Alternate Realities (29 page)

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Authors: C. J. Cherryh

BOOK: Alternate Realities
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In station central, the supervisor roused out the stationmaster by intercom. The thready voice from
John Liles
went on and on, the speaker having tried to jam all the information he could into all the time he had, a little under three hours ago. Longscan techs in Endeavor Central were taking the hours-old course of the incoming vessels and making projections on the master screen, lines colored by degree of probability, along with reckonings of present position and courses of all the ships and objects everywhere in the system. Longscan was supposed to work because human logic and human body/human stress capacities were calculable, given original position, velocity, situation, ship class, and heading.
But one of those ships out there was another matter.
And
John Liles
was not dumping velocity, was hurtling in toward the station on the tightest possible bend, the exact tightness of which had to do with how that ship was rigged inside, and what its capacity, load, and capabilities were. Computers were hunting such details frantically as longscan demanded data. The projections were cone-shaped flares of color, as yet unrefined. Com was ordering some small prospectors to head their ships nadir at once because they lay within those cones.
But those longscan projections suddenly revised themselves into a second hindcast, that those miners had started moving nadir on their own initiative the moment they picked up
John Liles
’ distress call the better part of three hours ago. Data began to confirm that hypothesis, communication coming in from
SSEIS I Ajax
, which was now a fraction nadir of original projection.
Lindy
had run early in those three hours, such as
Lindy
could ... dumped the sling and spent all she had, trying to gather velocity. Rafe plotted frantically, trying to hold a line which used the inertia they had and still would not take them into the collision hazard of the deep belt if they had to overspend. Jillan ran counterchecks on the figures and Paul was set at com, keeping a steady flow of
John Liles
’ transmission.
If
Lindy
overspent and had nothing left for braking, if they survived the belt, there were three ships which might match them and snag them down before they passed out of the system and died adrift ... if they did not hit a rock their weak directionals could not avoid ... if the station itself survived what was coming in at them. They could all die here. Everyone. There were two military ships at Endeavor Station and
Lindy
had no hope of help from them: the military’s priority in this situation was not to come after some minuscule dying miner, but to run, warning other stars so Paul said, who had served in Fargone militia, and they had no doubt of it. It was a question of priorities, and
Lindy
was no one’s priority but their own.
“How are we doing?” Rafe asked his sister, who had her eyes on other readouts. The curves were all but touching on the comp screen, one promising them collision, and one offering escape.
“Got a chance,” Jillan said, “if that merchanter gives us just a hair.”
Paul was transmitting, calmly, advising
John Liles
they were in its path. On the E-channel,
Lindy
’s, autowarning screamed collision alert: the wave of that message should have reached
John Liles
by now.
“Rafe,” Jillan said, “recommend you take all the margin. Now.”
“Right.” Rafe asked no questions, having too much input from the boards to do anything but take it as he was told. He squeezed out the last safety margin they had before overspending, shut down on the mark, watching the computer replot the curves. In one ear, Paul was quietly, rationally advising
John Liles
that they were ten minutes from impact; in the other ear came the com flow from
John Liles
itself, babble which still pleaded with station, wanting help, advising station that they were innocent of provocation toward the bogey. “Instruction,”
John Liles
begged again and again, ignoring communications from others. It was a tape playing. Possibly their medical emergency or their attention to the bogey behind them took all their wits.
“Come
on
,” Rafe muttered, flashing their docking floods in the distress code, into the diminishing interval of their light-speed message impacting the 3/4 C time-frame of
John Liles
’ Doppler receivers. He was not panicked. They were all too busy for panic. The calculations flashed tighter and tighter.
“We’ve got to destruct,” Paul said at last in a thin, strained voice. “Three of us—a thousand on that ship—O God, we’ve got to do it—”
Sudden static disrupted all their scan and com, blinding them.
“She’s dumping,”
Jillan yelled.
