Part 25 (1/2)

”Which room's mine?” he asked Beejay.

”Yours is the last door facing the corridor. Not much in it yet, but the shower water should still be hot. We haven't got everything set up,” she said, ”what with other priorities, but the bed's good. We're to get proper furniture later and you can choose. . . . Wait! Look at that! Worth a few minutes' watching,” she added, pointing to the western-facing window as Iwo's sun set, gilding the evening clouds with gold and orange that seemed to linger long after the primary was finally out of sight.

”See what you mean,” Vagrian said appreciatively. Then he nodded her a good night as he looked down the corridor for his door. He 'ported his duffels in that direction.

Bare the accommodation was, with a desk, a chair, a desk lamp in his ”lounge.” A door set in the west wall led into a bedroom, golden in the last of the dusky light, furnished with a wide bed that had a double sleeping bag on it. There was a wide bench. Sliding panels covered the closet s.p.a.ce on one side of the door, and to his left there were rough shelves and in the south wall another door, which opened into a well-equipped bathroom.

Someone got priorities right. Towels hung on a rack and a variety of toiletries were lined up on the s.p.a.ce by the handbasin. As he stripped, he crossed to the bed and tested it. Yes, someone knew the priorities: the bed had some sort of soft layer and was firm beneath, fust right! He walked naked to his bathroom, 'porting shut the doors he hadn't bothered to close behind him. The shower stall was also a surprise: big enough for two. The water, while warm, was more hot than cool and there was enough of it for him to get a good scrub.

When he left the bathroom, the air had already cooled in the bedroom. A light on the headboard had come on automatically, so he made his way quickly to the sleeping bag, which he would doubtless be glad of if the night got much cooler, and lay down. He turned on his stomach and applied relaxing techniques to a mind spinning with work and myriad impressions. His last thought was that he had not had time to do something to Laria's favorite mare before he'd left Iota. Then he remembered that she was also Petra's mount and he owed the Iota Lyons. Maybe he even owed Laria. His own Tower . . . Vagrian Beliakin slept the sleep of the just.

The report of the onset of war on Hiver-occupied world Xh-33 reached Captain Etienne Osullivan on the Asimov while he was on the bridge.

”Emergency code from the Xh-33 Moon Base, sir,” the communications officer said, swinging her chair round to face him.

”Put it up.”

There was the usual time lag due to the distance between tht Asimov and the Xh-33 system.

”Captain Osullivan, Wisla Makako here.” The screen showed the Oriental features of the facility's commander. ”All h.e.l.l's breaking loose down there on the Main Continent. Queens leading armies of really Th Toner nid the Him 3 9 big . . .” The screen now switched to the surface carnage with queens leading some of the biggest creatures, which Osullivan recognized as augmented ”worker” types from his captaincy of the Genesee. ”. . . dangerous looking types.”

”Is the situation more serious than your reports of earlier skirmishes over field boundaries?” Osullivan asked, his eyes intent on the scene. During the pause between query and answer, the captain sent quick orders. ”Prime Perry, on the bridge right now!” Osullivan had never given the T-l such a direct order, in fact didn't even realize he hadn't couched it as tactfully as he usually did. Perry 'ported beside him and Osullivan had only to point to the screen's grim scene to explain the summons as he continued firing off orders. ”Helm, set an immediate course for the Xh-33 system. Top speed. Fortunately we're not spatially that far from it. Send a signal to Iwojima that they're on their own for the next couple of days. We'll be back in orbit as soon as we've a.s.sessed the situation. Perry, the Moon Base has only a T-3 kinetic.”

Makako was replying: ”This seerns to involve all the queens on the Main Continent, sir, and I wouldn't call it a 'skirmish.' I'd call it an all-out war. The carnage is unbelievable!” Her wide-eyed expression reinforced her dismay.

”Has she said what started that?” Perry demanded, eyes glued to the scene. ”Is the Moon Base in any danger?”

Osullivan shook his head as the Asimov could be felt surging forward in star-speckled s.p.a.ce until the stars blurred.

”There's no way the queens can reach the Moon Base. Remember? We destroyed their spheres and scouts. Makako has reported that they've reopened their mines, but ore must be hard to find. New shafts have been sent down. On all the continents, by the way.”

”There must be far too many queens, sir,” Makako was reporting now. ”I've counted forty separate battlefields and several queens contesting ground in one.”

”Nothing you can do about it, Commander,” Osullivan said by way of rea.s.surance, and then turned to Perry. ”Prime, please make contact with Earth Prime whether he's at Blundell or Callisto. He needs to know about this. We really do need a telepath at every installation, even if he or she only receives.” The last was said in a low murmur of regret.

”There's never enough to go round, sir. . . . Lieutenant Balidovino.” Perry turned toward the duty engineer. ”I'll need to draw on the generators for this distance.”

”As you need, sir,” Balidovino replied, fingers poised on the pressure plates of his engineer panel.

”Yeoman, my compliments to Commander Voorhees, and I'd like him on the bridge as soon as possible,” Osulhvan added, rubbing his jaw without moving his eyes from the battle.

”Yes, doubtless they'll want an evaluation from the science officer,” Perry said, crossing his arms on his chest. Then he closed his eyes as he telepathically leaped the long distance to Earth.

Quite imposing in that att.i.tude, Osullivan thought, surprised at his own observation. Perry was no more powerfully built than any of the other Primes Osullivan had met, but there was an aura about the dark-haired, sharp-featured Betelgeusian that made him appear much bigger and ineluctably more powerful.

