golden color with blotches of
    P              brown. It could almost have been a trickle of sap like
                   the one Lacaille had noticed, thirty million years short of
                   hardening to amber.
                     Almost. It had been creeping sideways across the bark's

    




                         THROUGH THE BREACH    259
    
             corrugations. The creature stopped when Lacaille obeyed
             my order to freeze.
               I drew the grapnel from my belt, then paid the line out
             in four one-meter loops.
               "What's happening, Moore?" Lacaille said. He had his
             voice under control. He was trying to look down at me
             without moving anything but his eyes.
               "Not yet," I whispered. Lacaille couldn't hear me. I was
             speaking to calm myself.
               I lofted the grapnel with an underhand toss. It sailed as
             intended through empty air past the creature.
               The thing struck like a trap snapping. Its head clanged
             against the grapnel's slowly rotating hooks and flung them
    C        outward-with the creature attached.
               "Watch out below!" I screamed. The snakelike thing
             streamed past me, dragged by the weight of steel where
             it had expected flesh. I let go of the line.
               The creature was a good ten meters long, but nowhere
             thicker than my calf. Tiny hooked legs, hundreds of them,
             waggled from its underside.
               I heard the ensemble crash into the ground. A cutting
    t        bar whined. The blades whanged momentarily on metal,
             probably the grapnel's shaft.
               "What was it?" Lacaille demanded. "Can I move now?
             What was it?"
               "It was a snake," I said. "I think it was a snake."
               I wiped my eyes again. "Stephen?" I called. "Tell them
             to hitch the hawser to Lacaille's line where it is, will you?
             We've gone as high in this tree as I want to go."
               "Roger," Stephen said, his voice attenuated by distance
             and the way the foliage absorbed sound.
               I looked at Lacaille. "Yeah, it's all right now," I said.
             "I hope to God it's all right."
             I stepped away from the 2-cm hawser so that Dole and
             his crew could begin lifting the camouflage net. Lacaille
             knelt beside the creature a few meters out from the cone
             of roots. The snake had slid the last stage of its trip to
             Stephen's cutting bar.
               Stephen looked from the creature to me. "Don't touch

    




    260           David Drake
    
    the damned thing unless you want to get clawed by those
    feet," he said. "I think it's dead, but it has a difference of
    opinion."
     I squatted beside Lacaille. The creature's skull was
    almost a meter long. Stephen had cut it crosswise, then
    severed the back half from the long body-which was
    still twitching, as Stephen had implied.
     "I should've taken a bar with me," I said. "I was crazy
    not to."
     "This worked pretty well," Stephen said. "I don't see
    how you could improve on the results."
     He tilted up the front of the creature's skull on his bar.
    A bony tongue protruded a handbreadth from the circular
    mouth. The tongue's tip had broken off on the grapnel.
    The sides of the hollow shaft were barbed and slotted.
    The tongue was designed to rip deep through the flesh
    of the creatures it struck, then to suck them dry.
     "Wonder if it injects digestive fluids?" Stephen mused
    aloud.
     Lacaille stood, then doubled up and began to vomit.
     "Get him back to the ship," Stephen suggested quietly.
    "Guillermo can find some slash if you can't."
     "I can find something," I said. "Come on, Lacaille.
    need a drink, and out here is no damned place for anybody
    who feels as queasy as I do right now."
     "I'm all right," Lacaille muttered as he cautiously
    straightened. He wiped his mouth with the back of his
    hand before he turned to face me.
     "Any one you walk away from, hey?" he said with an
    embarrassed smile. "I suppose I can walk."
     He could. We could. Dole's men were raising one end
    of the net by the hawser Lacaille and I had drawn into the
    branches on Lacaille's grapnel line. We'd wired a pulley
    to the limb as well. It wasn't strictly necessary, but it made
    the lift a lot easier for the men below.
     I was only half kidding about needing a drink. Since
    the snake stalked us, I'd trembled while we continued to
    work high in the tree. Seeing the creature close up made
    the fear worse.
     We stepped over the rolled net. The bosun was arguing
                                              P-

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     261
    
    precedence with Salomon, whose men were laying hoses
    to the river. Both men paused and nodded to us. Piet,
    examining the tree that would anchor the other end of
    the camouflage, waved cheerfully.
     "You saved my life," Lacaille said in a low voice.
     "That fellow might have decided I looked juicier," I
    said. "He wasn't anybody's friend."
     We had to pick our way carefully across the burned
    patch surrounding the Oriflamme. Dense roots withstood
    the gush of plasma and lurked within the ash, ready to
    turn an ankle or worse.
     "Look," Lacaille said. He stopped and waited for me to
    meet his eyes. "I won't fight my own people."
     "Nobody asked you to," I said. "Christ's blood, d'ye
    think we can't do our own fighting?"
     Lacaille grimaced and shook his head in frustration.
    "Look," he said. "McMaster? You should have left him
    where he was."
     "You're not the first to think that," I said slowly. I
    glanced around. I didn't know where McMaster was. I
    couldn't find him outside nor among the party shifting
    gear in the hold ten meters from where Lacaille and I
    stood. "Piet's ... soft-hearted, though."
     "Tonight," Lacaille said. "When shortwave propaga-
    tion's good, McMaster's going to signal the North Island
    base on the backup commo suite aft."
     Salomon's men joined Dole's on the 2-cm hawser. It
    would be easier to slide the hoses under the hem of the
    camouflage net than to lift the roll, so the teams were
    combining to do the jobs in sequence.
     "He told you?" I asked without emphasis.
     "McMaster brags about things that nobody would
    admit!" Lacaille said. "Not just this, terrible things! He's
    a terrible man."
     Piet walked toward us, probably wondering what we
    were discussing.
     "Yeah, I can believe that," I said. It wasn't surprising
    that a man who'd been swimming for years in the filthy
    slough of President Pleyal's colonies would be unable to    74~,
    recognize that Lacaille might have feelings of gratitude

    




                    262           David Drake
                    toward those who'd saved his life. Far more surprising
                    that Lacaille's personal decency had survived.
    7V               "Ah. . ." I added. "Don't say anything to Piet, though.
                    All right?"
                     Lacaille nodded in relief. "You'll tell Mister Gregg?"
                    he asked.
                     "Stephen's got enough on his conscience as it is," I said,
                    putting on a bright smile to greet Piet. "I'll see that this
                    one's handled."
                    We sat at trestle tables sawn from the local wood with
                    cutting bars. The boards' surface was just as rough as
                    you'd imagine. The afternoon's downpour had driven the
                    ash into the clay substrate in a butter-slick amalgam. We'd
                    spread cover sheets over us, but the rare chinks of evening
                    sky we could see were clear.
                     "You know . . I" said Dole with a mouth full of tree-
                    hopper, maybe one of the trio that'd startled me. It had
                    peeked down at the commotion, this time where Stephen
                    could see it. "That fellow out in the lake might not have
                    steaked out so bad."
                     "Not for me, thanks," I said, thinking about the mon-
                                                   a ragout
                    ster's teeth. At the other table they were eating
        I           of the local "snake." I didn't even look in that direction.
                      Precooked, even," Piet said with a grin. He looked as
    ILI'
                    relaxed as I'd seen him in a long while. We'd have known
                    by now if a Fed on Clapperton's far side had chanced to
                    notice us sliding into the forest. "Well, we had other things
                    on our mind."
                     Winger, the chief motor mechanic, said, "I don't like
                    the way the main engine nozzles are getting, sir. We've
                    switched out the spares aboard, and they're getting pretty
                    worn themself."
                     "Umm," Salomon said. "They wouldn't pass a bottoniry
                    inspection at Betaport, but I don't think we need to worry
                    as yet.,,
                     An animal screamed in the near distance. It was probably
                    harmless-and the "snake" couldn't have made a sound if
                    it had wanted to-but my shoulders shrank together every
                    time I heard the thing.

    




                        THROUGH THE BREACH     263
    
            The local equivalent of insects swarmed around the
            hooded lights we'd spiked to tree boles to show us our din-
            ner. The creatures were four-legged. They varied in size
            from midges to globs with bodies. the size of a baseball
            and wingspans to match. They didn't attack us because of
            our unfamiliar biochemistry, but I frequently felt a crunch
            of chitin as I chewed my meat.
            "The nearest place that'd stock thruster nozzles is Riel,"
            Lacaille volunteered without looking up from his meal.
            But the port gets a lot of traffic, and it's defended."
            "Real defenses?" Dole asked, glancing over at Lacaille.
            "Or a couple guns and nobody manning them?"
            "I'd sure rather have warehouse stock than cannibalize
            a ship," Winger said. "It's a bitch of a job unscrewing
            bumed-in nozzles without cracking them."
            The little receiver in my tunic pocket squawked, "Call-
            ing North Island Command! Calling North Island Com-
            mand! This is-"
            Everyone in hearing jumped up. The opposite bench
            tilted and thumped the ground. Lacaille's mouth opened
            in horror.
             What in the name of Christ is that?" Stephen asked
             soffly. He wasn't looking at me. His eyes roved the forest,
             and the flashgun was cradled in his arms.
             It's all right!" I said. "Sit down, everybody. It's all
             right."
            "Yes, sit down," Piet decided aloud. He bent to help
            raise the fallen bench, holding his carbine at the balance
            so that the muzzle pointed straight up. He'd jacked a round
            into the chamber, and it would take a moment to clear the
            weapon safely.
              He sat again and looked at me. "What is all right?"
            "-Venusian pirate ship full of treasure," my pocket
            crackled. I took the receiver out so that everyone could see
            it. "Plot this signal and home on it. I don't have the coordi-
            nates, but it's somewhere in the opposite hemisphere from
            the base. Calling-"
            I switched the unit off. Dole said, "McMaster!" and
            stood up again.
              "Don't!" I said.
             cr a
    
            nat
              c
    
              e
               'P
    
                         s
    ~the b
    
             stooc
               r

    




    264           David Drake
    
     Dole stepped over the bench, unhooking his cutting
    bar.
     "Sit down, Mister Dole," Piet said, his voice ringing
    like a drop forge.
     The bosun's face scrunched up, but he obeyed.
     "And the rest of you," Piet said, waving to the men at the
    other table and the far end of ours. They'd noticed the com-
    motion, though they couldn't tell what was going on.
     "I fiddled the backup transmitter," I said in a voice
    that the immediate circle could hear. "No matter what
    the dial reads, it's transmitting a quarter-watt UHF. He
    could be heard farther away if he stood in the hatch and
    shouted."
     Stephen made a sound. I thought he was choking. It
    was the start of a laugh. His guffaws bellowed out into
    the night, arousing screamers in the trees around us. After
    a moment, Stephen got the sound under control, but he
    still quivered with suppressed paroxysms.
     "We still have to do something about the situation,
    though," Piet said softly.
     "No," I said. From the comer of my eye, I noticed a
    shadow slip from the main hatch and vanish into the
    forest. "The situation has just taken care of itse If.'
     A smile of sorts played with Piet's mouth. 'Yes," he
    said. "I see what you mean. He doesn't want to be aboard
    the target his friends are going to blast."
     He turned his head. "Mister Dole," he said crisply,',
    "we'll have the net down at first light. The voyage isn't
    over, and we may need it another time. I expect to lift
    fifteen minutes after you start the task."
     "Aye aye, sir!" the bosun said.
     "I suppose it'll be weeks before another big g
                                 gulper takes
    over this stretch of the river," Lacaille said.
     "Maybe not so long," Stephen said. He got up and
    stretched the big muscles of his shoulders. "And anyway,
    I'm sure there are more snakes and suchlike folk than the
    one you and Jeremy met."
     He chuckled again. The sound was as bleak as the ice
    of Lord's Mercy.

    




               ABOVE RIEL
    
    Day 311
    
    Guillermo's screen showed the world we circled in a
    ninety-four-minute orbit. The central display was a frozen
    schematic of Corpus Christi, Riel's spaceport, based on
    pilotry data, Lacaille's recollections, and images recorded
    during the Oriflamme's first pass overhead.
     "There are fourteen vessels in port that probably have
    thruster nozzles of the correct size," Piet said, sitting on
    the edge of his couch. Thirty of us were crowded into
    the forward compartment, and his words echoed on the
    tannoys to the remainder of the crew. "Besides those,
    there's a number of smaller vessels on the ground and
    a very large freighter in orbit."
     "Freighter or not. . ." Kiley murmured, "anything that
    weighs two kilotonnes gets my respect."
     "Two of the ships are water buffalos without transit
    capability," Piet continued. "We'll have to carry our prize
    off to an uninhabited system to strip it, so they're out.
    Likewise, a number of the ships are probably unservice-
    able, though we don't know which ones for sure. Finally,
    there's a Federation warship in port, the Yellowknife."
     There was a low murmur from the men. Somebody said,
    "Shit," in a quiet but distinct voice.
     "Yes," Piet said. "That complicates matters, but two of
    our nozzles have cracked. Maybe they just got knocked
    around when we tipped on Lord's Mercy, but it's equally
    possible that the other six are about to fail the same way.
    This will be risky, but we have no options."
      Hey, sir," Stampfer said. "We'll fucking handle it. You
    just tell us what to do."
    
                    265

    




                  266            David Drake
    
                  That wasn't bravado. Stampfer and everybody else
                  in the Oriflamme's crew believed that Captain Ricimer
                  would bring us all home somehow. Emotionally, I
                  believed that myself Intellectually, I knew that if I
                  hadn't stumbled as I ran toward the Montreal, the Fed
                  plasma bolt would have killed me instead of the man a
                  step behind.
                  "For ease of drawing reaction mass," Piet said, "the
                  port is in the bend of a river, the Sangre Christi. It's a
    oil
                  wampy area and unhealthy, since Terran mosquitoes and
                  mosquito-borne diseases have colonized the planet along
                  with humans."
                  Men glanced at one another in puzzlement. Malaria
                  didn't seem a serious risk compared to the others we'd
                  be chancing on a raid like this.
                  A slight smile played across Piet's mouth. "As a result,"
                  he explained, "the governor and officers of the garrison
                  and ships in port stay in houses on the bluffs overlooking
                  the river."
                  His index finger swept an arc across the display. "That
                  should slow down any response to our actions."
                  Piet sobered. "I'll take the cutter down at twilight, that's
                  at midnight ship's time, with fourteen men aboard," he
                  said. "A party of six will secure the Commandatura and
                  port control-they're together."
                    "I'll take care of that," Stephen said.
                  Piet's grin flickered again. "Yes," he said. "I hoped you
                  would."
                  He looked at me. "There are four gunpits with laser
                  arrays. The fire control system and the town's general
                  communications both need to be disabled. You can handle
                  that, Jeremy?"
                  Sure," I said. The task was a little more complicated
                  t
                  han it might have sounded to a layman. You have to
                  identify the critical parts in order to cut off their pow-
                  er, blow them up, whatever. But I shouldn't have any
     1111"t
                  difficulty.
    Ift!            "Or Guillermo could," Stephen said, scratching the side
                  of his neck and looking at nothing in particular.
                    "I'll do itil" I said.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     267
    
     "I'll need Guillermo for the other phase of the opera-
    tion," Piet said. "I don't expect any trouble about landing
    a cutter without authorization, but I personally can't go
    around asking which of the ships ready to lift have thruster
    nozzles in good condition. Guillermo can speak to Molt
    laborers and identify a suitable prize without arousing
    suspicion."
     He glanced down at the navigator in the couch to his
    left. "Mister Salomon, you'll command the Oriflamme in
    my absence. We'll rendezvous, the Oriflamme and my
    prize, at St. Lawrence. I don't believe there's any reason
    to proceed there in company."
     Salomon nodded. Men were tugging their beards, rub
    bing palms together-a score of individual tricks for deal-
    ing with tension. I kept clearing my throat, trying not to
    make a noise that would disturb the others.
     "All right," said Piet. "Stephen, you and I will get
    together and decide on personnel. When we've done that,
    then we'll go over tactics. I'd like the rest of you to
    vacate the compartment for a time, please, so that we can
    organize the raid."
     His eyes met mine. "Not the people already told off for
    the mission, of course."
     Crewmen drifted toward the passageway aft. Dole and
    Stampfer waited grimly. They obviously weren't about to
    leave unless they got a direct personal order to do so. I
    doubted Piet would push the point. You want your most
    aggressive men on a project like this.
     I shoved off carefully and caught the stanchion to which
    Stephen was anchored. "Didn't want me along?" I said
    very softly.
     Stephen shrugged. He didn't look at me. "I don't much
    want Piet risking his neck by leading this one," he said in
    a similar voice. "But there wasn't a prayer he'd listen if
    I said that."                                   IN
     He gave me a broad smile. "I'm responsible for you,
    Jeremy," he said in a bantering tone. "I brought you
    aboard.
     "Then remember I'm a member of this crew," I said.
    ,A
      nd a gentleman of Venus!"