John Liles
had cycled in the generation vanes, shedding velocity in pulses. They were getting the wash, like a storm passing, with a flaring of every alarm in the ship. It dissipated.
“We’re all right,”
Paul yelled prematurely. In the next instant scan cleared and showed them a vast shape coming dead on. Rafe froze, braced, frail human reaction against what impact was coming at them at a mind-bending 1/10 C.
It dumped speed again, another storm of blackout. Rafe moved, trembled in the wake of it, fired directionals to correct a yaw that had added itself to their motion. Scan cleared again.
“Clear that,” Rafe said. “Scan’s fouled.” The blip showed itself larger than
Ajax
, large as infant Endeavor Station itself.
“No,” Paul said.
“Rafe, that’s not the merchanter.”
“Vid,” Rafe said. Paul was already flicking switches. The camera swept, a blur of stars, onscreen. It targeted, swung back, locked.
The ship in view was like nothing human-built, a disc cradled in a frame warted with bubbles of no sensible geometry, in massive extrusions on frame and disc like some bizarre cratering from within. The generation vanes, if that was what those projections were, stretched about it in a tangle of webbing as if some mad spider had been at work, veiling that toadish lump in gossamer. Lightnings flickered multicolor in the webs, and reflected off the warted body, a repeated sequence of pulses.
It had exited C and actually gone negative, so that their relative speeds were a narrowing slow drift.
“Twenty meters-second,” Jillan read the difference. “Plus ten, plus five-five, plus five-seven K.”
There were no maneuvering options.
Lindy
was already at the edge of her safety reserve, and a ship which could shift course and stop like that—could overhaul them with the merest twitch of an effort. Rafe flexed his fingers on the main throttle and let it go.
“Maybe it’s curious,” Jillan said under her breath. “
Liles
never said it fired.”
“Got their signal,” Paul said, and punched it in for both of them...
(!) (!!!) (!!!!!).
“Echo it,” Rafe said. They were still getting signal from
John Liles
, a screen now Dopplered in retreat, echoed from other ships. Station might be aware by now that something was amiss; but there was still the lagtime of reply to go. As yet there was only
Ajax
sending out her longscan and her frantic instruction to
John Liles
.
Lindy
, on her own, facing Leviathan, sent out a tentative pulse.
(!) (!!!) (!!!!!)
Scan beeped, instant at their interval. “Bogey’s moving,” Jillan said in a still, calm voice. It was. “Cut the signal,” Rafe said at once; and on inspiration: “Reverse the sequence and send.”
(!!!!!)
, Paul sent.
(!!!) (!)
No. Negative. Reverse. Keep away from us.
The bogey kept coming, but slower, feather-soft for something of its power, as if it drifted. “10.2 meters-second,” Jillan read off. “Steady.”
“It could shed us like dust if it wanted to,” Paul said. “It’s being careful.”
“So we ride it out,” Rafe said. A hand closed on his arm, Jillan’s. He never took his eyes from the screens and instruments. Neither did she.
The bogey filled all their vid now, monstrous and flashing with strange lights, a sudden and rapid flare.
“It’s braking,” Jillan said. “4 .. 3 ... relative stop.”
“Station,” Paul sent, “this is
SSEIS 243 Lindy
, with the bogey in full sight. It’s looking us over. We’re transmitting vid; all ships relay.”
There was no chance of reply from station, a long timeline away.
“Relaying,”
a human ship broke in, someone calling dangerous attention to themselves by that sole and human comfort.
“Thank you,” Paul said, and kept the vid going, still sending.
The surface of the bogey had detail now. The warts were complex and overlapping, the smallest of the extrusions as large as
Lindy
herself. The camera swept the intruder, finding no marking, no sign of any identifiable structure which might be scanning them in turn.
Suddenly scan and vid broke up.
And space did.
III
C
apture.
Trishanamarandu-kepta
reached for the mote with <>’s jump field.
<> left the star, dragging the captured mote along.
