âI see where you're going. You think we should leave the coma cases to die.'
âIt's not as if they'll know what hit them.'
âAll those citizens went into voluntary coma on the understanding that the PVS would be looking after them, and that Panoply would be standing by if the PVS failed in its care. That was a promise we made to those people.'
Clearmountain looked exasperated. âYou're worried about breaking a promise to a citizen with the brain functions of a cabbage?'
âI'm just wondering where this ends. So the coma cases are inconvenient to us. Fine, we lose them. Who's next? Citizens who can't move as fast as the rest? Citizens we just don't like the look of? Citizens who maybe didn't vote the right way the last time there was a poll on Panoply's right to arms?'
âI think you're being needlessly melodramatic,' Clearmountain said. âThere was a reason for this visit, wasn't there, other than to cast doubts on an already complicated evacuation programme?'
âClearmountain's right,' Jane Aumonier said, her image speaking from her usual position at the table. âThe coma cases are a blessed nuisance, and we'd have a much easier time of it if we just pulled life-support on the lot of them. They're going to retard our evacuation programme and therefore increase the danger to the rest of the citizenry. But Tom's even more right. If we cross this line just once - if we say these citizens matter less than those citizens - we may as well hand Aurora the keys to the kingdom. But we're not going to do that. This is Panoply. Everything we stand for says we're better than that.'
âThank you,' Dreyfus said, his voice a hushed whisper.
âBut we can't let the coma cases impose too heavy a drag on the evacuation programme,' Aumonier continued. âThat's why I want them dealt with now, so we won't have to worry about them in the future. I want them leapfrogged well ahead of the front - out of the Glitter Band, even, if we can identify a suitable holding point.'
âThat'll tie up ships and manpower,' Baudry said.
âI know. But it has to be done. Do you have any suggestions, Lillian?'
âWe might consider an approach to Hospice Idlewild. They're used to dealing with sudden influxes of incapacitated sleepers, so they should be able to handle the coma cases.'
âExcellent proposal. Can you sort that out?'
âI'll get right on it.' After a lengthy pause she said, âSupreme Prefect Aumonier...'
âYes?'
âIt's been nearly six hours now. Since Aurora's transmission.'
âI'm well aware of that, thank you very much.'
âI'm just saying... given what we now know of her capabilities ... and the difficulties we're having with the evacuation effort, and the finite number of nuclear devices in our arsenalâ'
âYes, Lillian?'
âI think it would be prudent at least to consider Aurora's proposal.' Her words came out awkwardly, the strain written in her face. âIf her success is guaranteed, then we have an onus to do everything we can to protect the citizenry during the transition phase. Aurora has threatened to start euthanising citizens in the habitats she already holds. I believe she will follow through on that threat unless we broadcast the takeover code to the rest of the ten thousand. If we wish to save as many lives as possible, we may have no choice but to comply with her demand.'
âI don't think we're quite ready to hand her the keys to the castle,' Dreyfus said, before anyone else had time to respond to Baudry's words.
âWith all due respect, Field Prefect Dreyfusâ' she began exasperatedly.
âWith all due respect, Senior Prefect Baudry, shut up.' Dreyfus looked pointedly away from Baudry, to Clearmountain. âI dropped by for a reason, and it wasn't to rubber-stamp our surrender. You have any objections if I commandeer the Orrery for a moment?'
âIf you need to run the Orrery, you have authorisation to conjure a duplicate in your quarters,' Clearmountain said.
âLet him run it,' Aumonier said warningly. âWhat have you got for us, Tom?'
âIt may be nothing. On the other hand, it may be a clue to the present location of the Clockmaker.'
Aumonier lifted an eyebrow. He hadn't briefed her in advance, so she was as much in the dark as everyone else in the room. âThen I think you should continue, with all haste.'
âI'll need to wind back a few hours. Everyone happy with that?'
âDo what you need to do,' Aumonier said.
