Part 36 (1/2)

”Sorry, I'm sorry Simeon, I didn't mean to hurtcha, honest!”

”You didn't.” A bugle fanfare blew through the lounge, and segued into a Sou/a march, then the Ganymede Harp Variations.

”You've bolixed his oxygen feeds,” Channa said frantically, groping forwards.

”It's thecavabyl Ta-ta-tata-tara tat-teraaaa!”

”Simeon!”

”Has he gon' an* lost it?”

Aragiz t'Varak lolled, half-dreaming. A very pleasant daydream. He was back on homeworld, a territorial lord like the old recordings, and somehow Belazir t'Marid was there. Aragiz had just defeated him the old way, spectacular battles amid spouting radioactive geysers. Blasting into the stronghold with primitive fission weapons, hand-shaped plutonium triggered by black powder. Belazir groveled, begging mercy for his line, but they were led out and slaughtered before his eyes. Aragiz was just getting into the interesting post-victory part when the communications officer interrupted him.

”Detection ... Outer ring satellites. s.h.i.+p signatures, inbound.”

The bridge of the Age of Darkness came alert. Everyone had been waiting, nothing more to do until they undocked next cycle and escorted the transports back to rendezvous. He had brought everyone in, ready for departure. Now- ”Another pullet for the plucking,” Aragiz said lazily. He felt tired. Perhaps from that sc.u.mvermin boy, what was his name, Juke. A nice active squealer, not like that unpleasant one who'd gone into fits after a single kiss, back in the corridors. He'd kicked that one aside with a shudder. Not for a moment did he think that he would catch any disease, but it had been an unpleasant sight ”Action stations.” The soft chimes rang, eerie and ironic in their gentle harmony. ”Give me a reading, and relay to flotilla command and station-side.”

The sensor officer consulted the machine. ”Very large ma.s.s, Great Lord. Seventy to eighty kilotons.”

”Probably an ore carrier,” the captain said. ”Useful, if not dramatic ” The Clan could always use - ”Link is down,” Communications said.

”Again?” Aragiz barked. He couldn't decouple from the station without clearance. That Bad Seed chugrut Belazir had been fairly dear about that. Also, running an intercept on an incoming freighter could be tricky. And his head hurt, as if he'd been knocked unconscious and recovered...

”Check climate control,” he said. It was hoi. He was sweating, and he rarely did, even in combat practice at Kolnar-noon temperature.

”Yes, Great-wehavelostcommw^thfstation^sidevxitch.'* ”Wto?”Aragizsatboltupright. ”When?”

”Some time ago. We have been getting repeats of the last routine bailings.”

TTiat made his stomach lurch, and suddenly he bent over the arm and spewed.

”Fool!” he screamed. ”Alarm -” He choked on bile. What is happening tome? He tried to rise, fell back, thrashed, and slipped over the arm of the commander's couch into the spilled vomit Shouts of alarm rose from the crew. The groundlink screens flickered. One cleared to show a Kolnari face being pounded against the pickup.

The executive officer looked down at the jerking form of the captain, and took command.

”Remaining crew, prepare for boarding action. Suit up and -”

”Cancel that,” a gravelly voice said.

The officer blinked, and almost shouted in grat.i.tude. Pol t'Veng trotted in, her combat armor scored and still smoking in places, like that of the others behind her Still, she was t'Veng - ”Lord Captain,” he began. There was a careful protocol about subclan s.h.i.+p territories.

She cut him off. ”Uprising. Couldn't make the Shark. stationer electronics scrambled, hostile-controlled. Emergency. Dump your system and call up the backup.”

Pol glared at him, sparing the time until he submitted and saluted. Then she sank into the command couch. Inwardly, she sighed. Every time the joss seemed to throw the Clan a little luck, they were knocked back to a handful of homeless fugitives again. Every system on the s.h.i.+p dipped, then firmed, as the duplicate backup computers came on-line. A glance at the captain's readouts gave her the situation.

”Monitor the incoming,” she said.

”Lord captain, it is a freighter. Should we not be a.s.sisting in getting the station back in the fist?”

”Shut up. You a.s.sumed it was a freighter. Check that reading again. Now!” Her voice was a bellow, its natural volume increased by the suit's system to an ear shattering volume.

”Reading... Anomalous readings, lord.”

”Let me see.” He keyed over to her the feeds, unfiltered data. ”Youngfool, that's notanomalous-that's Fleetl”

She paused a second to free a sidearm and pump a pulse of energy into Aragiz's thras.h.i.+ng body. His squealing was distracting.

”Emergency decouple,” she said. Besides, she had wanted to kill him for years. This one should have been culled before he walked.

”We are loading fuel!”

”Move.”

He did. His hand swept the controls, and the Age of Darkness shuddered as explosive charges blasted it loose from the SSS-900-C's north docking tube. Fire blossomed out of the dockway after them, along with steam and pieces of cargo and humans. Kolnari as well as sc.u.mvermin, she supposed. ^ ”Broadcast, override, High Clan seek Refuge, High Clan seek Refuge,” she snapped. ”Put it on loop, open Clan frequency.”

The officer's eyes flared wide. That was die command to break, run and scatter, to approach the preset rendezvous points only years later and with maximum caution. Those points were in no file, no hedron, only in living brains and only a few of those. The final desperation measure to protect the Divine Seed, that it might grow again.

”Heart Crusher. Chindik t'Marid.”

”Put it through.”

”Lord Pol, you are receiving what I do?”

”Yes.”

”Data coming in,” the sensor chief said.

Pol t'Veng looked down again. The Fleet wars.h.i.+ps were coming up out of subs.p.a.ce like tungior broaching in the seas of Kolnar; huge ma.s.ses, neutrino signatures of enormous powerplants, ripping through into the fabric of reality.

”Command frequency broadcast! Identifying following,” she said. ”Fleet units emerging coordinates follow, probables: destroyers, six - correction, six destroyers plus three light, one heavy cruiser and possible ... Confirmed, three a.s.sault carriers. All Clan s.h.i.+ps, report status. Lord t'Marid, report status.”

”We coordinate?” Chind.i.c.k asked.

”No. You have not the insystem boost. Use the station for cover as long as you can. They will not endanger it.”

”Repeat?”

”Sc.u.mvermin psychology. Go. Lord t'Marid, status.”

T Marid here,” the familiar voice said, harsher than she could remember. ”Bride decoupling. We can cover.”

”No, with respect Yours is the more valuable Seed.” Especially since this skip has t'Varak's sweepings as crew. ”Bride, Shark and Strangier should cover the transports.”

A pause. ”Agreed. Yfciit for us with the Ancestors, Pol t'Veng.” t ”Guard our Seed and Clan, Belazir I'Marid,” she replied.

Then her attention went back to the work at hand. A Central Worlds s.p.a.ce Navy medium attack group bore down on them, with a dozen times the firepower the High Clan had available here and now, given the general pathetic botchup. About equal to the whole current Clan armada, give or take a dozen factors. Pol had fought the Fleet before and had a healthy respect for their capabilities. They were dangerous sc.u.mvermin.

”Helm,” she went on. ”Set course. Coordinates follow.” She had plugged the suit's leads into the couch. ”Maximum boost”

”Lord Captain,” the executive officer said. ”That is a course/or the enemy fleet. What are we to do there?” With one undercrewed frigate, went without saying.