The crowd was quieter than Holt would have expected.
"h.e.l.l of a damper on the party," Tanzin said.
"I am ready," said Amaranth. "Could have used some sleep, but-" He spread his hands eloquently.
Bogdan nodded. "I, as well."
"We may as well start back," said Tanzin. "I expect all transport will be headed toward the field."
Morgan flipped her hood forward. Holt was saddened to see her beauty abruptly hidden. "Some kind of fun now," she said in a low voice.
"I hope..." he said. They all looked at him. Holt felt like a child among a group of adults. He said simply, "Nothing. Let"s go."
Midnight in the jungle. Nocturnal creatures shrilled and honked on every side. Overhead the star field shimmered and winked, as a brighter star crawled slowly across the zenith.
Kirsi"s moon Alnaba began to edge over the tree-canopied horizon to the east.
Then the night sounds stopped.
The image suddenly tilted and washed out in a flare of silent, brilliant white light.
"That was the ground station at Lazy Faire."
Black. Stars that didn"t twinkle.
Something moved.
The image flickered, blurred, then focused in on-something.
"What"s the scale?"
"About a kilometer across. At this point, we can"t be more exact."
It was a polyhedron that at first one might mistake for a sphere. Then an observer perceived the myriad angles and facets. As the image clarified, angular projections could be seen.
The device reflected little light. In its darkness it seemed a personification of something sinister.
Implacable machinery, it looked tough and mean enough to eat worlds.
"We managed to swing the cameras of a surface resources surveyor. These were all the pictures we got."
A spark detached from the distant machine. That spark grew larger, closer, until it filled the entire screen. As with the transmission from Kirsi"s surface, the image then flared out.
"That was it for the survey satellite. I think you"ve gotten a pretty good idea of the fate of nearly everything on and around Kirsi."
The lights came up and Holt blinked.
"It"s gonna be one h.e.l.l of a job, let me tell you that now," Amaranth said to him.
"I think my enthusiasm is wearing thin already." Tanzin looked glum.
"Beams," said Bogdan. "More wattage than this whole continent. Missiles up the rear. How"re we gonna tackle that thing?"
Morgan smiled faintly. "I"d say our work"s cut out for us."
"Bravado?" Tanzin covered the younger woman"s hand with her own. The five of them sat behind a briefing table in the auditorium. "I agree with the sentiment. I just question how we"re going to implement it." Complaining voices, questioning tones spiraled up from the other dozens of tables and scores of seated pilots around the room.
"I know what you"re all asking. I"ll try to suggest some answers." Dr. Epsleigh was the speaker. She was short, dark, intense, the"coordinator chosen by the emergency coalition of governments to set up the task force. She was known for the sharpness of her tongue-and an ingenious ability to synthesize solutions out of unapparent patterns.
Someone from the back of the hall shouted, "Your first answer ought to try to squelch all the rumors.
Just what is that thing?"
"I heard," said Dr. Epsleigh, "that someone earlier in the evening called our opponent a boojum." She smiled grimly. "That was an astute nomenclature."
"Huh?" said the questioner. "What"s a boojum?"
"It"s fortunate that cla.s.sical literacy is not a requirement of a first-rate fighter." Dr. Epsleigh snorted. "The long-range sensors detected an object and coded it as a snark, a possible cometary object. One of our programmer ancestors liked literary allusions..."
At the table, Morgan"s head jerked and she half-raised one hand toward an ear.
"What"s wrong?" said Holt, feeling a start of concern.
"Runagate," she answered. "The ship"s link. I"ve got to turn down the volume. Runagate just shouted in my ear that he knows all about snarks and boojums. Quote: For the snark was a boojum, you see." "
"So just what is-" he started to say.
Dr. Epsleigh"s amplified voice overrode him. "What we shall be fighting, as best can be determined at this time, is an automated destroyer, a deadly relic from an ancient war. It"s a sentient machine that has been programmed to terminate all the organic life it encounters."
"So what"s it got against us?"
"That"s a dumb question," someone else pointed out. "Maybe you"re not organic intelligence, Boz." The first questioner flushed pink.
"Thank you," said Dr. Epsleigh. "We"ve been running an historical search for information in the computers. Objects like that machine orbiting Kirsi were known when we sought refuge in this planetary system four centuries ago. They were just part of the oppressive civilization our ancestors fled. Our people wanted to be left alone to their own devices. It was a.s.sumed that the vastness of the Galaxy would protect them from discovery by either the machines or the rest of humanity." Dr. Epsleigh paused.
"Obviously the machines were better trackers-or perhaps this is just a chance encounter. We don"t know."
"Is there room for negotiation?" That was Tanzin.