Dreyfus began to spin back the Solid Orrery to the point when he had begun tracking Saavedra's cutter. âLet's remind ourselves what we're looking at here,' he said, as the timetag digits reversed themselves. âThe Orrery's more than just a real-time record of the disposition of the Glitter Band and its habitats. It also shows Yellowstone. That isn't just some static representation of what the planet looks like from space. It's a constantly changing three-dimensional image, pieced together from countless orbital viewpoints.'
âWe're well aware of this,' Clearmountain said.
âHear him out,' purred Aumonier.
âEverything that happens on Yellowstone, the Orrery keeps a record of it. Changes in the weather, the cloud colouration ... it all goes into the memory. Even those rare occasions when the clouds clear to reveal the surface. But there's more to it than that.' The digits froze: the Orrery had wound back to the time of Saavedra's flight. Dreyfus dabbed a finger into the jewelled disc of the Band. 'Here's Panoply.' He moved his finger a few centimetres to the right. âHere's the last known position of Saavedra's vehicle before she dropped beyond our sensor horizon. In clear space we'd have been able to track her at a range of several light-seconds, even with her hull stealthing. But it's hopeless in the thick of the Band, even more so with the present crisis, and Saavedra knew it.'
âYou said we lost her,' Aumonier said. âHas something changed?'
âSaavedra told me I had no hope of chasing her since there were no other ships ready to go. She was bluffing - maybe there were no other ships fast enough to catch her, but there were certainly other vehicles that had more fuel and heavier weapons loads.' Dreyfus looked up from the Orrery. âSo I did some nosing around. Turns out the Firebrand operatives - I presume you've all been briefed concerning Firebrand? - have been using a lot of transat vehicles lately, even signing them out for duties that wouldn't require that capability. Now, why would they do that?'
âYou think they've moved the Clockmaker to Yellowstone,' Aumonier said.
Dreyfus nodded. âThat's the way it's looking. Of course, that's not particularly useful data in and of itself. It's a big planet with a lot of hiding places.'
âSo why didn't they take the Clockmaker there first, instead of using the Ruskin-Sartorious Bubble?' Baudry asked.
âBecause it would have been much more risky,' Dreyfus said. âVisiting the Clockmaker in the Bubble was so easy that they kept it up for nine years without any of us suspecting. But it's a lot more difficult to conceal flights in and out of Yellowstone. They must have looked on it as a temporary holding point until they could prepare somewhere else in the Band. But then Aurora made her move.'
âThis is good work, Tom,' Aumonier said. âBut the point still holds. Neither Panoply nor the local enforcement agencies have the resources to comb the whole planet looking for a secret hideaway, especially not now.'
âWe don't have to comb. I think I know exactly where they are.' Dreyfus indicated the night-time face of Yellowstone in the Solid Orrery. It was almost entirely black, except for a cold blue flicker of frozen lightning at the southern pole. âSaavedra's ship was stealthed, but nothing's truly invisible, not even a nonvelope. To avoid being pinned down, Saavedra had to move quickly and exploit gaps in CTC's tracking, just like any prefect on sensitive business.'
âHow does that help us?'
âIt means her options were limited when she hit atmosphere. I'm sure she'd have preferred to come in slowly, but that would have meant spending too much time in near-Yellowstone space. So she came in hard and fast, using the atmosphere itself as a brake.'
âAnd we got a hit,' Aumonier said.
Dreyfus smiled. Jane was one step ahead of him, but he liked it that way. He felt as if the two of them were a double act, feeding each other lines so that they both looked better before the other prefects. The others must have thought that the whole performance had been rehearsed.
âThe cams detected this flash,' Dreyfus said, letting the Orrery scroll forward to the point he had tagged. A tiny pink spot of light waxed and waned near Yellowstone's equator. âIt matches the expected entry signature for a cutter-sized vehicle moving at about the same speed Saavedra had just before she dropped out of range. It's her, Seniors.'
âShips are coming and going from Yellowstone all the time,' Clearmountain said.