    




         mow-
    
                    268            David Drake
    
                    The compartment had cleared except for the officers
                    and two petty officers. "Stephen?" Piet called. "Jeremy?"
                    "Oh, I won't forget that, Jeremy," Stephen said. He
                    directed himself with an index finger toward the consoles
                    at the bow. "Nor, I think, will our enemies, hey?"
    
    j~
    
    ~jT
    
    IP ~~i

    




                      RIEL
    
       Day 312
    
       Our outer hull pinged as it slowly cooled. The pilot's
       screen was coarse-grained and only hinted at our sur-
       roundings. Besides, with fourteen men packed onto a
       cutter, there were too many heads and torsos in the way
       for me to see more than an occasional corner.
       "Hell," said Winger. "With all the chips we're carrying,
       it'd be easier to buy the engine hardware."
       "This'll be easy enough," Stephen replied in his chilling
       singsong. "It always has been in the past. Dead easy."
       No one spoke for a moment. Our harsh breathing
       sounded like static on a radio tuned to open air.
       "All right," Piet said decisively. "Commandatura team
       and Guillermo first, we others wait five minutes. I don't
       want anyone to notice just how full this cutter is."
       Dole and Lightbody undogged the hatch, though the
       bosun would go with Piet to capture the ship that
       Guillermo picked. Fourteen men weren't many to oper-
       ate a starship of a hundred tonnes or more, so Piet had
       picked the most efficient members of the Oriflamme's
       crew.
       Stephen was the first out, jumping lightly to the ground.
       Under ordinary circumstances, Stephen seemed a little
       clumsy. Now, and at previous times like this, he moved
       with a dancer's grace.
     "Hand me the crate," he ordered bleakly. Lightbody
    and 1, seated on the hatch coaming, swung the chest of
    weapons into Stephen's waiting hands. He didn't appear
    JL to notice weight that had made the pair of us grunt.
    
                       269

    




                    270           David Drake
    
                    I hadn't missed anything for being unable to see the
                    vision screen. Piet had brought us down at the north end
                    of the field, some distance from the river. The cutter was
                    tucked in between a freighter that was either deadlined
                    or abandoned-several of her hull plates were missing-
                    and a water buffalo, a tanker that hauled air and reaction
                    mass to orbiting vessels too large or ill-found to land
                    normally.
                    Neither of our neighbors was lighted. There was no
                    likelihood of anybody noticing that the cutter's sheen was
                    that of hard-used ceramic, not metal.
                    We hopped down from the hatch. Guillermo was the
                    last out. A Molt who disembarked from a Fed vessel
                    ahead of humans would be whipped to death for his
                    presumption.
                     Guillermo skulked away from us, heading toward a
    SR
                    large freighter in the second row back from the river. A
                    gang of Molt laborers was carrying cargo aboard from
                    high-wheeled hand trucks.
                    "Take it easy, stay together, and ignore the other people
                    out on the streets tonight," Stephen said. His eyes passed
                    over us, but they didn't appear to light anywhere. "If we
                    do our jobs, there won't be a bit of excitement. That's the
                    way we want it."
                     A dead man wouldn't have spoken with less emotion.
                    We set off toward the Commandatura, three short blocks
                    beyond the inland side of the field. Kiley and Lightbody
                    carried the packing crate. We wore a mix of
                                           garments
                    picked up on Federation planets, exactly like the crews of
                    ships in Back Worlds' trade. None of the men or Molts on
                    errands about nearby vessels gave us more than a passing
    
    4V              glance.
                     The port was fenced off from the town of Corpus
                    Christi. The pivoting gate was open, and the Molts in
                    the guard shack were eating some stringy form of rations.
                    Nearby was a gunpit. The multitube laser there was also
                    crewed by Molts.
                     The street cutting the chord of the riverbend was paved.
                    We sprinted to avoid a truck whose howling turbogenua-
                    tor powered hub-center electric motors in all six wheels.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     271
    
    A Molt drove the vehicle, but he was obviously under the
    direction of the man on the seat beside him. The human
    waved a bottle out his side window and jeered us.
     "Wait a little, buddy," Kiley said. He was breathing
    hard because of the load of weapons. "Just you wait . .
     The street leading directly to the Commandatura was
    paved also and lighted. Stephen, walking with the stiff-
    legged gait of a big dog on unfamiliar territory, led us
    down one of the parallel alleys instead.
     Buildings in this part of Corpus Christi were wooden
    and raised a meter above the ground on stilts. Individual
    structures had porches, but they weren't connected into
    a continuous boardwalk between adjacent buildings. We
    walked in the street itself, one more group among the
    sailors and garrison personnel.
     If the town had a sewer system, it'd backed up during
    some recent high water. Enough light came from the signs
    and screened windows of the taverns for us to avoid large
    chunks of rubbish. Vehicular traffic disposed of most of
    the waste by grinding it into the mud in a fetid, gooey
    mass. The air was hot and still, and insects whined.
     A flung chair tore through the screen of a building we'd
    passed. Inside, a shot thumped. My right hand reached for
    the cutting bar that I didn't have.
     "Keep moving!" Stephen ordered without raising his
    voice.
     "Yellowknife! Yellowknife!" men shouted in unison
    above a rumble of generalized rage. Crewmen from the
    warship were fighting with port personnel, nothing for us
    to worry about.
     My right hand clenched and unclenched in sweaty des-
    peration. Bells rang. A van tore past, towing a trailer with
    barred sides and top. We walked on.
     The Commandatura was a two-story masonry building
    with an arching facade that added another half story. It
    stood on a low mound, but floodwater had risen a meter
    up the stonework at some point in the past. A double
    staircase led to the lighted front door on the second story.
    CONSTABULARY was painted in large letters on the wall
    above the street-level entrance on the side.

    




                   272            David Drake
                     There were twenty steps from the street to the Com-
                   mandatura's front door. Originally there'd been a park in
                   front of the building, but it was full of rubbish now. T e
                   governor and folk of quality wouldn't spend enough time
                   here to make the effort of beautifying it worthwhile.
                     The door was unlocked. Stephen entered. I gestured
                   Kiley and Lightbody in ahead of me, then helped them
                   snatch open the lid of the crate of weapons. The feel of
                   my cutting bar was like a drink of water in a desert.
                     No one was at the counter on the left side of the
                   anteroom. The plaque on the door to the right read com-
     R             MUNICATIONS. A hallway ran past that room toward the
                   back of the building. The door beside the commo room
                   was steel with the stenciled legend KEEP LOCKED AT ALL
                   TIMES. Other doors were wooden panels, some of them
                   ajar.
                     Stephen signaled Kiley an
                    d Maher to watch the hall,
                    then tapped his own chest before pointing to the commo
                    room. Lightbody gripped the door handle and rotated it
                    minusculely to be sure that it wasn't locked.
                   He nodded. The rest of us poised. Stephen lunged in
                   behind the opening door.
                     No one was inside the windowless room. The atmos-
    Eli L           phere was stifling and at least 10' C above the muggy
                    heat outside. The air-conditioning vents in the floor and
                    ceiling were silent; banks of electronics clicked and mut-
                    tered among themselves.
                   "I've got it," I whispered, stepping to the box that
                   controlled the building's own alarm system.
                   "Just because you can breathe the muck here," Loomis
                   said in genuine indignation, "that's no cause to let your
                   air-handling system go like this. What kind of people are
                   these?"
                   On Venus, as surely as in interstellar space, a break-
                   down in the air system meant the end of life. Loomis'
       ~j j
                    father supervised a public works crew in Betaport, but I
                    think we all felt a degree of the same outrage.
                   "Lightbody, watch Jeremy's back," Stephen said. "The
                   rest of you come along. There's somebody supposed to be
                   on duty, and they may not have gone far."

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     273
    
    scious of setting the cutting bar down to open my tool
     The job centered me so completely that I wasn't con-
    
    kit. After I disconnected the alarms, I went to work on
    the port's defenses.
     A vehicle clanging its alarm bell pulled up beside the
    building. My hand moved for the cutting bar as I looked
    at Lightbody in the hallway.
     He nodded and stepped out of my angle of vision. I
    heard the front door open, then close. Lightbody was back.
    "It's all right, sir," he whispered. "It's the Black Maria
    bringing a load of drunks to the lockup down below."
     I went back to work. A fire director in the southern
    gunpit controlled the four laser batteries. I couldn't touch
    the director itself, but its data came from the port radar
    and optical sensors. I switched them off, then used the tip
    of my bar to cut the power cable to their console. Sparks
    snapped angrily between strands of wire and the chassis,
    but the tool's ceramic blades insulated me.
     1 heard steps in the hallway. "It's Kiley," Lightbody
    said.
      There's four guys in the lounge," Kiley said as he
    joined Lightbody in the hall. "We're tying them up. Mister
    Gregg didn't want you to worry, sir."
     I nodded. I'd found the circuitry powering Corpus
    Christi's landline telephones. I could shut the system
    down, but I wasn't sure I wanted to. If the phones
    went out, people all over the community would run
    around looking for the cause of the problem. Some of
    them would come here.
     The steel door clanked. Somebody had rested his hand
    against the other side as he worked the lock. I moved
    to the commo room doorway with my cutting bar; Kiley
    and Lightbody flattened themselves on either side of the
    steel door.
     The panel swung inward. A Fed in a gray tunic and CON-
    S BIULARY brassards on both arms stepped through. He
     TA
      ha
     ad cut on his forehead and an angry look on his face.
     Hey!" he snarled. "If you fuckers can't get the air-
    conditioning fixed, we're going to have somebody croak
    in the cells down there!"

    




    J
    
                  274            David Drake
    
                  He glared at us momentarily. Concrete steps led down
                  behind him to a room full of echoing metal and alcoholic
                  vomit. I grabbed his throat in my left hand and jerked
                  him forward. Lightbody clubbed the Fed behind the ear
                  as Kiley pulled the door closed.
                  I let the Fed fall as a dead weight. I drew a deep breath.
                  Lightbody took the man's wrist and pulled him into the
                  commo room.
                  "I think he's still alive, sir," Lightbody said. He poised
                  the buttplate of his carbine over the man's temple. "Do
                  you want me to ...
                  "Yes, tie him," I said. I was pretty sure that wouldn't
                  have been Lightbody's first suggestion, Lightbody
                  shrugged and undid the Fed's belt for the purpose.
                    "Here's the others coming," Kiley murmured.
                  "Come on," I heard Stephen's muffled voice say. "We'll
                  head back to the cutter."
                  I went to the console and dumped the phones after all.
                  The more confusion, the better ...
                  "Wouldn't it be better to go to the new ship?" Loomis
                  asked.
                  "Only if we knew which it was," Stephen replied in a
                  tone so emotionless that I shivered.
                  I opened the unit's front access plate. There were three
                  circuit cards behind it. I pulled them.
                  Stephen stuck his head'into the commo room. "Trou-
                  ble?" he said, glancing at the unconscious Fed.
                    "No sir, not so's you'd mention it," Lightbody said.
                  The unlocked stairwell door swung open. Stephen
                  turned. Loomis tried to point his shotgun but the
                  steel panel banged closed again, knocking the gun bar-
                  rel up.
                  "Grubbies!" shrieked a voice attenuated by the armored
                  door.
                  "Outside!" I shouted as I zipped my kit closed over a
                  jumbled handful of tools.
                  Stephen pushed the door open and fired his flashgun
                  down the stairs one-handed. Metal in the cells below
                  vaporized, then burned in a white flash. Stephen clanged
                  the door shut again.

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     275
    
                We bolted out the front of the Commandatura, carry-
               ing our weapons openly. Lightbody jumped aside to let
               me lead.
    r           The van towing the cage was pulled up to the side door.
               Nobody was inside the vehicle, but the diesel engine was
               running. A Fed ran out the constabulary door. Kiley fired,
               knocking the man's legs out from under him with a charge
               of buckshot in the thighs.
                The constabulary door banged against its jamb and
               bounced a few centimeters open. Stephen's laser spiked
               at a nearly reciprocal angle to that of his first bolt. Men
    It         screamed as more burning metal sprayed.
                I'd never seen controls laid out like those of the van.
               The steering wheel was in the center of the front com-
               partment. There were hand controls to either side of the
               wheel, but no foot pedals.
                "I'll drive, sir!" Loomis cried, handing me his shotgun.
               I slid across the bench seat as the others piled in.
                Loomis twisted the left handgrip and let a return spring
    is         slide it to the dash panel, then pulled the right grip out
               to its stop. The diesel lugged momentarily before it
    ~a         roared, chirping the tires. We pulled away from the
               Commandatura. The door of the trailer for prisoners wasn't
               latched. It swung open and shut, ringing loudly each time.
                Loomis turned us and headed up the paved street direct-
               ly toward the gate. The trailer oscillated from side to side.
    u_
               It swiped a stand of pickled produce, hurling brine and
               glass shards across the front of the nearest building, then
    en         swung the other way and hit a cursing pedestrian who'd
    he         managed to dodge the careening van.
    ar-         A siren sounded from the spaceport. It can't have had
               anything to do with us, there wasn't time. Stephen reached
    ,ed        past Loomis from the other side and flicked a dash control.
               Our bell began to clang.
    ra          Three Molts were swinging a gate of heavy steel tubing
               across the.port entrance. Their.officer, a human wearing
               a gray tunic, saw our van coming. He waved his rifle to    4
    ,un        halt us.
    Dw          The four Molts who crewed the port-defense laser were
    Yed
               watching the Commotion among the ships on the field. The

    




                    276           David Drake
    
                   siren came from the Yellowknife. All the Fed warship's
                   external lights were on, flooding her surroundings with
                   white glare.
                   Loomis steered for the narrowing gap between the gate
                   and its concrete post. The Molts continued to trudge for-
                   ward. The officer threw his rifle to his shoulder and aimed.
                   Stephen's flashgun stabbed. The Fed's chest exploded.
                   Our left fender scraped the gatepost. My door screeched
                   back in an accordion pleat. The right-side wheels rode
                   over the bottom bar of the gate. The second and third bars
                   bent down but the sturdy framework as a whole didnt
                   flatten.
                   The van tilted sideways to 45', then flipped over onto
                   its roof in sparks and shrieking.
                   I was in the backseat, tangled with Tuching and Kiley.
                   Lightbody had wound up in front. Stephen was kicking
                   open the door on his side and Loom-is lay halfway through
                   the shattered windshield. The van's wheels spun above
                   us till Lightbody had the presence of mind to rotate a
                   handgrip and disengage the transmission.
                   One of the Molts lay pinned between the pavement and
                   the twisted gate. He moaned in gasping sobs that pulsed
                   across his entire body.
                   The gatepost had stripped off the sliding door in back
                   before we went over. I crawled out. The gunpit crew were
                   running to their multitube laser.
                   The leading Molt wore a white sash-of-office. Stephen
                   shot him. The bolt hit the right edge of the alien's cara-
                   pace, spinning the corpse sideways in a blast of steam to
                   trip another member of the gun crew. Stephen bent and
                   snatched the carbine which Lightbody had thrust t~rough
                   the window as he started to wriggle from the van.
                   I still held Loomis' shotgun. I raised it, aiming for the
                   Molt climbing into the seat on the left side of the gun
                   carriage.
                   My target was ten meters away. Stephen had taught me
                   that a shotgun wasn't an area weapon: it had to be aimed
                   to be effective. The Molt's mauve plastron wobbled, but
                   not too much, over the trough between the side-by-side
                   barrels. The charge of shot would kick the gunner out of
    