”My apologies, Earth Prime.” Perry spoke aloud as well as telepathically so that Osullivan knew what was said. Replies would come back, through his mouth but in Jeffs voice. ”But a situation has developed on Xh-33 that you should see through my eyes.” Perry opened his. There was a slight pause, and then Perry's voice deepened, closer to Raven's tone. ”So that's what happens when queens do not migrate. An awesome sight. Hmmm, and these creatures are much larger than those that were found by the Was.h.i.+ngton on Arcadia. Yet that is a much older colony and hasn't yet overburdened its planet's resources. A puzzle, what? Captain Osullivan?” Perry turned to Osullivan with a slight grin, encouraging response.

Lieutenant Commander Jan Voorhees came striding onto the bridge and stopped dead when he saw what was on the main screen, his eyes widening.

”A puzzle indeed . ..” Osullivan waved a helpless hand at the scene and the hideous, unceasing ma.s.sacre, with broken limbs and scattered parts oozing viscous internal liquid.

”This is one time”-Raven's voice came through Perry's mouth- ”when we allow the conflict to proceed. Ask Makako to keep recording. I'm calling up our own xenbees to 'see' this through me.”

”Sir,” Voorhees murmured to the captain, ”we should get pheromone readings . . . once they've stopped fighting. That could be vital information.”

”Quite right, Mr. Voorhees,” Jeff Raven's voice replied, startling the man. Earth Prime chuckled through his link to Perry. ”However, even if Humans have been able to move among Hivers without being noticed, I recommend hazmat gear and full masks.”

”Of course, sir, since we don't know what effect such violent pheromones, even poisonous gases from all those visceral parts, could have on Humans,” Voorhees said, running a nervous hand through thinning blond hair. ”And if the prevailing winds happen to carry the stink to the other continents . . . well, I hate to speculate what reaction would occur.”

”Good point,” Jeff Raven said. ”I'll mention that to our experts. We have, by the way, discovered a T-10 in the perfumery business who has volunteered to lend us his nose in identifying the smells. He's supposed to be good at more than the flowery stuff.” Perry's voice dutifully echoed the amus.e.m.e.nt in Jeff Raven's tone, and one of Perry's eyebrows raised in surprise. ”My xenbees are rubbing their hands in an excess of delight to know we can get samples of the dominant pheromones. Preferably as soon as possible after the battles end.”

”I'll have a team standing by either from here or from the Moon Base, but I request permission to lead it.” Voorhees deferentially looked at his captain, who nodded permission. Then Voorhees turned to Perry. ”Is that possible, Prime?” Perry nodded. ”Respond in your own time, Commander Makako.”

The response lag was shortening as the powerful Asimov sped toward the Xh-33's system.

”Sir,” Makako replied, shaking her head, ”I would hate such . . .

butchery ... to extend to the other continents. Right now the weather system is mild with moderate winds blowing east to the sea. My Met officer says there are rain clouds over the intervening ocean. According to him, we might have as much as thirty-six hours before those winds reach the next landma.s.s. We'll keep a strict eye on it. Continent Two is nightside and doesn't show any disturbance . . .” Her voice trailed off briefly.

”Have you hazmat gear on the base?”

Another pause. ”Yes sir, as well as the crew who placed the remotes in the queens' collectives. I've put them on standby.”

”Very good, Commander. Inform us when ... the fighting is over.”

”Commander Makako, Blundell wants you to copy whatever is already recorded and tube it,” Perry said with [effs voice. ”I'll pick it up myself from your base in fifteen minutes from my mark. . . .Mark! We need to have some idea of how they fight.”

”Yes sir,” Makako said, looking toward Perry and rather startled to hear another voice issuing from his mouth. ”I'm ordering a copy and it'll be in a message tube at lock 482, sir, in fifteen minutes.”

”Thank you, Commander Makako. Let's hope we can stop the . . .”

”Butchery? Slaughter? Genocide?” Perry supplied synonyms in his own voice without a trace of emotion. Then once more Jeff Raven spoke through the link. ”The queens demonstrate a curious killing rage. Similar to old berserkers. My regards to you, Captain Osullivan.” As soon as those words were out of Perry's mouth, he altered his stance and nodded to the captain to indicate that he was no longer in contact with the Earth Prime. The generators whined down to a lower level.

”Berserkers?” Osullivan said, turning to Perry. ”Yes, an apt term. Organize that landing party, will you, Mr. Voorhees? We want to be ready. Pheromones? How interesting.”

Voorhees saluted and immediately left the bridge to organize his team.

Perry stepped slightly closer to the captain's chair and said softly, ”One thing is certain, sir. Those records may have a salutary effect on those who criticized Admiral As.h.i.+ant's destruction of the spheres.”

”I should certainly hope some good comes of that.” Osullivan waved his hand in the general direction of Xh-33. Then his upper body s.h.i.+vered in a sudden convulsive shake. ”Thank you, Prime, for your a.s.sistance.”

”You're welcome, sir.” Perry exited through the door of the short pa.s.sage from the bridge to the Talents' lounge.

He went immediately to the alcove that housed the lounge's refreshment facility and poured a hefty gla.s.s of the strongest brandy of a very respectable selection of spirits Sod wines. He drank it in one gulp.

”Perry?” his wife, Adela, asked sleepily, from the door of their bedroom. ”What was that all about? Etienne's never done that before.”

”A question for Earth Prime that was urgent. Want a drink?” He held up the bottle.

She frowned prettily. ”No, I can go right back to sleep if you're beside me.” She was a T-3 kinetic, able to 'path when in contact with someone, and then only someone she knew well.