She hadn"t meant, to sleep, Morgan thought, as she moved and stretched under Holt"s welcome weight.
Since she couldn"t recall when she had slept last, that probably explained her drifting off. Holt, not having slept at all, his upper body supported by his elbows, glanced toward the center of the chamber and said something in "Reen. Someone answered. Morgan turned her head and made out MussGray"s form limned by the coals at the foot of the ladder. Holt gently disengaged himself and got to his knees. Her body tautened for a moment. He softly touched the side of her head with his fingers.
MussGray spoke again.
"We"ll be ready," said Holt. "Their decision is made," he said to Morgan.
The two of them dressed quickly, unself-consciously. After all, she thought wryly, we"re all soldiers, comrades in arms.
"Are they coming down here?"
"No," Holt said. "We"re to go back above."
When they climbed the ladder and emerged from the hide shelter, they found a clear, cold starscape overhead. MussGray led them back to the windhover. Morgan saw that the skids were now covered with fresh snow.
PereSnik"t and the other adult "Reen, not just the silvered elders, waited. Bulked together in the night, they didn"t seem to Morgan either ominous or an outright danger. They were simply at home there, not discomforted by the chill.
The two humans stopped a meter from PereSnik"t. MussGray crossed over some intangible boundary and rejoined the tribe. He, too, faced Morgan and Holt.
The streamers of Almira"s aurora began to play above the horizon. Ribbons of startling blue crackled into the sky.
PereSnik"t said something. To Morgan, it seemed surprisingly brief. Holt let out his breath audibly.
"And-?" she said softly.
"It"s done."
"Will they help?"
The dark ma.s.s of "Reen stirred. PereSnik"t said something to them over his shoulder.
"They will try to aid us," said Holt. "I think they understand what I attempted to get across. I"m more concerned about what I don"t comprehend."
"I"m not sure I follow."
"They agreed," Holt shook his head. "But the terms of the bargain are open. I don"t know the price. I"m not sure they do either."
"How expensive can it" be?" Actually she had already begun to speculate. Night thoughts. The man only smiled. In the shifting, ephemeral light of the aurora, it was not a smile of joy.
The machine swept steadily toward the waiting second wave of Almiran fighters. The ragtag fleet neither advanced nor retreated. The ships hung in position, interposing themselves as a flimsy shield between a.s.sa.s.sin and victim.
The machine electronically seined the inexorably diminishing distance between. It did not project a definitive probability-model of the humans" intention. It could not. The machine searched its memories for similar human strategies. Nothing quite matched. In its way, the machine considered what it perceived to be all the likely human options, attempting to place itself in its opponents" position. No answers emerged.
Electrons continued to spin in paths weaving patterns that simulated organic intelligence-only it was a mind far more carefully considered, infinitely more ordered than that of humans. There was no primitive animal forebrain here. No conscience. No irrationality. Only a paradox. A holographic representation of oblivion.
The boojum searched for any evidence of human trickery, signs of an ambush, but it could acc.u.mulate no empirical support.
It sailed on.
But as much as it was capable of doing so, the machine wondered...
"No?" said Morgan. "No?"
"No, with regrets." Dr. Epsleigh looked very unhappy. "The word came down from the Princess Elect"s office a short time before you and Holt returned. I"d already dispatched the transport to pick up the "Reen, but now I"ll have to call it back."
Dr. Epsleigh"s office at the Wolverton landing field was spare and austere. The four of them-Tanzin had been waiting for Holt and Morgan the moment the windhover set down-sat in straightbacked, unpadded chairs around a bare desk.
"But why?" Morgan thought that if she gripped the arms of her chair any more tightly, either the furniture or her fingers would snap.
"Spume," said Dr. Epsleigh.
"I don"t understand," said Holt.
"It"s the word the Prime Minister used." Dr. Epsleigh shrugged. "Moonfoam. Brainfroth. The point being he thought our plan was the silliest proposal of anything anyone had suggested. That"s why the summary turn-down."
"I have to admit I can see his position," said Tanzin. She leaned back in her chair and stretched her legs, one boot crossed above the other. "It"s akin to me saying, "Hey, I"ve got a. great idea-I think my pet is telepathic, and he can hypnotize the bird in the birdbath." Then someone else says, "Hey, it"s so crazy, it might just work." See the point?"
"I gave Morgan"s suggestion preliminary approval," said Dr. Epsleigh angrily. "Are you suggesting this is all a pipe dream? We"re in a desperate situation."
"Just a moment," Morgan"said, "Hold on. Does the PM have a plan of his own?"
Dr. Epsleigh turned toward her, shaking her head in disgust. "It"s death. I told him that, but he said if was the only rational option."
"Suicide." Tanzin inspected her boots. "Pure and simple."
"You don"t like any of the alternatives," said Holt.
"No." Tanzin"s voice was somber. "No,"I don"t."
"Suicide?" said Morgan. "What did the PM say?"
Dr. Epsleigh gestured out the dawn-lit window toward the ma.s.sed ranks of fighting ships. "One, ma.s.sive attack. Those ships carrying all the ma.s.sed armament and fire-power that can be bonded on during the next few hours. Ma.s.s against ma.s.s. Brute force against force."
"The machine will win," said Holt.
"The PM knows that, I suspect. I also think he believes the machine will prevail in any account. A grand doomed gesture is apparently better than this half-balked scheme from a battle hero and a junior pilot."
Dr. Epsleigh slapped her small hands down on the desk top with finality.
"No," said Morgan. They all looked at her. She said to Dr. Epsleigh, "Can you use your phone to get through to the Princess Elect"s office?" I want the woman herself."