                                                         kLI
    oil,

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     277
    
    his seat, his chest shattered in a splash of brown ichor. All
    I had to do was pull the trigger.
     I couldn't pull the trigger. I couldn't kill anything this
    way, in the dispassion that distance brought. Not even
    though the laser's six-tube circular array depressed and
    traversed toward me at the Molt's direction.
     Stephen shot the gunner in the head. The Molt went into
    spastic motion as if he was trying to swim but his limbs
    belonged to four different individuals.
     Another Molt jumped into the right-hand seat. Stephen
    worked the bolt of his rifle without taking the butt from his
    shoulder and blew the back off the second gunner's trian-
    gular skull also. The last member of the crew disentangled
    himself from his dead leader, stood, and immediately fell
    flailing.
     "Come on!" Stephen shouted. He set the carbine on the
    pavement beside him and braced his hands against the
    van's quarterpanel. "We'll tilt this back on its wheels!"
     I handed the shotgun to Lightbody and ran toward the
    gunpit. Loomis pulled himself the rest of the way through
    the windshield and rested on all fours in front of the
    van. His palms left bloody prints on the concrete, but
    if he could move, he was in better condition than I'd
    feared.
     A 300-tonne freighter midway in the second row fluffed
    her thrusters. The plume of bright plasma wobbled toward
    the town as it cooled, bome on the evening breeze from
    the river. The engine test would go unremarked by Feds
    in the port area in the present confusion, but for us it
    identified the vessel Piet and his men had captured.
     The dead Molts had fallen from the gun's turntable.
    I sat in the left seat and checked the control layout:
    heel-and-toe pedals for elevation and traverse, a keyboard
    for the square 20-cm display tilted up from between my
    knees.
     The laser hummed in readiness beside me. The tubes
    were pumped by a fusion bottle at the back of the pit.
    One such unit could have driven all four guns, but the
    Fed planners had gone to the extra expense of running
    each laser array off a dedicated power source.

    




                    278           David Drake
    
                   If there'd been a common power plant, I could probably
                   have shut it down from the Commandatura. At the time
                   that would have seemed like a good idea, but I'd have
                   regretted it now.
                   Gunports fell open along the Yellowknife's centerline,
                   black rectangles against the gleaming metal hull. The
                   muzzle of a plasma cannon slid out. The gunners began
                                               ed freighter.
                    to slew their weapon to bear on the captur
                     Loomis knelt with his hands pressed to his face. Stephen
                    and the other three crew members rocked the van sideways,
                    then pulled it back and gathered their strength for a final
                    push. Either they'd unhitched the trailer, or the crash had
                    broken its tongue.
                     My targeting screen set a square green frame over the
                    bow of the Yellowknife. I keyed a 1 mil/second clock-
                    wise traverse into the turntable control. A hydraulic motor
                    whined beneath me.
                     The van rolled onto its right side in a crunch of glass,
                    then up on its wheels again as my friends shouted their
                    triumph. The motor was still snorting. The diesel must
                    have been a two-stroke or it would have seized by now
                    for being run upside down.
                     The manual firing switch was a red handle mounted on
                    the gun carriage itself, rather than part of the keyboard.
                    I threw it home against a strong spring, then locked it in
                    place with the sliding bolt.
     J1 i
                     Flux hundreds of times more concentrated than that of
                    Stephen's flashgun pulsed from the six barrels in turn as
                    the array slowly rotated its fury along the Yellowknife's
                    hull. I jumped from the gun carriage and ran to the van as
                    Stephen tossed Loomis into the back. He piled in besidle
                    Lightbody in the driver's seat.
                     Metal curled from the Yellowknife in dazzling w1lite
                    streamers. The pulses hammering the hull would make
                    her interior ring like a bell.
     RE              The laser array was a defense against the organic ves
                    sels of the Chay. No hostile human ship would dar;
                    land with its thrusters exposed to the port's fire, but
                    the Yellowknife was too solidly constructed for the flux
     E              to penetrate her broadside.          am,

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     279
    
     The line of blazing metal slid a handbreadth beneath
    the open gunports instead of through them. I'd aimed too
    hastily or the Fed gunners hadn't properly bore-sighted
    their weapon.
     We accelerated toward the captured freighter. A wheel
    was. badly out of alignment. The studded tire screamed
    against its fender, throwing sparks out behind us. Another
    ship lit its thrusters to the north edge of the field.
     The Yellowknife fired a plasma cannon. The intense
    rainbow flash shadowed my bones through the flesh of
    my hand. The laser array erupted in white fire. The fusion
    plant continued to discharge in a blue corona from the
    fused power cable.
     Part of the slug of charged particles missed the gun
    mechanism and blew out the walls of a building across
    the street. The wooden roof collapsed on the wreckage
    and began to bum.
     A cutter-our cutter-lifted from the edge of the field.
    It sailed toward the Yellowknife at the speed of a man
    running. Loomis screamed in terror as he realized the
    vessel was in an arc only five meters high at the point
    it would intersect our track.
     Stephen grabbed the steering wheel with his left hand
    and spun it clockwise. The van skidded in a right-hand
    turn. The rubbing tire blew and we fishtailed.
     The cutter passed ahead of us in the iridescent glare of
    its thruster. Its skids touched the concrete and bounced the
    vessel up again. A human figure leaped from the dorsal
    batch, tumbling like a rag doll.
     Riflemen in the Yellowknife's open hatch shot vainly
    at the oncoming cutter. The siren continued to scream.
    A plasma cannon fired, but the weapon didn't bear on
    anything: the bolt punished the sky with a flood of rav-
    ening ions,
     Stephen thrust his flashgun into the backseat. I grabbed
    it. He opened his door and hung out, gripping the frame
    with his huge left hand as Lightbody fought to brake
    the van.
     Stephen straightened, jerking Piet off the pavement and
    into the van with us by the belt of his trousers. A wisp of

    




                 280            David Drake
                 exhaust had singed Piet's tunic as he bailed out.
                   The cutter slanted into the bow of the Yellowknife. The
                 light ceramic hull shattered like the shell of an egg flung
                 to the ground, but the Federation warship rocked back
                 on its landing skids from the impact. Steam gushed from
                 gunports and a started seam, enveloping the Yellowknife's
                 stem.
    pill,"                      "A feedline broke!" Tuching, an engine crewman,
                 shouted.
                   Lightbody steered toward the captured freighter again.
                 He had to struggle with the shredded tire and Piet squirming
                 to sit up on Stephen's lap beside him.
                   The wreckage of the cutter fell back from the Yellow-
                 knife. The warship's bow was dished in and blackened;
                 smoky flames shot from an open gunport.
       4t          A green-white flash lifted the Yellowknife's stern cen-
                 timeters off the ground. The CRACK! of the explosion
                 was lightning-sharp and as loud as the end of the world.
                 The van spun a three-sixty, either from the shock wave or
                 because Lightbody twitched convulsively in surprise.
                   We straightened and wobbled the last hundred meters
                 to the freighter waiting for us with the main hatch open.
                 "Not a feedline," Piet said in rich satisfaction. "An injector
                 came adrift and they tried to run their auxiliary power plant
                 without cooling. They'll play hell getting that ship in
                 shape to chase usl"
                   I suppose Guillermo was at the controls of the captured
                 vessel, for she started to lift while Piet and the rest of us
                 were still in the entry hold.
                   If the three remaining laser batteries had human crie
                                                    w'
                 they might have shot us out of the sky. Molts  dni
                 assume in a crisis that anything moving was an enemy.
                   Therefore we survived.

    




             ST. LAWRENCE
    
    Day 319
    
    We watched the double line of prisoners dragging the
    thruster nozzle on a sledge from the captured freighter,
    the 17Abraxis, to the gully where Salomon had landed the
    Oriflamme. The Molts-there were thirty-one of them-
    chanted a tuneless, rhythmic phrase.
     Two of the freighter's human crew had been wounded
    during the capture. The remaining ten were silent, but they
    at least gave the impression of putting their weight against
    the ropes. Lightbody and Loomis, watching with shotguns,
    wouldn't have killed a captured Fed for slacking; but at
    least in Lightbody's case, that's because Piet had given
    strict orders about how to treat the prisoners.
     Lightbody's perfect universe would contain no living
    idolators; Jeude's death had made him even less tolerant
    than he was at the start of the voyage. The Fed captives
    were wise not to try his forbearance.
     "Rakoscy says the communications officer is going to
    pull through," Piet remarked. I was worried about that."
     "That Fed worried me about other things than him tak-
    ing a bullet through the chest," I said. I wasn't angry-
    or frightened, now. Neither had I forgotten driving across
    the spaceport under fire because the commo officer of 17
    Abraxis had gotten off an alarm message before Dole shot
    him out of his console.
     The gully contained vegetation and a little standing
    water, and the defilade location saved the Oriflamme from
    exhaust battering when Piet brought our prize in close by.
    Though the air was only warm, the sun was a huge red
    
                    281
    
                            ----------

    




                    282            David Drake
                    curtain on the eastern sky. That sight wouldn't change
                    until the stellar corona engulfed St. Lawrence: the planet
                    had stopped rotating on its axis millions of years before.
                      "He was doing his job," Stephen said mildly. "Pretty
                    good at it, too. There aren't so many men like that around
                    that I'd want to lose one more."
                      "Fortunately," Piet added with a smile, "the staff of
                    the Yellowknife hadn't plotted the vessels on the ground
                    at Corpus Christi, so they didn't have any idea which ship
                    was under attack."
                      We were in the permanent shade of four stone pillars,
                    the fossilized thighbones of a creature that must in life
                    have weighed twenty tonnes if not twice that. The bones
                    had weathered out of the softer matrix rock, but they too
                    were beginning to crumble away from the top.
                      I turned my head to gaze at the tower of black stone.
                    "Hard to imagine anything so big roaming this place," I
    U               said. Vegetation now grew only in low points like the
                    arroyo, and we hadn't found any animal larger than a
                    fingernail.
                      "A long time ago," Stephen said with emphasis. "Who
                    knows? Maybe they developed space travel and emigrated
                    ten million years back."
                      "Put your backs in it, you cocksucking whoresons,"
                    came the faint fury of Winger's voice from the underside
                    of 17 Abraxis, "or as Christ is my witness, you'll still be
                    here when your fucking beards are down to your knees!"
                      Piet frowned at the blasphemy (obscenity didn't bother
                    him), but the men were far enough away that he must have
                    decided he could overlook it. The job of removing thrust-
                    er nozzles-without dockyard tools-after they'd been
                    torqued into place by use was just as difficult as Winger
                    had grumbled it would be when we were on Clapperton.
                      "They've got seven," Stephen said quietly. "This last
                    one and we're out of here."
                      "If we don't take spares," I said, deliberately turning
                    my head toward the Oriflamme to avoid Piet's eyes.
                      He glared at me anyway. "The prisoners can get back to
                    Riel on four out of twelve thrusters," he said. "They can't
                    get back on two. We aren't going to leave forty-three rnen~

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     283
    
    here on the chance that somebody will come by before
    they all starve."
     Twelve humans and thirty-one Molts. All of them "men"
    to Piet, and you'd best remember it when you spoke in his
    hearing.
     "You could manage on two, Piet," Stephen said with a
    grin. "I'll bet you could take her home on one, though I
    guess we'd have to gut the hull to get her out of the gravity
    well to begin with."
     I knew Stephen was joking to take the sting out of Piet's
    rebuke to me. I'd promised Winger that I'd try to get him
    a spare nozzle, though.
     Piet chuckled and squeezed my hand. "All things are
    possible with the Lord, Stephen," he said, "but I wouldn't
    care to put him to that test. And, Jeremy-"
     He sobered.
     "-I appreciate what you've tried to do. I know the
    motor crew is concerned about the wear we'll get from
    tungsten, and they have a right to be. But if these nozzles
    don't last us, we'll find further replacements along the
    way. We won't leave men to die."
     I nodded. I looked up at the femur of a creature more
    ancient than mankind and just possibly more ancient than
    Earth. Black stone, waiting for the sun to devour it.
     A tiny, intense spark shone in the sky where the thigh
    pointed. I jumped to my feet.
     "There's a-"
     "Incoming vessel!" Piet bellowed as he rose from a
    seated position to a dead run in a single fluid motion.
    "Don't shoot! Don't shoot! If she crashes, it could be
                                                                                             P
    anywhere!"
     Stephen and I followed at our best speed, but Piet was
    aboard the Oriflamme while we were still meters from the
    cockpit steps.
    
    "This is close enough," Stephen ordered, dropping into a
    squat a hundred meters from the strange vessel's starboard
    side. "This swale doesn't look like much, but it'll deflect
    their exhaust if they try to fry us. Can't imagine anything
    else we need to worry about, but don't get cocky."

    




    771
    
                   284,           David Drake
                     Piet and the rest of us knelt beside him. Stephen, com-
                   mander of his county's militia before he ever set foot on
                   a starship, was giving the orders for the moment.
                     Dole's ten men were still jogging to where they'd have
                   an angle on the stranger's bow. Fifty-tonne freighters built
                   like this one on the Back Worlds weren't likely to have
                   hatches both port and starboard, but we weren't taking
                   the risk.
                     Stampfer was half a kilometer behind us, aligning the
       H           4-cm plasma weapon 17 Abraxis carried for use against
                   Chay raiders. The Oriflamme's guns were useless while
                   she was in the gully. Salomon, Winger, and the bulk of
                   the crew weren't going to be ready her to lift for an hour
                   or more despite desperate measures.
                     "You'd think," I said, "that they'd have signaled they
                   were coming in."
                     Stephen shrugged. "Maybe they don't have commo," he
                   said. "The Feds'd leave the air tanks off to save money if
                   they could get away with it."
                     "Southerns, sir," Lightbody said unexpectedly-
                     Stephen and I looked at him; Piet grinned and continued
                   to watch the strange vessel. "This one's Southern Cross
                   construction, sir," Lightbody amplified. "Not Fed. The
                   pairs of thrusters are too far apart for Feds."
                     The vessel's hatch clanged twice as those inside jerked
                   it sideways by hand rather than hydraulic pressure. Six
                   figures got out. They jumped as far as they could to clear
                   the patch of thruster-heated ground.
                     One of the newcomers was a woman; common enough
                                                          Ir
                   for a Terran crew, though I heard Lightbody growl. None
                   of the strangers was armed, and their assorted clothing was
                   entirely civilian.
                     Piet got up and strode to meet them.
                     "Guide a little left, Piet," Stephen said as he trotted to
                   Piet's right side. Stephen's left index finger indicated a
                   30' angle. I moved over to give Piet room but he ignored
                   the direction.
        11           "Piet," Stephen said calmly, "Stampfer will have that
                   plasma cannon trained on the open hatchway. I trust
                   Stampfer, but I don't much trust junk he crabbed

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     285
    
    out of a Federation freighter. I'd really rather you
    didn't take the chance of something unlikely happen-
    ing."
     From the tone of Stephen's voice, he could have been
    asking where to place a piece of furniture.
     Piet clicked his tongue, but he bore to the left as directed.
    "Where would you be without me to fuss over, Stephen?"
    he murmured.
     Possible answers to that falsely light question rang
    through my head like hammerblows.
     "Sirs?" the leader of the newcomers asked. "Are you
    from the North American Federation?"
     He spoke Trade English with a distinct Southern accent,
    A good dozen additional people, including a few more
    women, climbed from the vessel behind him. They moved
    with greater circumspection than the initial party.
     The ten of us spread slightly as we bore down on the
    strangers. We weren't being deliberately threatening, but a
    group of grim, armed men must have looked as dangerous
    as an avalanche.
     "We are not," Piet said in a proud, ringing voice. "We
    are citizens of the Free State of Venus."
     "Oh, thank God!" cried the woman at the leader's side.
    She knelt and kissed a crucifix folded in both her hands.
     I grabbed Lightbody by the front collar and jerked him
    around to face me. "No!" I shouted.
     I held the spacer till the light eased back into his eyes
    and he began to breathe normally again. "Sorry, sit," he
    muttered, bobbing his head in contrition.
     Everyone was staring at us. I flushed and lowered the
    cutting bar in my right hand. Lightbody hadn't done any-
    thing overt.
     I think Piet understood. I know Stephen did, because
    he gave me a slow smile and said, "If you ever change
    sides, friend, I'm not going to let you get in arm's length
    alive. Hey?"
     In context, that was high praise.
     The newcomer's leader embraced Piet. "Sir," he said,
    "I am Nicolas Rodrigo and these are my people, twenty
    of us."