Rafe had time to feel it happening. He screamed—a long, outraged
“No!”
—at the utter stupidity of dying, perhaps; at everything he lost. His voice wound strangely material through the chaos of the between, entwined with the substance and the terrified voices of Jillan and Paul. He was still screaming when the jump came, the giddy insideout pulse into
here
and
when
, falling unchecked out of infinity into substance that could be harmed. He reached out, groping wildly after controls as the instruments flashed alarm. Orientation was gone. They were moving, his body persuaded him, though he felt no G. He pushed autopilot: red lights flared at him, a bloody haze of lights and blur.
Lindy
’s autopilot kicked in, and it was wrong ... he felt it, the beginning of a roll, a braking insufficient for their velocity. The wobble
Lindy
had always had with the directionals betrayed her now. He tried to shut it down, while G was whipping blood to his head, rupturing vessels in his nose, a coppery taste at one with the bloody lights and the screams.
Paul and Jillan.
“Jillan!”
Paul’s voice.
Tumble went on and on. Instruments broke up again, and another motion complicated the spin: autopilot malfunction. They had been dragged through jump, boosted to velocity a good part of C, and
Lindy
was helpless, uninstrumented for this kind of speed. Every move the autopilot made was wrong, complicating
Lindy
’s motion.
He fought to get his hand to the board, to do something, a long red tunnel narrowing black edges between him and the lights.
Someone screamed his name. His eyes were pressing at their sockets and his brain at his skull, his gut crawling up his rib cage to press his lungs and heart and spew its contents in a choking flood that might be hemorrhage. The tunnel narrowed and the pressure acquired a rhythm in his ears. Vision went in bursts of gray and red, and mind tumbled after.
<> maneuvered carefully to secure the ship: field seized it, stabilized it from its spinning, snugged it close. Getting it inside once stable was no problem at all.
Getting inside
it
... was another matter altogether.
Kill it
, some advised.
moved to do that. <> blocked that attempt with brutal force. An extensor probe drifted along a track and reached down, punched through the hull with very precise laser bursts and bled off an atmosphere sample from the innermost cavity.
Nitrogen, argon, carbon dioxide, oxygen ...
Trishanamarandu-kepta
had no internal atmosphere. <> started acquiring one, here and in other sections.
<> had no need of gravity; but <> began to acquire it, basing calculations on the diameter and rotation of the structure back at the star.
<> extended other probes and surveyed the small ship’s hull, locating the major access.
The interior was, once <> had gotten a probe inside to see, messy. The occupants, stained with red fluids, stirred only feebly, and more and more extensors cooperated in freeing the occupants from their restraints, in moving them outside, while other extensors intruded into every portion of the diminutive ship, testing the instrumentation, sampling the consumables. <> flurried through incoming data in a general way, relating that and what it discovered in the tiny ship’s computers, simple mathematical instruments adequate only for the most basic operations.
The subjects offered resistance, though weakly, at being containered and moved a great and rapid distance through
Trishanamarandu-kepta
’s twisting interior. One was very active: it thrashed about at intervals, losing strength and smearing the transparent case with red fluids at every outburst, which indicated rapidly diminishing returns, whether this motion was voluntary or not. It screamed intermittently, and whether this was communication remained to be judged.
It screamed a very long scream when it was positioned in the apparatus and the recorder came on and played through its nervous system. So did the other two. Most vocal organisms would.
Each collapsed after the initial spasm. Vital signs continued in a series of wild fluctuations which seemed to indicate profound shock. <> maintained them within the recorder-field and realigned them with the hologrammatic impression <> had taken.
<> took cell samples, fluid samples, analyzed the physical structures from the whole to the microscopic and chemical while the entities remained conscious. <> was careful, well aware that some of the procedures might cause pain. <> reduced what wild response <> could, elicited occasional murmurings from the subjects. <> recorded those sounds and played them back; played back all response it had ever gotten from this species, here and from the other ship and from the star system in general.

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