âBut not that fast. Most ships come in slow, settling down into the atmosphere on controlled thrust. And there's hardly been any routine traffic since the supreme prefect polled for the use of emergency powers. People are keeping their heads down, hoping this will all blow over.'
âBut an entry point is just an entry point,' Baudry said.
âAgreed. I can't rule out the possibility that Saavedra travelled a lot further within the atmosphere. But if she did, planetary traffic control didn't pick her up. I think she came in hard and fast close to her destination.'
âBut there's nothing there,' Baudry said. She craned her head slightly. âI can see the weather pattern over Chasm City, on the sunward face. Unless my knowledge of Stoner geography's seriously flawed, Saavedra came in thousands of kilometres from any other settlements.'
Dreyfus sent another command to the Orrery. âYou're right, Lillian. The nearest surface community would have been Loreanville, eight thousand kilometres to the west. But Firebrand wouldn't have been interested in Loreanville, or any of the domed settlements: there'd have been too much local security for them to continue their activities.'
âSo where was she headed?'
âClear to surface,' Dreyfus told the Orrery. The quickmatter envelope of the planet's atmosphere dissipated in a puff, revealing the wrinkled terrain of Yellowstone's crust. It was an icy landscape riven with fissures and ridges, spotted here and there with simmering cold lakes, lifeless save for the hardiest of organisms capable of enduring the toxic chemistry of the methane-ammonia atmosphere.
âThere's still nothing there,' Baudry said.
âNot now. But there used to be.' Dreyfus gave another command and the surface became dotted with a dozen or so vermilion symbols, each accompanied by a small textual annotation.
âWhat are we looking at, Tom?' Aumonier asked.
âThe sites of former Amerikano colonies or bases, predating the Demarchist era. Most of these structures and digs go back three hundred years. They've been ruins for more than two hundred.' There was no need for him to labour the point: Saavedra's entry trajectory had positioned her directly above one of the abandoned colonies. âNow, this could be coincidence, but I'm inclined to think otherwise.'
âWhat is that place?' Aumonier asked.
âThe Amerikanos called it Surface Operations Facility Nine, or Ops Nine. If they had another name for it, we have no record of it.' Dreyfus shrugged. âIt's been a long time.'
âBut not so long that there isn't still something there.'
âFirebrand wouldn't have needed a fully operational base, just somewhere to hide the Clockmaker and keep an eye on it. An abandoned facility would have served them adequately.'
âBut is there anything there at all, after all this time?'
âNot much on the surface according to the terrain maps, but the old records say Ops Nine went down several levels. This is quite a stable area, geologically speaking. The subsurface areas may still be relatively intact: even to the extent that they'll still be airtight.'
Clearmountain blew out slowly. âThen we'd better get a task force down there immediately. There may be nothing in this, but we can't take that risk. Our top priority is to secure the Clockmaker.'
âAll due respect, Senior,' Dreyfus said, âbut I wouldn't recommend any kind of visible response to this intelligence. Since nothing's happened so far, we can be reasonably sure that Aurora hasn't made the same deductions we have. But if we start retasking assets - sending deep-system vehicles into the atmosphere - Aurora's going to see that and wonder what's got us so interested in an abandoned Amerikano base.'
âAnd I wouldn't expect her to take long to put two and two together,' Aumonier said. âNo: Tom's correct. We need to respond, but it has to be a covert approach. We need to secure and protect the Clockmaker before Aurora even has a hint as to what we're up to. That rules out any mass concentration of assets or personnel.' She paused heavily. âBut someone will still have to go in. I'd volunteer to do it - I've already survived direct contact with the Clockmaker - but for obvious reasons my participation isn't an option.'
âWe wouldn't risk you anyway,' Dreyfus said. âYou were a field when you encountered the Clockmaker back then. It's still a field's job to go in now.'
âBut it doesn't have to be you.'
âThis has been my case from the moment I spoke to that Ultra captain. I propose talking with it.'
âIt doesn't talk. It kills.'
âThen I'll just have to find some common ground. A negotiating position.'