    




    286           David Drake
    
     I eyed the group quickly. If there were only twenty, then
    they were all in plain sight by now. There were no Molts
    in the group, surprisingly.
     "Until forty days ago, we maintained the colony on
    Santos," Rodrigo said. "Then two Federation warships,
    the Yellowknife and Keys to the Kingdom, arrived under
    a beast named Prothero. He-"
     The woman had risen again. At Prothero's name, she
    spat. Our eyes meshed, then slid sideways. Quite an attrac-
    tive little thing in a plump, dark-haired fashion. Young; 18
    or 20 at the outside, as compared with Rodrigo's 35 or so.
     "-told us that the Southern Cross had been placed
    under President Pleyal's protection, and that he was taking
    control of Santos on behalf of the Federation. He-"
     "What do you have aboard your ship?" Stephen inter-
    jected abruptly.
     "What?" Rodrigo said. "Nothing, only food. Ah-we
    took back the Hercules, this ship, on Corpus Christi.
    There was confusion when a freighter crashed into the
    Yellowknife."
     Kiley chuckled. "I wonder if them poor bastards'll ever
    figure out quite what happened," he said.
     "Come along back to our ships, then," Piet said. "We'll
    be more comfortable there, and I don't want my men I've
    left there to be concerned."
     The bosun's party was moving toward us, slowed by
    their weight of weapons and, for a few of them, armor.
    "Mister Dole?" Piet called. "Set five of your men to secure
    the ship, if you will."
     Stampfer must have realized the situation was peaceful;
    he tilted the muzzle of the light cannon up like an excla-
    mation point above the hasty barricade of crates across
    the hold of 17 Abraxis. Maybe the gesture helped the
    others relax.
     Me, I was still trembling in reaction to a few minutes
    before, when I stopped Lightbody from blowing a pretty
    woman's head off.
    
    "Prothero put his own men on Santos as overseers,"
    Rodrigo explained, drinking a thimble glass of slash cut

    




                     THROUGH THE BREACH     287
    
         three to one with water. "The plantations are worked by
         Molts, of course. We don't-we didn't export, we just sup-
         plied convoys in the Back Worlds trade stopping over."
           The Southerns mixed freely with the Oriflamme's crew.
         A joint party had -gone back to the Hercules, for supplies
         including Santos wine. The Federation prisoners watched
         sullenly as they resumed hauling heavy thruster nozzles.
           Piet, Stephen, Lacaille, and I sat with the Southern
         leaders at a trestle table on the shaded side of the gully.
         Rodrigo's wife, Carmen, was at his side across the table,
         occasionally eyeing me as she raised the glass to her lips.
         She wasn't actually drinking.
           "I know Prothero," Lacaille said. "I don't know any- 4
         body who likes or trusts him, but he's ... Able enough.
         In his way."
         The Southerns watched the Fed castaway sidelong,
         uncertain about his status. I guess we all were uncertain,
         Lacaille himself included.
         "The Hercules was on Santos when the Federation
         ships arrived," Rodrigo continued. "Captain Cinpeda
         commanded."
         A short, dark Southern nodded. He'd drunk his slash
         neat. His eyes never left the carafe I'd deliberately slid
         out of his reach.
         "Prothero filled the Hercules with food and put his
         own crew aboard," Rodrigo said. "It was no more than
         piracy. But how could we fight with no warships of our
         own?"
         Stephen's lips smiled; his eyes did not. Ships don't
         fight: men do. And Rodrigo wasn't that sort of man.
         "Prothero took us with him on the Yellowknife," Rodrigo
         said. "The Keys to the Kingdom was his flagship, but she
         heeded repairs. He left her on Santos while he went ahead
         to Riel."
         "She's a great, cranky tub of eight hundred tonnes, the
         Keys," Lacaille said. "I'm not surprised she broke down.
         Her water pumps again?"
           Cinpeda nodded to Lacaille with respect.
         "They can't be depopulating all the Southern colonies,"
         I said. "Can they?"
    
                                         M
                                        Amr
                                      
    
    




    V I
              288           David Drake
    
             "I think," Carmen Rodrigo said with her eyes lowered,
             "that the decision was Commander Prothero's. I believe
             his intentions toward me were ... not proper. Though he
             already has a mistress!"
             "Prothero's always operated as though the Middle Ways
             were his own kingdom," Lacaille said. "I doubt he was
             acting completely on orders."
             "We took our chance when the emergency siren
             sounded," Rodrigo said. "We thought it was a Chay raid.
             The prize crew had left the Hercules, so we went aboard
             and lifted as soon as the computer gave us a course."
             "To home," Carmen said. "We're going back to Rio.
             Better Pleyal a continent away than Prothero in the next
             cabin."
             There was an edge in her tone that I thought I under-'
             stood. Carmen Rodrigo might or might not be a virtuous
             wife; I had my doubts. But she certainly intended to make
             any decisions of that sort on her own.
             "Why this course, to St. Lawrence?" Piet asked sud-
             denly. "It's a week's transit in the wrong direction if you
             intend to return to the Solar System."
             "Reaction mass," Cinpeda grunted. "I wonder, master,
             could you. .
               He extended his tiny glass. I filled it from the carafe.
             "Ali, thank you, thank you indeed, master," the South-
             ern captain said. He shuddered as he tossed the shot
             down, but his eyes gained a focus that had been missing
             a moment before.
             "Reaction mass," Cinpeda repeated. "Prothero's crew,
             they'd refilled the air tanks when they landed on Riel, but
             they hadn't hooked up to the water yet. Food we had, air
             we had, but there wasn't water for ten days under power."
             "There is water here, isn't there?" Rodrigo asked in sud-
             den concern as he gazed around him. The planet must have
             looked like a desert from orbit, and the slight greenery of
             this arroyo wasn't much more inviting.
             "We've bored a well," Piet said. "You can draw from
             it, now that we've topped off."
             "If you were trying to escape," Stephen asked, "why
             did you land by us-and without- signaling?"

    




                                            meow,
    
               THROUGH THE BREACH     289
    
     "Fucking collimator's out," Cinpeda said with a scowl.
    "On the laser communicator. Fucking thing drifts. And the
    VHF transmitter, it's been wonky since they installed it."
     He looked as though he was going to ask for another
    drink. I shook my head minutely.
     "We thought you'd done the same thing we did,"
    Rodrigo said, answering the first part of the question.
    "Come here to get away from Prothero. We knew other
    ships escaped when we did."
     "Didn't even notice this one before we landed," Cinpeda
    said with a nod toward the Orifiamme. "What is it-don't
    you reflect radar?"
     I shrugged. Ceramic hulls did reflect radar, but not as
    strongly as a similar expanse of metal. -The Oriflamme was
    an outcrop in the gully to a radar operator unless the fellow
    was actively looking for a Venerian ship here.
     "And there was no reason to come to this place," Car-
    mien added, "except to avoid being on Riel. So we thought
    Y(
    ou might be from the Southern Cross too, until we saw
    your guns."
     "Does your vessel carry guns?" Stephen said. There was
    no challenge in his tone, only the certainty of a man who
    will be answered.
     "A small cannon," Rodrigo said. "For the Chay, and
    perhaps not much use against them. We can't defend
    ourselves against you, sirs."
     Piet stood up with a nod. "Nor do you need to," he said.
    "We have our own needs and can be of little help to you,
    but we certainly won't hinder."
     "How long will you remain on this planet?" Carmen
    asked without looking-pointedly without looking-at
    me.
     "No longer than it takes to mount two more thruster
    nozzles, madam," Piet said with a wry grin. "Which is
    some hours longer than I wish it would be, now that
    you've arrived."
     "Are we so terrible?" Carmen said in surprise.
     "The people who may follow you are," I explained
    gently. "The Feds know how much reaction mass they
    left on your ship, and they've got the same pilotry data

    




                    290            David Drake
                    as you do to pick the possible landfalls."
                      "But we'll deal with them, if it comes to that," Stephen
                    said, hefting his flashgun. His eyes had no life and no
                    color, and his voice was as dry as the wind.
                      No Federation force would be half so terrible as we
                    ourselves were.
                      "Piet?" I said as I stood up. "The Abraxis has a first-rate
                    commo suite. If you'll let Guillermo help me, I can swap
                    it into the Hercules in less time than~ it takes Winger to
                    fit the nozzles."
                      "That leaves the Abraxis without. . ." Piet said. He
                    smiled. "Ali. One ship or the other."
    q                 "And the choice to the men with the guns," Stephen
                    said. He was smiling also, though his expression and Piet's
                    had little in common. "As usual."
                      "Yes," Piet said. "Go ahead."
                      "Guillermo!" I shouted as I ran for the forward hatch
                    and my tool kit. "We've got a job!"
                    The Oriflamme's siren shut off as Guillermo and I clam-
                    bered aboard the 17 Abraxis. Piet had held the switch
                    down for thirty seconds to call the crew aboard. Me
                    were scattered from here to the Hercules. Hell, some had
                    probably wandered off in the other direction for reasons
      .4              best known to themselves.
                      When the alarm sounded, Fed prisoners returning the
     D4'                                                  sledge to the 17 Abraxis slacked the drag ropes to see what
                    was happening. The Molts continued to pace forward.
                    Maher, one of the pair on guard this watch, punched a
                    Fed between the shoulder blades with his rifle butt.
                      The prisoner yelped. He turned. Maher prodded his face
                    with the gun muzzle. The Feds resumed the duties they'd
                    been set.
       ~Ihl           "We don't want to screw up the navigational equipment
                    when we lift this," I said to Guillermo as I tapped the
                    freighter's communications module. "Do you know if any
                    of the hardware or software is common?"
                      "No, Jeremy," the Molt said. "I could build it from
                    parts, of course, since one of my ancestors did that a
                    thousand years ago."
    J0

    




                                                 J .
               THROUGH THE BREACH     291
    
     Guillermo's thorax clicked his race's equivalent of
    laughter. His three-fingered hands played across the
    navigation console. "What we can do, though, is to
    bring up the Al and keep it running while we separate
    the communications module and attempt to run it."
     "Right," I said. Molts were supposed to operate by
    rote memory while humans displayed true, innovative
    intelligence. That's what made us superior to them. You
    bet.
     I bent to check the join between the module and the
    main console. The speaker snapped, "Presidential-
     I jumped upright, grabbing my cutting bar with both
    hands to unhook it. The only reason I carried the weapon
    was I hadn't thought to remove it after we returned from
    the Hercules.
     "-Vessel Keys to the Kingdom calling ships on St.
    Lawrence! Do not attempt to lift. You will be boarded
    by Federation personnel. Any attempt at resistance will
    cause you both to be destroyed by gunfire. Respond at
    once! Over."
     The commo screen was blanked by a nacreous overlay:
    the caller could, but chose not to, broadcast video.
     "Stay in the image!" I said to Guillermo. Venerian ships
    didn't have Molt crew members.
     The voice had said, ". . . you both. . ." The Feds had
    made the same mistake as Captain Cinpeda: they'd seen
    the metal-hulled vessels, but they'd missed the Oriflamme
    in her gully.
     My fingers clicked over the module's keyboard. It was
    an excellent unit, far superior to the normal run of commo
    gear we produced on Venus. I careted a box in the upper
    left corner of the pearly field for the Oriflamme.
     pie looked at me, opening his mouth. I ignored him and
    said, Freighter David out of Clapperton to Presidential
    Vessel, we're laid up here replacing a feedline and our
    consort's commo is screwed up. What the hell's got into
    you, over?"
     Guillermo stood with his plastron bowed outward. He
    scratched.the grooves between belly plates with a finger
    from either hand. I'd never seen him do anything of the

    




                      292            David Drake
    
                      sort before. The activity looked slightly disgusting-and
                      innocent, like a man picking his nose.,
                      "Who are you?" demanded the voice from the module.
                      "Who is this speaking? Over!"
                      Piet nodded approvingly. At least he thought we looked
                      like the sort of folks you'd find on the bridge of a Feder-
                      ation merchantman ...
                      "This is Captain Jeremy Moore!" I said, tapping my
                      chest with the point of my thumb. "Who are you, boyo?
                      Some bleeding Molt, or just so pig-faced ugly that you're
                      afraid to let us see you? Over!"
                      Through the open hatch I saw men staggering aboard
                      the Oriflamme. Sailors' lives involved both danger and
                      hard work, but their normal activities didn't prepare them
                      to run half a klick when the alarm sounded.
                      The sledge sat beside the 17 Abraxis, ready to receive
                      the eighth and final thruster nozzle. It had taken an hour,
                      minimum, to transport each previous nozzle, and another
                      hour to fit the tungsten forging into place beneath the
                      Oriflamme.
                      Guillermo balanced on one leg and stuck the other in the
                      a r. He poked at his crotch. I noticed that he'd dropped his
                      sash onto my cutting bar on the deck, out of the module's
                      camera angle.
                      The pearl-tinged static dissolved into the face of a man
                      who'd been handsome, some twenty years and twenty
                      kilograms ago. At the moment he was mad enough to
                      chew hull plates, exactly what I'd intended. Angry people
                      lose perspective and miss details.
                      "I'll tell you who I am!" he shouted. "I'm Commodore
                      Richard Prothero, officer commanding the Middle Ways,
                      and I'm going to have your guts for garters, boyo! My
                      landing party will be down in twenty minutes. If there's
                      so much as a burp from you, I'll blast a crater so deep
                      it goes right on out the other side of the planet! Do you
                      understand, civilian? Out!"
                      Prothero's three quarters of the screen blanked-com-
                      pletely, to the black of dead air rather than a carrier wave's
                      pearly luminescence. Piet nodded again and crooked his-
                      index finger to Guillermo and me.
    
