Part 24 (1/2)

Perhaps, he thought, that had been a mercy.

More voices, this time with blurry faces. Human men and women; s.h.i.+gar didn't recognize any of them. He made out some words, though, including the hexes' furious catch-cry. It was being chanted by a group of people, including a woman of middle years, with short ash-blond hair and intelligent eyes. Her hand was raised above her head. She was shaking her fist at the sky-but it wasn't a sky at all. It was a roof. She was in a large s.p.a.ce with a tubular tank at its center, filled with red.

s.h.i.+gar didn't fight the vision. He just told it: I want to be inside her head.

And he was. He was enfolded by a turbulent flow of thoughts and sensory impressions. He tumbled, slightly in awe of how easy it had been. Nothing like this had ever happened before. Perhaps there was something special about her, this Lema Xandret.

For it was indeed her. He was buffeted by her rage. He found strength in her determination to live unfettered. He grew weary at the understanding that all things must eventually be compromised, or die. He felt satisfaction at all her achievements. He wept at the mingled love and loss of a child.

s.h.i.+gar looked through her eyes at the world she had adopted for her own, and felt pride tinged with worry, and an intense desire for revenge.

We do not recognize your authority!

And there it was, at last. Everything he had been looking for: the dense, metallic world, rich with change and vigor, where no one would have looked for it in a million years.

His eyes snapped open. He didn't feel the pain of the cuts to his palms. He had forgotten the various aches and pains of his body, earned the hard way on Hutta. He felt only a degree of grat.i.tude that he had never experienced before, blended with a powerful sense of achievement.

Climbing to his feet, he hurried to the crew quarters. Larin was already fast asleep. He thought about waking her to tell her the news but reined in the impulse. She deserved her rest. He could thank her later.

Ula and Jet were in the c.o.c.kpit. He clambered up the ladder and burst into their conversation.

”I know where it is!”

”The world?” asked Ula, looking up in surprise.

”Yes. I found it!”

”Good for you, mate, ” said Jet. ”Got some coordinates for me?”

”Not exactly, ” s.h.i.+gar said, ”but I can describe it to you. I think it'll be fairly easy to pin down. ”

”Well, great. I'm very tired of the view here. Take a seat and we'll get started. ”

s.h.i.+gar felt his sense of triumph ebb slightly at the thought of what lay ahead of them.

”What?” asked Ula, staring at his face. ”Is there a problem?”

”You could say that. ”

Their faces fell in unison as he told them.

Finding the planet was one thing.

Getting there would be another entirely.

CHAPTER 26.

Specialist Pedisic looked up as Ax walked into the quarantine bay. The s.p.a.ce had been transformed. Large pieces of equipment hovered over the dissection table, connected by thick cables to the bulk cruiser's main processor arrays. The remains of the hex had been splayed out like a delicate tapestry, revealing intricate details of its structure and function. The cell walls that made it robust as well as lightweight were threaded with s.h.i.+ning metal, suggesting that they performed key functions as well as providing internal support. She saw several fist-sized globes like round, silver eggs nestling against more familiar components. The legs had been removed entirely from complex-looking joints and stacked like metal antlers in a transparisteel jar.

”I have much to report, sir, ” the specialist said. She had rolled her sleeves up, and her arms were smeared with brown-black goo up to her elbows.

”Then do so. ” Ax stood with her hands on her hips at one end of the table. She had been generous. The specialist had had more than an hour. If Darth Chratis had not been so conversational in his discipline, Ax would have come back much sooner.

”Well, the first thing I can tell you is that this thing, whatever it is, isn't finished. ” Pedisic selected a slender-tipped tool from the many surrounding her work s.p.a.ce and pointed as she talked. ”See here: its neuro-web was interrupted before the completion of a full suite of reflex a.n.a.logues. And here: there's a full array of senses about to come online down this dorsal region, but it's totally unconnected to the central computer. The reporting system has only grown to here and has yet to join the two. ”

”You mean it was released too early, before it was ready?”

”There's evidence to suggest that it was continuing to develop after it left the factory that built it. I suggest this thing would have finished itself, given time. ”

Ax remembered how ferociously the thing had fought. And it hadn't even been complete! ”What would the final form have been like?”

”It's impossible to say. The main data bank doesn't contain a single template. Instead there are many, with lots of transitional forms. And there's a biological component, too, that I find very puzzling. This brown stuff must perform some function, otherwise it wouldn't be present in such quant.i.ties. Perhaps it acts as a randomizing agent, encouraging it to adapt more fluidly. It's hard to a.n.a.lyze, though, because it's been so severely cooked. ”

She looked at Ax reproachfully, as though blaming her for the condition of the sample. In this case, Ax was completely innocent. Either the Jedi or the Mandalorian had done that job for her.

And either way, it was irrelevant.

”So you've accessed the brain, then. ”

”Yes. Just this minute. ”

”How smart was it? Could it fly a s.h.i.+p, for instance?”

”Not likely, my lord, but if it needed to, it could change itself so it could. Like birds grow new parts of their brains in spring to learn new songs. It's just a matter of...”

Ax waved her silent. ”Is the data encoded?”

”Naturally, but the cipher is based on an Imperial system that went out of use fifteen years ago. ”

When Lema Xandret fled the Empire, Ax remembered.

”I'll crack it soon. Don't worry, my lord. The fact that the thing was incomplete actually made getting in easier. All I have to do is map the architecture and find my way around... ”

Ax didn't pay attention to the specifics. And she hadn't been aware that she'd looked worried. If this specialist couldn't do the job, she'd just get another.

”All I want to know is where this thing came from, ” she said. ”And I want to know now. ”

Specialist Pedisic nodded. ”Yes, my lord. With your permission, I'll resume my examination. ”

Ax indicated with a flick of one index finger that the specialist should return to work.

While Ax waited, she paced the crowded s.p.a.ce, reading raw data and coming to her own conclusions. Nothing she saw contradicted the specialist's opinions, and there was much more to be absorbed than could have been crammed into that short conversation. The globes contained the hex's primary processors, where sensory data converged, was exchanged, and provoked various environmental responses. The weapons on each hand were little different in principle from standard blaster technology, but remarkably miniaturized and integrated into a limb capable of gripping and supporting weight as well. This hex had no camouflage system to a.n.a.lyze, and unfortunately the electromirror defense was too badly damaged to reverse-engineer. Whole sections of its body had been fried to ash.