Without a word, the administrator punched out a code.
"What are you doing?" said Holt. "I"ve heard the Princess Elect doesn"t do a thing without the PM"s approval."
"Have I given you my lecture on power?" Morgan said, and proceeded, to answer without pause her own rhetorical question. "I despise the power one is born to without earning it. I"ve never used that lever."
Dr. Epslelgh had reached someone on the phone. "Tell her the caller is Morgan Kai-Anila," she said.
"My personal rules are now suspended," Morgan said.
"It"s time for this "blood-bloated, privileged parasite on the body politic" to kick some rears."
Dr. Epsleigh handed her the phone.
"h.e.l.lo?" Morgan said. She forced a smile and let that smile seep into her voice. "h.e.l.lo, Aunt Thea, dear?"
Steam curled up from the jet nozzles of the dart-shaped fighters. The rows of sleek fuselages formed a chevron, the point of which faced away from the administration complex of the landing field at Wolverton. The sun had sunk close to the western horizon, the twilight glow beginning to soften the peaks of the Shraketooth Range.
Swarms of workers surrounded the fighters, topping off water tanks, tuning each weapon, completing installation of the additional acceleration couches.
The briefing hall had become an auditorium of Babel. Intermixed, humans and "Reen crowded the room.
The sessions had been loud and volatile. Serving as translator, Holt had tried to mediate. The basic problem seemed to be that each group thought it was surrounded by unsavory barbarians.
The overtaxed air purifying system could no longer cope with the sweat and musk. Cheek by jowl, fur against flesh, luxuriant flank stripes juxtaposed with extravagantly theatrical uniforms, the warriors groused and growled as Dr. Epsleigh tried to keep peace.
About the height of the average "Reen, the administrator had to stand on a chair to be seen by all in the room. Many of the pilots looked distinctly dubious after having listened through the first briefing sessions.
"I know you have questions," continued Dr. Epsleigh. "I recognize that we"ve been asking you to take all this in on faith. I also know I can"t order any of you simply to be credulous."
Beside her Holt translated for the benefit of the "Reen, "Just let me wrap it up," said Dr. Epsleigh. "The majority of pilots will have the essential task of harrying the boojum in whatever way and from whichever tangent they can. It will be your job to draw the machine"s attention from the score of colleagues who will be ferrying our "Reen allies as near to the enemy as is"-a wry smile broke across her lips-"humanly possible."
Amaranth stood in fee first row; "Isn"t this just as foredoomed as the PM"s idiotic plan?""
""If It were, I wouldn"t endorse it." Dr. Epsleigh raised her eyes machineward. "It will be dangerous, yes.
You"ll all be dependent upon your wits and the abilities of your ships."
Amaranth nodded, amused. "It"s never been any different." The "Reen whuffled and coughed at the translation. For them also, it was a point of commonality.
"We"ve exhaustively pored over the recordings of our first combat encounter with the machine," said Dr.
Epsleigh. "So long as the boojum"s missiles and beams are avoided, we"re sure that some of our ships can maneuver beyond the protective screens."
"Mighty hard to avoid particle beams, maneuvering in slow motion," someone called out from the floor.
""I expect that"s why the rest of us"ll be speeding our tails off," someone else answered.
"Precisely right," said Dr. Epsleigh. "The machine won"t antic.i.p.ate seeming irrationality.".
"So you think."
"So we think." The uproar threatened to drown out the administrator.
"And then the "Reen will claw the boojum to death?" someone apparently said jokingly, but too loud.
"Is a manner of speaking,"" Dr. Epsleigh said.
Holt translated that for PereSnik"t"s benefit. MussGray overheard and both "Reen growled in amus.e.m.e.nt.
Dr. Epsleigh shook her head in exasperation and asked Holt to explain the Calling again.
"I still don"t think I believe in all that occult c.r.a.p," a pilot called out.
"Neither do I think," Holt said, "that the "Reen believe simple light can actually be cohered into a laser.""
"But that"s different."
The room"s noise level got louder again.
Twilight had begun to fuzz into actual night.
In the briefing hall, Holt held up a meter-square sheet of shining alloy so that all could see. A grid of silver lines had been etched, then painted in almost a cloisonne effect. Regular cl.u.s.ters of angular symbols cross-connected the lines. The panel could equally have represented an electronic map or a jewelry design. It was an elaborate and stylized pattern.
"The apprentice MussGray created this," said Holt, "under the direction of the shaman, PereSnik"t. It will focus the Calling."
"This is the brain of the boojum," Dr. Epsleigh said.
PereSnik"t rumbled something.
"The heart," Holt translated. "Energy. The electrical field."
"The design may not be identical to the primary components in that machine up there," said the administrator, "but it"s as close as we can come by guess and extrapolation after ransacking the historical computer memories. When we were part of the rest of human civilization, our ancestors helped dissect some of the boojums. We"re hoping that logic circuitry is logic circuitry, even allowing for refinement."
The room fell silent.
"Hey," said Amaranth, voice loud and firm, "I"ll give it a shot." His lips spread in a grin, revealing broad, white, gleaming teeth. The "Reen muttered approvingly as Holt translated.
"We"ve placed identical copies of the focus pattern in each ship carrying a "Reen. To help coordinate the plan, our friends will have their own ship"s-link channel." Dr. Epsleigh turned on the chair and looked down at Holt "You"re going to be a busy young man. I understand PereSnik"t will ride with no one else."
"He is my father," said Holt. "I am his son."
"Will you be able to handle the translating as well?"
"No one else can." Holt"s voice was not so much resigned as it was simply matter-of-fact.