    Abul.,

    




                           THROUGH THE BREACH    293
    
    id          I didn't imagine that Prothero could intercept the laser
               link I'd formed between us and the Oriflamme, but we
               needn't take unnecessary risks. The necessary ones were
               bad enough.
    -d         "You'll need more than your helmet," Stephen said in a
    r-         voice as if waking from a dream. "Put the rest of your
               armor on, Jeremy."
                "When we lift, I'll put my suit on," I said. I wondered
               what I sounded like. Nothing human, I supposed. Very
               little of me was human when I slipped into this state.
                "The Federation warship orbiting St. Lawrence is an
    rd         eight-hundred-tonner mounting twenty carriage guns."
               Piet's voice rang calmly through the tannoy in the ceiling
               of the forward hold. "We'll be lifting on seven engines, so
               we won't be as handy as I'd like. In order to return home,
    Ve         we must engage and destroy this enemy. With the Lord's
               help, my friends, we will destroy them and destroy every
       r
               enemy of Venus!"
                Twelve of us waited in the hold. Kiley, Loomis, and
    he         Li ' ghtbody carried flasliguns, but Stephen alone held his
    lis         with the ease of a man drawing on an old glove.
    ~'s                                              We'd had time to rig for action, but it would be tight
    I I         working the big guns with everybody in hard suits. They
      an       were probably cheering Piet in the main hull. None of
               us did. For myself, I didn't feel much of anything, not
     ity       even fear.
      to        "They must've landed on Riel just after we left," Maher
     )le       said. "The Keys must. Pity they weren't another month
               putting their pumps to rights."
     )re        "We'll lift as soon as the enemy ship is below the
    ~,S,       horizon," Piet continued, "and our marksmen have dealt
      Ay       with the Federation cutters. The enemy is in a hundred-
       s       and-six-minute orbit, so we'll have sufficient time to reach
      ep       altitude before joining battle."
                Even on seven thrusters? Well, I'd take Piet's word for
      m_       it. Aloud I said, "Lacaille says that the Keys is falling
    C' s       apart. You've seen the sort, older than your gramps and
     his       Fed-maintained as well. We'll give her the last push,
               is all."

    




                     294            David Drake
    
                     "Too right, sir!" Kiley said, nodding enthusiastically.
                     He knew I was just cheering them up before we fought a
                     ship with enough guns, men and tonnage to make six of
                     US. All the sailors knew that-and appreciated it, maybe
          1h i       more than they appreciated me standing beside them now.
                     They expected courage of a gentleman, but not empathy.
                     Two exhaust flares winked in the sky. I lowered my
                     visor. For the moment, the riflemen and I were present to
                     protect the flashgunners from Feds who managed to get
                     out of the landing vessels. I'd wear my suit when it was
                     that or breathe vacuum; but I wouldn't put on that jointed
                     ceramic coffin before I had to.
                     "I'll take the right-hand one," Stephen said in a husky,
                     horrid whisper. He clicked his faceshield down. "Wait for
                     me to shoot. If anyone jumps the gun-if you survive the
                     battle, my friend, you won't survive it long. On my oath
                     as a gentleman."
                     "Almighty God," said Piet. "May Thy hand strengthen
                     ours in Thy service today. Amen."
                     Lacaille was suited up aboard the Oriflamme. He'd
                     repeated that he wouldn't fight his own people; but he'd
                     asked not to be left on the ground, either.
                     We owed him that much. The prisoners locked for the
                     moment in the hold of the 17 Abraxis would identify him
                     quickly enough to survivors of the Federation landing
                     party. Besides, Lacaille,was one of us now-whatever
                     he said, wherever he was born.
                     "Easy, gentlemen," Stephen said as he lifted his flashgun
                     to his shoulder.
                     The Fed boats leveled out from their descent and cruised
                     toward the 17 Abraxis a hundred meters in the air. They
                     were bigger than our cutter, almost the size of featherboats.
                     They didn't act like they saw us. Small-craft optics are
                     crude, and the Feds weren't expecting to find anything in
                     the shadow of the arroyo.
                     The nearer vessel slowed to a crawl while five meters
                     in the air. It began to settle beside the freighter. Its plasma
                     exhaust flared in an oval pattern that swept stones as big
                     as my fist from the ground.
    er I

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     295
    
     Stephen fired. His bolt struck the side of the boat's
    thruster nozzle, close to the white-hot lip. The exhaust
    already sublimed tungsten from the nozzle's throat and
    left a black smear on the ground where the metal redepos
    ited.
     The laser pulse heated the point it hit to a fractionally
    greater degree than the metal casing around it. The noz-
    zle lost cohesion. The side blew toward us in a bubble
    of green vapor as intense as the plasma that drove it.
    The rash! of metal exploding was more dazzling than
    I C
    the flash.
     The vessel rolled clockwise on its axis and nosed in
    almost upside down. The dorsal hatch flew off. Members
    of the landing party flew out in a confusion of weapons
    and white tunics.
     The second craft was thirty meters in the air and a
    hundred meters beyond the first. Our three remaining
    flasligunners fired in near unison. Two of the bolts glanced
    from the cutter's hull, leaving deep scars in the metal and
    puffs of aluminum vapor in the air. The third man aimed
    better but to even less effect: his flux stabbed toward
    the nozzle but was smothered in the cloud of ionized
    exhaust.
     The boat rotated toward us. A port in its blunt bow
    gaped open. The riflemen beside me volleyed at the little
    vessel, flecking the hull when they hit.
     Stephen clacked the battery compartment closed and
    raised his reloaded flashgun. The muzzle of a twin-tube
    laser thrust from the Feds' gunport. Even pumped by the
    thruster, it couldn't seriously damage the Oriflamme's
    hull; but it could kill all of us in the hold, hard suits or no.
     The vessel slid toward us in a shallow dive. Stephen
    fired.
     T~e thruster nozzle was only a corona beneath the
    craft s oncoming bow. A cataclysmic green flash lifted
    the vessel in what would have been a fatal loop if the
    pilot hadn't been incredibly good or incredibly lucky. The
    cutter screamed overhead and skidded along the ground
    on its belly for two hundred meters beyond the arroyo,

    




                       296            David Drake
    
                       strewing fragments of hull behind it.
                       The Oriflamme's engines roared. The deck vibrated
                       fiercely, but it would be a moment before thrust rose
                       beyond equilibrium with our mass and we started to lift.
                       Men started for the companionway to the main deck,
                       cheering and clapping one another's shoulders with their
        I'A
                       gauntleted hands.
                       My hard suit waited for me in a comer of the hold.
                       I began to put it on, trying not to get rattled as I per-
                       formed the unfamiliar, unpleasant task of locking myself
                       into armor. Because Stephen and Lightbody helped me, I
                       was suited up within a minute or two of when the hatch
                       sealed out the buffeting of the atmosphere the Oriflamme
                       was fast leaving.
    
     ILI
    1AL

    




         ABOVE ST. LAWRENCE
    
    Day 319
    
    Oriflamme's guns were run out to starboard. Stampfer
    was amidships with the fire director, but the Long Tom's
    six-man crew stood close about their massive gun.
     Gaiters did a halfhearted job of sealing the gun tube
    to the inner bulkhead. The pleated barriers kept the cabin
    air pressure high enough to scatter light and even carry
    sound, but we were breathing bottled air behind lowered
    faceshields.
     The Keys to the Kingdom hung on Guillermo's display.
    It wasn't a real-time image. We viewed one frozen aspect
    of the spherical vessel, and even portions of that had the
    glossiness of an electronic construct rather than the rough,
    tarnished surfaces of physical reality.
     There was nothing for scale in the image, but "800
    tonnes" meant something to me now as it had not at
    the start of this voyage. It meant the Keys was signifi-
    cantly larger than Our Lady of Montreal; and unlike the
    Montreal, she was first and foremost a warship.
     God knew, so was the Oriflamme, and we of her crew
    were men of war.
     The Keys' bridge, indicated by sensor and antenna con-
    centrations, was in the usual place at the top deck. The
    generally globular design was flattened on the underside
    so that the thrusters could be grouped in the same plane.
     Ramps on the deck above the thrusters served for load-
    ing and unloading the vessel on the ground. Because the
    Keys was so large, she was also configured to load in
    orbit through large rectangular hatches at her horizontal
    
                    297

    




                  298           David Drake
    
                  centerline. Her gun decks, indicated by a line of ports
                  that were still closed when our optics drew the image on
                  display, were above and below the central deck.
                  About twenty guns Lacaille had said. They'd be smal-
                  ler than ours and less efficient; but ... twenty guns.
                    The usual digital information filled Salomon's screen.
                  I glanced at Piet's display and found, to my surprise, that
                  I understood its analogue data to a degree.
                    The gray central ball was St. Lawrence. The bead on
                  the slightly elliptical green line circling the planet was
                  the Keys to the Kingdom in orbit, while we were the
                  indigo-to-blue line arcing up the surface. The difference in
                  color indicated relative velocities: the Keys, in her higher
                  orbit, moved slower than we did as we circled toward the
                  Feds from below under power.
                    The image on Guillermo's display suddenly shifted into
                  motion, as though a paused recording had been switched
                  back on. We'd come out of the planet's shadow; our
                  sensors were getting direct images of the Keys to the
                  Kingdom again.
                    Our approach was from the Keys'underside. Her twenty-
                  four thruster nozzles were arranged four/six/four/six/four.
                  A faint glow still illuminated their heavy-metal casings.
                    I put my helmet against Stephen's and said, "Don't they
         V        see us?"
                    Plasma flooded from the Keys' thrusters. The cloud
                  expanded to hundreds of times the volume of the starship
                  from which it sprang. A moment later, attitude jets spurted
    01111           lesser quantities of gas which swiftly dissipated. The sphere
                  shuddered and began to rotate so that its main engines
                  weren't exposed to our fire.
                    "Now they see us!" Stephen replied. Even thinned by
                  conduction through his helmet and mine, his voice was
                  starkly gleeful.
                    The bubble of exhaust separated from the Keys to the
                  Kingdom. It drifted away, cooling and still expanding
                  until it was only a faint shimmer across the starscape.
                  The Fed commander was putting his ship in a postureof
                  defense, because he'd realized that he couldn't escape us.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     299
    
     Even on seven thrusters, the Oriflamme had a much
    higher power-to-mass ratio than the huge Keys did. We
    could literally run circles around the Feds in the sidereal
    universe. If they attempted to transit, we would jump with
    them: two Als with identical parameters would always
    pick the same "best" solution.
     And that would be the end of the Keys to the Kingdom.
    Piet would bring us up beneath the Feds at point-blank
    range-and Stampfer would blow the Keys' thrusters out, 6a,
    leaving the vessel to drift powerless in interstellar space.
     The need to protect our thrusters was behind Piet's
    decision to disable the Fed landing boats before we lifted.
    The Oriflamme's hull could take a considerable battering
    from heavy guns and still be repaired. Laser bolts or light
    plasma cannon could destroy our main engines, however.
    We couldn't risk being encircled by three hostile vessels,
    even if two of them were small by comparison with the
    Oriflamme.
     Piet shut off our engines. I grasped a stanchion with
    my left gauntlet as I started to drift up from the deck.
    The bead that was the Oriflamme drove silently across
    the main display on a course that would intersect the Keys
    to the Kingdom in two minutes, or at most three. The arc
    marking our past course was now turquoise.
     The carriage of the 17-cm gun crawled slowly side-
    ways, making the deck tremble. The fire director was
    keeping the muzzle pointed at the target Stampfer had
    chosen.
     "All weapons bear on the enemy, sir!" the master gun-
    ner announced over the radio intercom. Motors in the gun
    training apparatus crackled across Stampfer's voice, but so
    long as the main engines were shut down the whole crew
    could hear him over the helmet radios.
     "Thank you, Mister Stampfer," Piet said in a tone that
    was so calm he sounded bored. "I trust your aim, but I
    think we'll close further so that the charges will dissi-
    pate less."
     Static roared on the intercom. My hair stood on end
    from a jolt of static, and the hull beside me rocked to a
    white-hot hammerblow.

    




                  300            David Drake
                    There was enough atmosphere at this altitude to light
                  the tracks of the Keys' plasma bolts across our optical
                  screen. The Feds had salvoed ten guns. Only one round
                  had hit squarely. It was powerful enough to shatter our
    A             tough outer hull and craze the inner one in a meter-
                  diameter circle between the gunport and the navigation
                  consoles.
                    The Oriflamme rocked with the impact of ions moving
                  at light speed. Attitude jets snorted, returning us to our
                  former alignment. The Long Tom's gear motors tracked
                  and tracked back, holding a calculated point of impact.
                    The Keys to the Kingdom filled Guillermo's screen.
                  Our green bead and the chartreuse bead of the Feder-,
                  ation vessel were on the verge of contact on the analogue
                  display.
                    "Fire as you bear, Mist-" Piet's voice ordered befo
                                                      re
                  static and the ringing CRASH! of five heavy guns recoiling
                  blotted out all other sound.
                    Two of the directed thermonuclear explosions struck
                  the Keys' upper gun deck, two struck the mid-line deck,
                  and the last ripped a collop out of the lower gun deck
                  in a grazing blow. Eight cargo hatches blew out along
                  the centerline. Our plasma charges expanded the deck's
                  atmosphere explosively, pistoning the Fed vessel open
                  from the inside.
                    Bolts that hit the Keys' gun decks ripped huge, glowing
                  ulcers in the hull plating. White-hot metal blew inward,
                  mixed with the residual atmosphere, and burned in see-
                  ondary pulses. The initial impacts wracked the Keys' inter-
                  nal subdivisions. These follow-up blasts penetrated deep
     Ell          into the vessel, spreading pain and panic among those
                  who'd thought themselves out of immediate danger.
                    Attitude jets puffed, rotating the Oriflamme on her axis
                  so that our spine rather than our starboard was presented to
                  our enemy. We'd taken one hit and were likely to take oth-
                  ers. Piet was adjusting our aspect so that the Feds couldn't
                  concentrate on ewe ned portion of our hull.
                    The Long Tom had recoiled two meters on its carriage.
                  Efflux from the plasma bolt had blown the gaiters inward -
                  so that a rectangle of hard vacuum surrounded the barrel.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     301
    
    A crewman spun the locking mechanism and swung the
    breechblock open.
     The thermonuclear explosion had heated the gun's
    ceramic bore to a throbbing white glow. In the absence
    of an atmosphere, cooling had to be by radiation rather
    than convection, but even so an open tube would return to
    safe temperature much sooner than closed-breech weapons
    of the sort the Feds used. A few wisps of plasma twinkled
    within the bore like forlorn will-o'-the-wisps.
     I caught a momentary glimpse of a sunlit object through
    the gunport: the Keys to the Kingdom. In astronomical
    terms, we and our enemies were almost touching, but the
    human reality was that kilometers separated our vessels.
    The Fed warship was a glint, not a shape.
     A four-man damage-control team covered the crazed
    portion of our hull with a flexible patch. The men moved
    smoothly, despite weightlessness and their hard suits. Glue
    kept the patch in place, though positive internal air pres-
    sure would be a more important factor when we really
    needed it. The refractory fabric didn't provide structural
    strength, but it would block the influx of friction-heated
    atmosphere during a fast reentry.
     Our thrusters roared for twenty seconds to kick us into
    a diverging orbit. The Federation vessel rotated slowly on
    -line cargo hatches
    Guillermo's screen. All the Keys' mid
    were gone.
     Additional gunports swung to bear on us. I expected the
    Feds to fire, but for now they held their peace. Prothero
    r( li
    el
     a zed that we could reload faster than his gunners dared
    to. If the Feds fired their ready guns now, they would have
    no response if we closed to point-blank range and raked
    them again.
     A figure anonymous in his hard suit came from the
    midships compartment and pushed by me with as little   J
    concern as if I'd been the stanchion I held. I thought it
    was someone bringing Piet a message that couldn't be
    trusted to the intercom. Instead the man stooped to view
    the bore of the Long Tom.
     The ceramic was yellow-orange at the breech end. Its
    color faded through red to a gray at the muzzle which only

    




    302           David Drake
    
    wriggled slightly to indicate it was still radiating heat.
     I saw the man's face as he rose: Stampfer, personally
    checking the condition of his guns rather than trusting the
    assessment to men he had trained.
     "Sir," he said over the intercom, "the broadside guns
    are ready any time you want them. The big boy here
    forward, he'll be another three minutes, I'm sorry but
    there it fucking is."
     "Thank you, Mister Stampfer," Piet said. I watched his
    hands engage a preset program on his console. He still
    sounded like he was checking the dinner menu. "We'll hit
    them with four, I think. Load your guns."
     Stampfer swooped through the internal hatch in a sin-,
    gle movement, touching nothing in the crowded forward
    compartment. Our attitude jets burped; I locked my left
    leg to keep from swinging around the stanchion. The
    main thrusters fired another short, hammering pulse. The
    curve our course had drawn across that of the Keys to the
    Kingdom began to reconverge.
     Stampfer was a lucky man to have a job to do. The
    cutting bar trembled vainly in my gauntleted hand.
     The Federation vessel grew on Guillermo's screen.
    Black rectangles where the hatches were missing crossed
    her mid-line like a belt. Apart from that, her appearance
    was identical to that of the ship we'd first engaged: the
    damage we'd done, like the guns that had fired on us, was
    turned away.
                                      Keys
     We were already closer than we'd been when the
    loosed her opening broadside. This time she held her
    fire.
     "Come on," somebody muttered over the
                                                         intercom.
    "Come on, come-"
     Guillermo's left hand depressed a switch, cutting off
    general access to the net. His six digits moved together,
    reconnecting certain channels-Stampfer, Winger, Dole;
    the navigation consoles. I could have done that ...
     "It would make our job easier if Commodore Prothero
    was stupid as well as the brute I'm told he is," Piet
    announced calmly, "but we'll work with the material the,
    Lord has given us. Mister Stampfer, we'll roll at two

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     303
    
              degrees per second. Fire when you bear."
                Thump of the jets, the torque of my armored body trying
              to retain its attitude as my grip on the stanchionforces it
              instead to the ship's rotation 
                Chaos. The 15-cm guns firing amidships and-so sud-
              den it seemed to be a part of the broadside-the smashing
    t         impacts of two, maybe three Federation bolts.
                Residual air within the Oriflamme's hull fluoresced a
              momentary pink. The normal interior lights went out; the
              constant tremble of pumps and drive motors through the
              ship's fabric stilled.
                The navigation consoles were still lighted. Salomon
              lifted himself in his couch to look back. Piet did not.
              His armored fingers touched switches in a precise series,
              looking for the pattern that would restore control.
                The Oriflamme's axial rotation continued, modified by
              the recoil of our broadside guns and the hits the Feds
              had scored. What size guns did the Keys mount: 10-cm?
              Perhaps bigger; that last impact rang through our hull as if
              the Oriflamme had been dropped ten meters to the ground.
                The attitude jets fired, then fired again in a different
              sequence. Piet damped first the planned component of
              our rotation, then brought the plasma-induced yaw under
              control.
                Red emergency lights came on. Because there wasn't
              enough atmosphere to diffuse their illumination normally,
              they merely marked points on the inner hull.
                A man bowled forward from amidships: Stampfer again.
              He snatched a spherical shell from Long Tom's ready
              magazine and settled it into the weapon's breech, using
              his fingertips rather than the alignment tool shaped like a
              long-handled cookie-cutter.
                The Keys to the Kingdom was turning slowly on at
              least two axes. Our broadside had struck in a concentrated
              pattern on the huge vessel's lower gun deck and the deck
              immediately below that. Three of the bolts had burned a
              single glowing crater that could have passed a featherboat
              sideways. The fourth was a close satellite to the merged
              trio. Vapor spurted from it, indicating that we'd holed
              either an air or a water tank.
    
                              ..................

    




    Jw_
    
                     304            David Drake
                       A crewman swung the Long Tom's breech shut and
                     turned the locking wheel. Bracing themselves against the
                     steps cut into the deck for the purpose, the men ran their
                     weapon out. Emergency power wasn't sufficient to oper-
                     ate the hydraulics, but Stampfer's crew knew its job.
                       The master gunner himself crouched beside the individ-
                     ual gunsight set into the Long Tom's trunnion. He had to
                     edge sideways as his men shifted the gun to battery. The
                     fire director must have gone out. At least one of the Fed
                     bolts hit us amidships. We might have lost a gun or even
                     all the broadside guns.
                       A team ran cable sternward from a manhole in the deck
                     behind me. The auxiliary power unit was amidships, in the
                     bulkhead between our fore and aft cargo holds. These men
                     were tapping one of the main thrusters for power.
                       "Steady, Captain!" Stampfer's voice demanded. He
                     sounded like he was trying to pull a planet out of its
                     orbit. Up to now, he'd been speaking on a net limited
                     to his gunners. "Stead-"
     7                 The Long Tom flashed its horrid rainbow glare as it
                     recoiled into the compartment. There was no air to com-
                     press, but the massive cannon drove back with a crushing
                      psychic ambience.
                       The 17-cm bolt pierced the blurred crater the triplet of
                      broadside guns had melted in the Federation vessel's hull.
                      Because the Keys was slowly rotating, the angle of the'
                      impact was different. More important, this bolt released
                      all its energy within the spherical hull instead of on the
                      exterior plating.
                       Silvery vapor geysered from the Keys' lower gun deck:
                      metal heated to gas. It slammed outward at a velocity
                      that chemical explosives couldn't have imparted. In the
                      shock wave tumbled shredded bulkheads, dismounted can-
                      non, and the bodies of personnel stationed on the deck our
       le             guns had ravaged.
                       Our internal lights came on; I felt vibration through the
                      stanchion I held as the great pumps begin to tremble again.
                      Stampfer moved amidships, toward his broadside guns.
                      The Long Tom's bore was a cylinder of hellish white,
                      breech to muzzle.
       N

    




         W,
    
                          THROUGH THE BREACH     305
    
    !d"Holy Jesus preserve us," Salomon said. I looked around.
    ieThe digital information on his screen meant nothing to me,
              but I could understand the third track rising from the
              planetary surface on Piet's display.
              Guillermo split his optical screen, setting the Keys'
              image to the right. On the left half was the Hercules,
              rising to higher orbit to join the battle.
                The freighter's hatch was open. The 5-cm plasma can- "M
              non we'd left the Southerns was mounted on a swivel in
              the center of the hatchway. Our optics and the software
              enhancing them were so good that I could make out at
              least a dozen armored figures within the freighter's hold.
    C
              The Southern refugees didn't have hard suits. The
              Hercules was crewed by survivors from the Keys' landing
              party, and perhaps by prisoners released from 17 Abraxis
              as well.
              The two Federation ships were the jaws of a nutcracker,
              and the Oriflamme was their nut. One hit, even by the
              swivel gun, on our thrusters and we would no longer
              be able to maneuver with the Keys to the Kingdom. One
              hit. .                                          A
              "Piet," Stephen said, "bring us in tight to the Keys. I'll
              take a party aboard and we'll clear her."
              "Prothero's holding his fire," Piet replied. I didn't know
              whether Guillermo had included me in the command chan-
              nel, or if the whole crew was hearing the debate. "He'll
              salvo into our hold if we come within boarding distance.
              That's what he wants!"
              I couldn't command, I couldn't even talk. I trembled in
              my hard suit. There was a red haze over my vision and
              I wanted to kill someone, I wanted to kill more than I'd
              ever before in my life wanted anything ...
               Jesus Christ will you bring us close?" Stephen
               shouted. "Will you have those whoresons peck us to
               death and no answer? Bring us close, damn you, bring
               us close!"
              It wasn't anger in his tone. It was white fluorescent
              rage, and I knew because the same need surged through
              me, ruling me, would I never swing my arm and see faces
              dissolve in blood again?
    
          j W,

    




                    306           David Drake
    
                     "We--2' Piet shouted.
                    The Hercules was on an intersecting but not parallel
                    path to the paired orbits of the Keys and the Oriflamme.
                    Cinpeda had told us-and would tell anybody at gun-
                    point-that the reticle of the Hercules' laser communica-
                    tor wasn't aligned properly. The Federation crew had to
                    make a close approach to the Keys in order to coordinate
                    their aI knew that. Until the Keys to the Kingdom fired all her
                                                      t
                    loaded guns into the Hercules, it didn't occur to me hat
                    Commodore Prothero knew nothing of the sort.
                    The freighter burst into a ball of opalescent vapor. Her
                    own thrusters ruptured, adding their ionized fur to the
                    y
                    directed jolts of the Federation cannon. The Hercules'
    Aill!          light-alloy hull couldn't contain or even slow the cata-
                    clysm.
                    "All personnel except those with immediate gunnery or
                    engineering tasks, assemble in the holds," Piet ordered in a
                    voice as thin as a child's. "Starboard watch to the forward
                    hold, port watch aft. Over."
                    I followed Stephen toward the compartment bulkhead.
                    Because we hadn't yet loaded the 17 Abraxis' cutter to
                    replace the one we'd lost on Riel, there was room in both
                    holds for boarding parties.
                    I noticed that the Long Tom's crew was headed aft with
                    us. They'd apparently interpreted "immediate tasks" t'
                    mean tasks more immediate than the six to eight minute
                    the 17-cm gun would take to cool for the next shot.
    21111i           The midships compartment looked like the remains o
                    a lobster dinner. Fragments of flesh and ceramic armor
    111F            floated in the air. Much of the blood had spread across
                    the bulkheads in viscous blotches. Sufficient droplets,
                    wobbling as they tried to remain spherical, still floated
                    in the compartment to paint the suits of us coming from
                    the bow.
                    The bolt had entered through Number Two gunport at
                    a severe angle, taking an oval bite from the coaming. The
                    main charge had struck Number Three gun, vaporizing the
                    left side of the carriage, much of the gun tube behind the
                    second reinforce, and parts of-

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     307
    
     Three men, maybe five. It was hard to say. There
    were so many body parts drifting in the compartment,
    rebounding from the bulkheads in slow curves, that my
    first reaction was that everyone amidships was dead.
     Rakoscy was working on an armless man in a trans-
    parent cocoon meant as emergency shelter if the ship
    lost its atmosphere. The bubble was a tight fit for two
    men wearing most of their hard suits. Another crewman,
    anonymous in his armor, stood over the cocoon to illumi-
    nate Rakoscy's work with a handlight. There wasn't room
    for an aide within the distended fabric.
     It didn't look to me as if the victim had a prayer. I
    don't suppose Rakoscy could afford to let himself think
    that way, though.
     The forward hold was crowded. Stephen pushed to the
    front. A Fed bolt had struck near the cross-bulkhead. It
    hadn't penetrated, but the upper aft comer of the hatch was
    fractured in a conchoidal pattern. I wondered if Winger
    would be able to bring the APU back on line ...
     Dole, his helmet marked with three fluorescent bars,
    stood beside the hatch controls. Lightbody and Maher
    were at the arms locker beside the bosun. They gave us
    room as they recognized Stephen, Stephen and me.
     "I'll take the line, Mister Dole," Stephen announced,
    reaching for the magnetic grapnel in the bosun's left hand.
    "Gentlemen to the front."
     "Yessir," Dole said, giving up the grapnel. "If you'd
    really rather."
     Lightbody hooked the line onto one of Stephen's equip-
    ment studs. The grapnel had permanent magnets on its
    gripping surface, but unless something went wrong, its
    electromagnets would be powered through the line itself.
     There was also a suction device to grip nonferrous
    surfaces. From the way the Keys to the Kingdom had
    resisted our plasma bolts, there was no doubt that her
    hull was steel, and thick steel besides.
     "I'm next," I said to Lightbody. There was movement in
    the hold, men entering and shifting position. My eyes were
    focused on the back of Stephen's helmet, and I wasn't
    seeing even that.
    
                                  ----- ---- -

    




                   308            David Drake
                     "Sir, will you take a rifle?" a voice said.
                     The intercom worked with only the usual amount of
     oil'
                   static. Neither we nor the Feds were burning thrusters
                   Occasionally an attitude jet fired. For the most part, bein~
                   weightless in a windowless hold had the feeling of being
                   motionless.
                     Someone jogged my left hand. Maher was looking at
    A              me, offering a falling-block rifle. The side lever was delib-
                   erately oversized so that it was easier for a man wearing
                   gauntlets to work.
                     "What?" I said. I shook my head. I wasn't sure he could
                   see me behind the reflection from my faceplate. "No, no.
                   I have to get closer to do any good."
                     I blinked, trying to remember things. "You can give
                   me another bar," I said. "Hang it on my suit opposite
                   the line."
                     I felt clicks against my hard suit. The suit wasn't trap-
    AII:
                   ping me this time. My mind was in a much straiter prison
                   than that of my ceramic armor.
                     "Prepare to board," a voice ordered. Salomon or Guil-
                   lermo, I couldn't tell which; not Piet.
                     Dole turned the control wheel and stepped out of my
                   range of sight as he moved to take his own place on the
                   boarding line. Six of our attitude jets fired together in
                   a ten-second pulse, braking the Oriflamme's momentum
                   with perfect delicacy.
                     The hatch unlocked and began to lower. The fractured
                   comer in front of me flaked off in a slow-motion snow-
                   storm. Shards glittered as their complex surfaces caught
                   the sunlight.
                     The Keys to the Kingdom hung twenty meters away,
                   filling the sky.
                     The Oriflamme wasn't aligned on quite the same hori-
                   zontal axis as the Federation vessel. I was staring straight
                   into the Keys' upper gun deck, but men at the rear of our
                   aft hold would enter through the Feds' centerline if they -low
                   boarded directly.
                     The hatch carnmed itself down with gear-driven cer-
                   tainty. Stephen gathered himself to jump. One of our
       BE          plasma bolts had ripped the Keys' hull open between

    




               THROUGH THE BREAcH     309
    
    two gunports. The compartment beyond was dark, save
    for the glint of armored shadows.
     Fed gunners thrust main battery guns from the ports to
    either side of the large hole. The muzzles glowed red;
    their breeches must be yellow-white. The Fed gunners
    had taken the desperate chance of reloading their weapons
    while the barrels still shimmered with the heat of previous
    discharges; taken the chance and succeeded.
     The bore of the gun trained on me looked large enough
    to swallow a man whole, as the plasma it gouted would
    surely do.
     White light with overtones of green and purple blazed
    through every opening in the Keys' gun deck. The shell
    in the gun aimed at me had cooked off before it could be
    triggered in proper sequence. The deuterium pellet fused
    into helium and a gush of misdirected energy, blowing
    the cannon's stellite breech across its crew and the Fed
    personnel nearby.
     The second cannon fired normally. The bolt hit the
    forward edge of our hatch. Dense ceramic shattered in
    fragments ranging in size from dust motes to glassy
    spearpoints a meter long. One of the latter gutted the
    man to my right.
     I felt the shock through my boots; a film of grit and ions
    slapped my armor. Stephen leaped. I leaped behind him.
     If the Fed gunners had waited another second or two,
    their plasma bolt would have loosed its devastation in the
    packed hold instead of shattering the ramp as it lowered.
    The slug of ions would have killed a dozen of us, may-
    be more. That wouldn't have slowed the survivors, nor
    the men still climbing into the hold to join the board-
    ing party.
     Stephen sailed forward, his body as rigid as a statue. I
    twisted slowly around the line clockwise. In one sense it
    didn't matter, since the Keys wasn't under way. We'd be
    operating without any formal up or down. I couldn't judge
    where I was going to land, though.
     A group of Feds wrestled a multibarreled weapon on
    the Keys' open cargo deck to bear. The human leader was
    in metal armor. His five Molt crewmen wore transparent
                                 - ---------
                                                   14

    




                 310           David Drake
                 helmets and suits of shiny fabric stiffened at intervals by
                 metal rings.
                  A jet of plasma from one of our midships ports struck
                 the gun carriage. The bolt was small by the standards of
                 the broadside guns firing moments before, but it and the
                 Feds' own munitions blew the weapon and crew apart.
                  I'd forgotten about the swivel gun Stampfer took from
                 17 Abraxis. Stampfer hadn't forgotten.
                  Stephen bent as he approached the Keys to the King-
                 dom. He held the grapnel forward in his left hand. His
                 arm compressed, taking the shock.
                  My left boot struck flat on the hull; my right speared
    J            through the crater our guns had torn. Swaths of rust and
                 recrystallized steel vapor overlaid the Keys' plating. The
                 light was too flat to wake colors, but reflection gave the
                 surfaces different textures.
                  I hooked my right foreleg into the hole and unlatched
                 myself from the line. A crewman in metal armor loomed
                 from the darkness within the Fed vessel and fired a shot-
                 gun into my chest.
                  My breastplate survived the shock. The crashing impact
                 blew me back out of the hole. My leg lost its grip, and my
                 flailing arms touched nothing.
                  Piet Ricimer caught my right wrist in his left hand.
                 He fired his carbine into the hole. The Fed shotgunner
                 was pirouetting from his weapon's recoil. His breastplate
                 sparked as the rifle bullet dimpled it. The Fed continued to
                 spin slowly, but the shotgun drifted out of his hands and a
                 smoky trail of blood froze in the vacuum around him.
                  I grabbed the rim of the opening and jerked myself
                 aboard the Keys to the Kingdom again. Icicles of refrozen
                 steel broke off in my grip.
                  The Fed constructors had used light alloys for most of
                 the internal subdivisions. Our fire and the exploding can-
                 non had blown them to tatters, leaving the gun deck open
                 except for throughshafts and a pair of parallel hull-metal
                 bulkheads that supported the upper decks when the vessel
    U1           was on the ground.
                  Scores of bodies drifted in light that flickered through
                 the hull openings. Most of the corpses were Molts. Their

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     311
    
    flexible suits were no protection against plasma or against
    the fragments of bulkhead, weapons, and bodies which the
    blasts turned into shrapnel.
     Figures moved twenty meters from us, near a compan-
    ionway shaft. A bolt from Stephen's flashgun sent one
    corpse toward the far hull, shedding limbs.
     That corpse was a Molt. Riflefire winked, puncturing
    two other Molts whom the laser had lighted. A last Molt     AW
    and an armored human vanished back into the shaft.
     Men sailed toward the companionway from behind me.
    I headed for the freight elevator near the Keys' vertical
    axis. My initial jump was too high. I had to dab along
    the deck's scarred ceiling to redirect myself. There were
    no points for gracefulness today.
     The circular shaft was of hull metal, but the outer
    doors were alloy. Blasts had bowed them into the shaft,
    springing the juncture between the leaves wide enough
    that I could probably have crawled through it as is.
     I thrust my bar into the opening to cut outward and
    down. The blade almost bound, but I jerked it back across
    to complete the cut, doubling the size of the gap.
     It was the first action I'd taken since I'd run from the
    17 Abraxis to the Oriflamme.
     I didn't know where the elevator cage was. If it was
    below me, the bulged doors would keep it from rising. If
    not-I'd take my chances on being able to carve through
    the cage floor before it crushed me into those same jag-
    ged doors.
     I was thinking very clearly. I wasn't sane, but that's a
    different question; and the situation wasn't sane either.
     The dim ambience of the elevator shaft helped me
    when my eyes adapted to it. Actually, the light may not
    have been that dim. Although my faceshield filtered the
    quick succession of plasma bolts, they'd leached the visual
    purple from my retinas.
     I rose three decks, using my left gauntlet on one of the
    elevator cables to control my speed and guide me. The
    sills and paired shaft doors told me where I was. I was
    pretty sure that the bridge was a deck or two higher yet,
    but this was as far as the cargo elevator went.

    




                    312            David Drake
    
                    Holding the upper rim of the shaft opening, I cut an
                    ellipse from the panel's inner sheathing. The pieces drifted
                    away from the bar's last contact, tumbling across the shaft.
                    There was no gravity to make them fall.
                    I should have brought a light ... but I didn't have a
                    hand for it, and I couldn't hold it in my teeth with the
                    helmet on. The present illumination was good enough,
                    because I knew what I was looking for.
                    The shaft doors were locked closed by pins under spring
                    pressure. Electromagnets raised the pins when the cage
                    and safeties were in the proper position. If the power was
                    off-as it seemed to be now-the doors could be unlocked
                    as I did, by pulling the mechanism out from the back.
                    I could have cut through the doors, but that would
                    have warned the Feds on the other side that I was com-
                    ing.
                    I wedged the side of a boot into the door seam, then
                    forced the fingers of my left gauntlet in and levered the
                    valves in opposite directions. Faces looked up in terror
                    as I sailed into what had been a circular lounge giving
                    access to individual suites against the hull.
                    This deck had atmosphere before it flooded past me
                    and down the elevator shaft. Most of the personnel I saw
                    as the light faded to the flatness of direct illumination
                    wore suits, but their helmets were open. Hands groped
                    to slam faceshields closed, instead of swinging weapons
                    toward me.
                      A team of twenty Molts was hauling a carriage gun
                    across the lounge on four drag ropes. The 10-cm cannon
                    was no less massive for being weightless. It slid on with
                    the certainty of a falling boulder when the crewmen
    ti,             dropped their harness.
                    I let the impetus of my leap from the shaft take me
                    into the crowd of aliens trying to close their helmets. I
                    swung my cutting bar with no aim but to hit something,
                    anything.
                    Ripping the Molts' fabric suits was good enough for
                    my purposes. The limbs and gouts of fluid sweeping
                    past me on the last of the deck's atmosphere were a
                    bonus.

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     313
    
     A rifle fired, its yellow powderflash huge for expand-
    ing in near vacuum. I was through the Molts within my
    immediate reach. I pushed off from the plagma cannon
    traveling relentlessly past me.
     I couldn't have executed so complex a weightless
    maneuver if I'd practiced for weeks. Chance or murderer's
    luck took me on a vector to the Fed trying to lever another
    shell into his rifle's chamber as my bar jerked and sparked
    through the neck of his armor.
     I spun and pushed myself toward the next large con-
    centration of the enemy, the group fronting the compan-
    ionway hatches. Some of the humans were screaming
    -behind their faceshields. God knows I gave them reason
    to scream.
     I grabbed a woman with my left gauntlet. She pounded
    the side of her riflebutt on my helmet, then tried to short-
    grip the weapon to shoot me. Her mass anchored my
    sweeping right-hand cut through her fellows.
     The stiffeners in Molt suits were under tension. When
    my blade sheared a ring, the severed ends sprang apart
    and dragged the rip in the fabric wider. A bad design for
    combat ...
     I cut the line of a backpack laser and a corona of high-
    amperage blue sparks shorted through the metal armor
    of the man holding it. The Fed's body should have been
    insulated from the outer shell, but his liner had worn or
    frayed. The suit stiffened as his flesh burned, raising the
    internal pressure to several times normal.
     I was shaking the woman in my left hand, but I didn't
    have time to finish her until I'd taken care of the laser and
    by then she was limp within her articulated armor. She'd
    lost her rifle; a bullet hole starred her faceshield.
     Someone aiming at me, someone shooting at random;
    her own bullet, triggered at the wrong instant. I held her
    close as I scanned for living targets.
     The 10-cm cannon continued its course into the par-
    tition bulkhead surrounding the lounge. This deck was
    given over to suites for powerful passengers and the Keys'
    command staff. Nonetheless, the hull was pierced with
    gunports and a few plasma cannon were placed here for

    




    314           David Drake
    
    emergencies. I'd interrupted a crew shifting an unfired
    weapon across the lounge to a compartment from which
    it bore on the Oriflamme.
     The cannon's stellite muzzle hit the flimsy bulkhead at
    a skew angle and ground another meter forward, driven by
    the inertia of tonnes of metal in the gun and its carriage.
    The wall split at the point of impact and buckled inward
    across all four edges.
     The door popped open like the cork from an over-
    charged bottle. The suite had still been under normal air
    pressure. Two Molts and a female servant spurted into
    the lounge. The servant tried to scream and she shouldn't
    have, though it didn't make more than a minute's dif-
    ference since neither she nor the Molts had breathing
    apparatus.
     The suite's main occupant was a plump woman of fifty,
    wearing a glittering array of jewelry and light-scattering
    fabrics cut too tight for her build. A transparent emergency
    bubble protected her. She stared transfixed at the cloud of
    lung tissue protruding from her servant's mouth.
     Feds edged toward me around the right-hand curve of
    the lounge. There were half a dozen armored humans and
    as many Molts in the group. I flung away the corpse to
    drive me toward them.
     The Feds hadn't identified me in the carnage and tricky
    illumination, but they, noticed the movement. Muzzle
    flashes and the sparks of ricocheting projectiles bright-
    ened the lounge. The corpse spun as several rounds hit her,
    and the bullet that punched through my left shoulderguard
    flipped me ass over teacup.
     My left shoulder was cold. Some of that would be the
    sealant oozing from between the armor's laminae to close
    the hole. I tried to wriggle my fingers. I couldn't tell if
    they moved.
     My figure somersaulted five meters from the Feds. The
    Molts were less awkward in their flexible pressure suits,
    but only a few of them carried firearms. The humans
    aimed for another volley, and I couldn't do a damned
    thing but spin since I wasn't touching anything I could
    push off from.

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     315
    
    d           I hurled my cutting bar at the Fed in a parcel-gilt hard
    h         suit pointing a rifle at me. A flashgun pulse flickered
              through his faceshield and ruptured his skull within. The
              bolt might have reflected harmlessly if it had struck his
              metal armor.
                I unhooked the spare bar from my waist. Feds turned,
              flailing and throwing equipment in order to get behind the
              central shaft again.
                Piet floated in the companionway hatch. His knees
              clasped the coaming to steady him against his car-
              bine's recoil. He stripped a fresh clip into the maga-
              zine. Stephen's reloaded flashgun exploded a Molt who
              came on with a cutting bar when his human officers
              fled.
                I tried to brake myself against the ceiling with my left
              hand. The arm moved, but not properly. My field of
              view spread into a line of infinite length and no height
              or width.
                Consuming fire shrank to no more than normal pain.
              Stephen caught my elbow and pulled me to his side. He'd
              wedged a boot into the plumbing beneath an ornamental
              wall fountain.
                Piet had backed within the companionway. I heard him
              on the intercom, calling, "Oriflammes to Deck Eight! Ori-
              flammes to Deck Eight! We hold the stairhead, but they'll
              regroup in a moment!"
                Each deck of the Keys to the Kingdom was a Faraday
              cage. The metal construction acted as a barrier impene-
              trable to radio propagation. If any Venerians happened to
              be in the companionway shaft-also a metal enclosure-
              they could hear Piet's summons. Perhaps they'd even be
              able to answer it; though not, I thought, in time to make
              a difference.
                "Christ's blood, Jeremy," Stephen said in a tone of
              laughing wonder. "Did you do all this yourself?"
                My vision had wobbled in and out of focus since I tried
              to use my left an-n. Until Stephen spoke, I hadn't really
              looked at anything. The lounge was-
                The lounge was very like what I'd passed through in
              the Oriflamme's midships compartment a lifetime ago.

    




                 316            David Drake
    
                 The bodies floating here were whole, or nearly whole.
                 The head, arm, and torso-with-legs of a Molt had floated
                 back together in a monstrous juxtaposition.
                 There may have been twenty corpses. It was impossible
                 to be sure. I didn't remember killing that many.
                   "I suppose," I said.
                 There was so much blood. I dragged the back of my
                 right gauntlet across my visor. Again, I suppose. I didn't
                 remember doing that before either, though I must have.
                 The ceramic dragged fresh furrows across the brown-red
                 haze that dimmed my sight. I needed a wiping rag.
                 "Well, it's time to do some more," Stephen said. He
                 aimed his flashgun toward a barricade of mattresses float-
                 ing around the right-hand curve of the central column.
                 "That's mine," I said and launched myself toward the
                 Feds.
                 They were coming from, both directions this time. Three
                 Molts wearing breastplates and carrying rifles swept out
                 from the left. The flashgun lit the walls behind me as I
                 slid blade-first toward the bedding from nearby suites.
                 Out of the comer of my eye I caught Piet's figure diving
                 across the lounge. To get an angle from which to shoot,
                 I supposed, but I had enough to occupy me.
                 The Feds had stacked three mattresses like a layer cake
                 on end. The spun-cellulose filling wouldn't stop a bullet,
                 but we couldn't see through it and it would absorb the
                 bolt of a monopulse laser like Stephen's without any fuss
                 or bother.
                 I ripped the mattresses and the pair of Molts pushing
                 them with a deliberately shallow stroke. The bedding
                 didn't affect my cutting blade, but it would've bound my
                 arm if I'd let it.
                 The Molts sprang away. One of them was trying to hold
                 the segments of his plastron together; the other didn't have
                 arms below the second joint.
                 Two human officers in hard suits, and a gunner wearing
                 quilted asbestos with an air helmet, followed the Molts.
    91 1W        They'd been poised for attack over or around their bar-
                 ricade. I came through the middle of it with a backhand
                 stroke and a cloud of severed fiber.

    




                            OPP-
    
               THROUGH THE BREACH     317
    
     The gunner shot at me and missed, though the muzzle
    blast punched the side of my helmet. I stabbed him where
    his collarbone met the breastbone, then cut toward the
    officer on my right. She got her rifle up to block me.
    My edge showered sparks from where the barrel mated
    with the receiver.
     The second officer put the muzzle of his rifle to my
    head. Everything was white light because Piet fired the
    carriage gun wedged into the bulkhead nearby.
     This deck was sealed except for the shafts in the center.
    If the 10-cm cannon had been fired perpendicularly into
    the hull at this range, it would have blown a hole in the
    plating; but the Keys' hull was thick, and the gun's muzzle
    was caught at an acute angle to the curve.
     The slug of ions glanced around the inner surface of
    the hull: expanding, dissipating, and vaporizing everything
    in its immediate path into a dense, silvery shock wave.
    None of the internal bulkheads survived. Those closest to
    the muzzle became a gaseous secondary projectile which
    flattened partitions farther away.
     The cannon wasn't clamped into deck mountings. It
    recoiled freely against the thrust of ions accelerated to
    light speed, tumbling muzzle over cascabel to meet the
    shock wave plasma-driven in the opposite direction.
     The barrel finally came to rest not far from where Piet
    had fired the gun. Bits of the carriage still tumbled in
    complex trajectories. Dents from the tonnes of stellite
    pocked the hull plating.
     Stephen had dodged back into the armored compan-
    ionway. He lost his flashgun and the satchels of spare
    batteries he'd worn, but otherwise he was uninjured.
     Piet survived because he was as far as possible from
    the ricocheting course of the plasma slug. The shock wave
    tumbled him, but the Oriflamme's gunners had taken a
    worse battering and survived-most of them-when a
    similar bolt pierced our hull.
     And I survived. I was out of the direct line of the plasma
    and swathed in mattresses besides. Everything went white;
    then I was drifting free on a deck from which all the
    internal lighting had been scoured. A Venerian focused a

    




                  318            David Drake
    
                  miniflood on me. Piet Ricimer caught me by the ankle and
                  pulled me with him back to the companionway. I hadn't
                  even lost my cutting bar.
                  I can't imagine the Lord wanted me to survive after
                  what I'd done, but I survived.
                  Maybe some Feds in full hard suits were still alive.
                  Bulkheads, furniture, weapons, and bodies-all the matter
                  that had existed on Deck Eight was still there in the form
                  of tumbled debris that could conceal a regiment. If there
                  were any survivors, they were too stunned to call attention
                  to themselves.
                  There were six of us now. Stephen led the way up the
                  helical stairs, holding a cutting bar of Federation manu-
                  facture. Strip lights in the shaft still functioned. The sharp
                  shadows they threw without a scattering atmosphere acted
                  as disruptive camouflage.
                  A fireball burped into the shaft from a lower deck, then
                  vanished as suddenly. Fighting was still going on below.
                  The companionway opened into a circular room on
                  the bridge deck. There were four shafts in all. A bullet
                  ricocheted up one, hit the domed ceiling, and fell back
                  down another as a shimmer of silver.
                  Two inward-opening hatches on opposite sides of the
                  antechamber gave onto the bridge proper. Against the
                  bulkhead were lockers and, at the cardinal points between
                  the hatches, communications consoles with meter-square
                  displays.
                  A sailor pulled open a locker. Emergency stores spilled
                  out: first-aid kits, emergency bubbles, flares.
                  Dole tried a hatch. It was locked from the other side.
                  The left half of the bosun's armor was dull black, as
                  though the surfaces had been sprayed with soot.
                  "Jeremy, can you get us through-" Stephen said, bobb-
                  ing his helmet toward the hatch.
                    "Yes," I said, kneeling. The bulkhead was of hull metal,
                  not duraluminum, but it couldn't be solid and still contain
    oil           the necessary conduits.
                  Wait,"-said Piet. He stepped to a console and toggled
                  it live. The screen brightened with a two-level panorama
    jit           of the circular bridge. Inside-
     mill

    




               THROUGH THE BREACH     319
    
     Four heavily-armed figures sexless in plated armor;
    five human sailors without weapons, armor, or breathing
    apparatus; three Molts, also unprotected and seated at
    navigation consoles; and a startlingly beautiful blonde
    woman in a sweep of fabric patterned like snakeskin,
    with jeweled combs in her hair.
     Piet pressed his faceplate to the console's input micro-
    phone. "Commodore Prothero!" he said, shouting to be
    heard through the jury-rigged vocal pathway. "We're sea]-
    ing this deck. Put down your weapons and surrender.
    There's no need for more people to die."
     With time I could have linked the console to our inter-
    com channel. There wasn't time; and besides, I couldn't
    see very well. I tried to wipe my visor again, but neither
    of my hands moved.
     Dole and two other spacers were closing the compan-
    ionway shafts. The hatches were supposed to rotate out
    of the deck, but long disuse had warped them into their
    housings. The bosun cursed and hammered the lip of a
    panel with his bootheel to free it.
     Prothero would be the squat figure in gilded armor.
    Impervious to laser flux, but Stephen didn't have his
    flashgun any more. Prothero and his three henchmen
    spoke among themselves.
     They must have been using external speakers instead of
    radio. We couldn't hear them through the bulkhead, but
    the blonde screamed and one of the unprotected spacers
    launched himself at Prothero when he heard the plan.
     Prothero clubbed the man aside with a steel forearm.
    "Get us through!" Piet shouted.
     1 drew the tip of my bar down the bulkhead, cutting
    a centimeter deep. The sparkling metal roostertail was
    heated yellow but unable to oxidize in a vacuum.
     Two more Fed spacers grappled with their officers. One
    of Prothero's henchmen blew them clear of his fellows
    with shotgun blasts, and Prothero himself pulled open the
    hatch beside me.
     I rose, thrusting. Prothero fired a weapon with a needle
    bore and a detachable magazine for cartridges the size of
    bananas. The flechette struck the blade of my cutting bar.

    




    320           David Drake
    
    Bar and projectile disintegrated in a white-hot osmium/ce-
    ramic spray.
     I smashed the bar's grip into Prothero's faceshield.
    Red and saffron muzzle flashes shocked the corners of
    my vision. I could hear the shots as muffled drumbeats
    while the atmosphere flooded from the bridge to the open
    antechamber.
     I couldn't hold Prothero with my left hand, but I wrapped
    my legs around his waist and I kept hitting him, even after
    the faceshield collapsed and the mist of blood dissipated
    and nothing was moving but my gauntlet, pumping up and
    down like the blade of a metronome. They say after that
    I tried to inflate an emergency bubble around one of the
    Fed spacers. I couldn't manage that, because my left arm
    didn't work and anyway, it was too late.
     I don't remember that. I don't remember anything but
    the red mist

    




                  LIMBO
    
    A Place Out of Time
    
    I lay at the edge of existence, and the demons wheeled
    above my soul.
     "The controls weren't damaged," said the first demon.
    "Guillermo's interviewing the surviving Molts for a sup-
    port crew. When he's done, I'll set her down on St.
    Lawrence."
     "Rakoscy's on his way over. Stampfer's setting up an
    infirmary for him on Deck Two," said the second demon.
    "They're dumping cargo into space to make room." Then
    he said, "So much blood."
     "What we did was necessary!" said the first demon in
    a voice like trumpets. "If we're to stop tyrants like Pleyal
    and butchers like his Commodore Prothero, then there was
    no choice. When the Oriflamme gets home, she'll bring
    freedom a step closer for the whole universe."
      We're not home yet," said the second demon, though
    he"didn't sound as if he cared.
     "We'll get back," said the first demon. "It's a long run,
    another ninety days or more. But there's nothing between
    here and Betaport to fear, save the will of God."
     "I figured we'd seal the prisoners on Deck Six once
    we've swept it for weapons," the second demon said. "I
    suppose I ought to go take charge, but I'm so tired."
     "Dole has it under control," said the first demon. I felt
    his shadow pass over me. "I wish Rakoscy would get here.
    I'm afraid to take his suit off myself."
     "There's enough treasure on the Oriflamme," said the
    second demon, "to run the Federation government for a
    
                     321
    
                      ........    ...

    




               322            David Drake
    
               decade. Governor Halys will never give it up ... but when
               she doesn't, there'll be all-out war between Venus and the
               Federation."
                 "It will be as the Lord wills," said the first demon.
               My mind drifted from limbo to absolute blackness.
               Sinking into the embracing dark, I knew that I'd been
               listening to Piet and Stephen on the bridge of the ship
               we'd captured. They were no more demons than I was.
               and no less.
                 The black turned red as blood.
    
    JU

    




           BETAPORT, VENUS
    
    122 Days After Landing
    
    "Ah, Cedric," said Councilor Duneen. "Let me introduce
    you to Jeremy Moore. Moore of Rhadicund. Jeremy, this
    is Factor Read, a businessman who understands the value
    of a strong navy."
     I shook hands with a man younger than me. His eyes
    never stopped moving. They flicked over the withered arm
    strapped to my side, then back to my face without even a
    pause. Read's grip was firm.
     "Jeremy will be marrying my sister Melinda this fall,
    as you may have heard," Duneen continued. "I've found
    him a townhouse near ours in the capital."
     "The Moore who. . ." Read said, nodding toward the
    Oriflamme in her storage berth. Though he was shouting,
    I had to watch his lips to be sure of the words. None of
    the heavy machinery was operating today, but the big dock
    rang with laughter and hawkers' calls.
     "Yes, as it happens," I said. I've seen snakes with more
    warmth in their eyes than Read had, but if reports were
    true he was the richest man in the Ishtar Highlands. The
    sort of fellow I'd need to cultivate in my new position as
    aide to Councilor Duneen, but for now ...
     "Councilor," I said, "Factor Read? Pardon me if you
    would, because I see some shipmates."
     Duneen clapped me on the shoulder. "You can do any-
    thing you like here, my boy. You're the stars here today!"
     It was the politic thing for the Councilor to say, since he
    didn't want a row in front of Read and Read's entourage.
    I had the feeling that he meant it, though.
    
                     323

    




             324            David Drake
    
     There were as many folk around Piet and Stephen as
    there were with Read and Duneen, but some of those
    pressing for contact with the General Commander were
    magnates themselves. Mere money couldn't earn the sort
    d
             of fawning adulation Piet had now.
             Though he had the money as well, of course. The
             lowliest member of the Oriflamme's crew had enough
             wealth to amaze, for example, a Betaport ship-chandler
             in a comfortable way of business.
             Folk made way for me. Some of them recognized me-
             "Factor Moore," with a nod; broad, smiling, "Jeremy,
             good to see you again!"-and some did not, only knew
             what they saw on my face, but they all made way.
    j          I came up behind a man named Brush. He controlled
             his niece's estate until she married; an event he was
             determined should not be before its time. A court toady,
             not as young as he wished he was, who pitched schemes
             to the unwary. "You know, Gregg," he said to Stephen,
             "a friend of mine has a business opportunity that might
             be the sort of thing that you want -now that, you know,
             you're back."
             Stephen looked past Brush to me, then back to the
             courtier. "Well, Brush," he said in a bantering voice. "It's
             like this. I'm young, I'm rich, I'm well born. I can do
             absolutely anything that I want to do. So that means-"
             He smiled. Brush stepped back, then bounced forward
             from my chest like a steel ball shuttling between electro-
             magnets.
             -that the thing I've been doing is what I really want."
             Brush vanished into the crowd. I touched Stephen's
             arm. I've never heard anything more stark than his words
             of a moment before.
             Piet waved himself clear with both hands and a broad
             grin, turning to us. He was dressed in a suit of crimson silk
             slashed with a natural fiber from Mantichore. It looked
             like copper or shimmering gold depending on the angle
             of the light.
             Piet touched the miniature oriflamme on my collar.
             "Well enough for now," he said with a grin, "but Duneen
             will be wearing your colors before long, Jeremy."
    
                                                   Am

    




                 Now-
    
               THROUGH THE BREACH     325
    
     "The Councilor could do worse," Stephen said in the
    light tone that made strangers think he was joking.
    "Jeremy has a way of finding routes through unfamiliar
    systems."
     I've heard Stephen's jokes, and they're not the sort of
    thing that others smile at.
     There was a stir at the entrance to the storage dock.
    Governor Halys was entering with over a hundred courti-
    ers afid attendants. Her spot in the assemblage was marked
    by six members of the Governor's Guard in black hard
    suits, though the governor herself was hidden.
     "Won't be long now," Piet said. For a moment we three
    were in a reverie, walled off by memories from the voices
    clamoring around us, at us.
     "Hard to believe the ship made it home," said Stephen.
    "Or that we did either, of course."
     I followed his eyes to the Oriflamme and for the first
    time saw her as she'd become on our voyage. Her bow and
    stem were twisted onto slightly different axes. I remem-
    bered Winger complaining about thruster alignment.
     We hadn't replaced the forward ramp. The hull was
    daubed with a dozen muddy colors, remnants of refur-
    bishing with the materials available on as many worlds.
    We'd had to recoat completely on St. Lawrence after the
    battle, but the russet sand hadn't bonded well to some of
    the earlier patches. On Tres Palmas we'd taken much of
    the stern down to the frames and tried again.
     The Oriflamme leaked. Air through the hull, water from
    two of the reaction-mass tanks. All the living spaces were
    damp during the last three weeks of the voyage. Winger
    was afraid to run the nozzles from 17 Abraxis on more
    than eighty percent thrust, but they were better than the
    replacements we found on Fowler, so we switched them
    back again for the last leg.
     I think Piet must have had the same revelation. "To
    God, all things are possible," he said. "But some aren't-"
     He squeezed us by opposite shoulders.
     "-as probable as others, I agree."
     The Governor's entourage paused while Councilor Du-
    neen and other high dignitaries joined it. When the court

    




    Bit         326            David Drake
    
                resumed its progress, attendants began herding a group
                of bizarrely-dressed, worried-lookin sailors aboard the
                9
                Oriflamme. Money hadn't given them either taste or con-
                fidence in a setting like this one.
                "I think it's unfair that a mob of scruffs should be given
                places and T be refused!" said a slender, perfectly-dressed
                woman, as straight as a rifle barrel and as gray.
                I moved and Stephen grabbed me because he knew what
                I knew, and what the other sixty-odd survivors knew; and
                what nobody else in the universe would ever know.
                "They were good enough to accompany me through
                the Breach, madame," Piet said. "They will accompany
                me now."
                He didn't shout, but he spoke in a tone that cut this
                clamor as it had that of so many battles. Everyone for
                twenty meters heard, and the woman melted away from
                his eyes.
                Piet laughed. "Stephen, Jeremy," he said. "I need to
                take my place, I suppose. See you soon."
                He arrowed through the mob, heading for the Gover-
                nor's Guard.
                Stephen said, "Piet believes that God is aiding us to
                do His will. I don't know what God's will is. But I don't
                suppose what I know matters."
                e oo at me and added, "I thought we might see
                your fianc6e here, Jeremy."
                I shrugged with adrenaline nervousness and smiled.
                "No," I said, "no. I asked Melinda not to come. I don't
                want to connect her-in my mind. With this. I'd as soon
                the Councilor weren't here, but he had to be, of course."
                  I smiled again. The lip muscles didn't work any better
                the second time. I gripped Stephen's shoulder. "Stephen,
                listen," I said. "It happened, it can't ever not have hap-
     Eli        pened now. But it's over. We can go on!"
                "I'm glad it's over for you, Jeremy," Stephen said.
                He plucked gently at my sleeve, filling the fabric he'd
                crumpled when he kept me from breaking a woman's
                neck with my one good hand. "I was afraid for a time
                that you were one of those it wouldn't be over for."
                  He smiled. "I'm responsible for you, you know."

    




                          THROUGH THE BREACH     327
    
              I blinked so that I wouldn't cry. "Let's get aboard," I
              said loudly, turning toward the ship.
              The crowd cheered as it parted to let us board the
              Oriflamme. There in a few minutes we would watch the
              governor's investiture of a potter's whelp from Bahama
              District as Factor Ricimer of Porcelain.
    
    S
    I'
    
    t

    




    fill

    




                         __4
    
                            0
    
     David Drakes many previous books in-
    clude Surface Action, Birds of Prey, and
    the Northworld series-not to overlook
    his collaborations with Janet Morris and
    S. M.' Stirling, his contributions to the
    Thieves' World' universe, and to The Fleet
    and Battlestation series. He is probably
    best known for his novel Hammer's Slam-
    mers, one of the classics of military
    science fiction, and the acclaimed 1994
    novel, Igniting the Reaches.
     Widely praised for his knowledge and
    understanding of military operations,
    Drake is a veteran of the only indepen-
    dent armored regiment assigned to Viet-
    nam. Equally at home in fantasy or
    science fiction, an enthusiastic student of
    ancient history and classical literature,
    David Drake is one of today's most popu-
    lar and versatile writers. He lives in North
    Carolina, where he walks his dogs and
    feeds sunflower seeds to the birds.
    
                       Jacket design by DAVID S. RHEINHARDT
                         Jacket painting by BRUCE JENSEN
                                Copyright OP 1995
    
                              AN ACE SCIENCE FICTION
                                 AND FANTASY BOOK
                           The Berkley Publishing Group
                                200 Madison Avenue
                                New York, NY 10016
                                       4/95
                                     
    
    




                  NEWCASTLE REGION LIBRARY
    
                   3 2300 00329181 8
                     L.f LA v i LA U I U &V
    
       "One of the most gifted users of military raw material at work
              today in science fiction. "
                   -Chicago Sun-Times
    
             "One of those rare authors who seem capable of switching
            from one mode of writing to another, hard science to near
         future political thriller to high fantasy with a smooth meshing
                                    of gears."
                            -Science Fiction Chronicle
    
                             Praise for David Drake's
                              Igniting the Reaches:
  'A cleverly set up, Poul Anderson-style reprise of the early Elizabethan
          period, when 'tradd and 'piracy' were synonymous...
          Enormously entertaining!"
                                   -Detroit News
      "Drake uses military language fluently to create vivid combat scenes."
                                -Publishers Weekly
    "Hard-hitting adventure ... a tale that will appeal to fans of military SF."
                                 -Library Journal
    
                                5 19 9 5 >
    
                  9 780441 001712
    
                   ISBN 0-441-001?1-8