Dr Epsleigh"s humorless smile appeared again. "Apparently not. In the past the machines negotiated only when it was part of a larger strategy against their human targets. The attack on Kirsi was without warning. The machine has not attempted to communicate with any human in the system. Nor has it responded to our overtures. It is merely pounding away at Kirsi with single-minded ferocity. We think it picked that world simply because Kirsi was closer to its entrance point into this system." Dr. Epsleigh"s jaw visibly tightened; the tension was reflected in her voice. "It"s not merely trying to defeat our neighbors. The machine is annihilating them. "We"re witness to a ma.s.sacre."
"And we"re next?" said Morgan.
"All of Almira," said Dr. Epsleigh. "That"s what we antic.i.p.ate, yes."
"So what"s the plan?" Amaranth"s voice boomed out.
Holt glanced aside at Morgan, her hair almost glowing in the hall"s artificial glare. His job had been to send back fee dividends to North Terrea, the village that had invested in him and his ship. Until only a short time ago, his life had centered around adventure, peril, and profit. Now a new factor had intervened. It seemed there suddenly was another facet of life to consider, Morgan. Maybe it was only a crush-he"d never find out if it would work or not unless he explored the possibilities. But instead they"d both fly out with the rest to Kirsi. The machine would kill him. Or her.
Or the both of them. It was depressing.
Dr. Epsleigh interrupted his reverie. "We don"t know what the defensive capabilities of the machine are.
The few ships that investigated from Kirsi didn"t even get close enough to test its screens. You"ll be more careful. We think you"ve got considerably more speed and mobility than the machine. The strategy will be to slip a few fighters through the machine"s protective screens while the other ships are skirmishing. We"re jury-rigging some heavier weapons than standard issue."
"Um," said a pilot off to the left. "What you"re saying is, you hope some of us can find points of vulnerability on that critter?"
"We"re continuing to gather intelligence about the machine," said Dr. Epsleigh. "If a miracle answer comes up, believe me, you"ll be the first to know."
"It"s borking suicide." Amaranth"s voice carried throughout the hall.
"Probably." Dr. Epsleigh"s smile heated from grim to wry. "But it"s the only borking chance we"ve got."
"Why even bother with quintuple bonuses," someone muttered. "No one"ll be around to spend "em other than the machine."
"How can that boojum-thing just want to wipe us all out?" came an overly loud musing from the back of the room.
"Aren"t you forgetting us and the "Reen?" Holt said angrily, also loud. His neighbors stared at him.
"We didn"t kill "em all," said Bogdan mildly.
"Might as well have. For four hundred years, we took their land whenever it suited us. They died when they got in our way."
"Not in my way," protested Bogdan. "I"ve never done anything to those stinking badgers."
"Nor for them," said Holt.
"Shut up," said Tanzin. "Squabble later. When the machine bombards Almira, I"m sure it won"t distinguish between human and "Reen." She raised her voice back in the direction of Dr. Epsleigh. "So what happens next?"
"We"re outfitting the fighters. It will take some hours. You"ll be leaving in successive waves. The ready rooms are prepared. I suggest you all get whatever sleep or food or other relaxation you can manage. I"ll post specific departure rosters when I can. Questions?"
There were questions, but nothing startling. Holt drew his courage together and turned toward Morgan.
"Buy you a caf?" She nodded.
"Buy as all a caf," said Taazin, "but get a head start now. We"ll meet you later."
Unwelcome satellite, the machine continued to circle Kirsi.
Dust.
Steam.
Death.
Oblivion.
Thai list pretty much inventoried the status of Kirsi"s surface. Orbital weapons probed down to the planet"s substrata.
The boojum, you see, wanted to be sure.
The ready rooms were cl.u.s.ters of variously decorated chambers color-keyed to whatever mood the waiting pilots wished. This dawn, the pilots had tended to gather together in either the darkest, most somber rooms, or else the most garishly painted. Seeking privacy, Holt conducted Morgan to a chamber finished in light wood with neutral, sand-colored carpets.
Holt told the room to shut off the background music. It complied. The man and woman sat opposite one another at a small table and stared across their mugs of steaming caf.
Morgan finally said, "So, are you frightened?"
"Not yet." Holt slowly shook his head. "I haven"t had time yet. I expect I will be."
She laughed. "When the time comes, when that machine looms up as sharp and forbidding as the Shraketooth Peaks, then I expect I"ll shake from terror."
"And after that?" said Holt.
"Then I"ll just do my job."
He leaned toward her over the table and touched her free hand. "I want to do the same." She almost imperceptibly pulled her fingers back.
"I know something of your career," said Morgan. "I pay attention to the stats. I"m sure you"ll do fine."
Holt reacted to a nuance in her tone. "I"m not that much younger than you. I just haven"t had quite as much experience."
"That"s not what I meant." This time she touched his hand. "I wasn"t making light of your youth. I"ve watched the recordings of your skill as a young fighter pilot. What I"m wondering about is what it took to get there..."
Her words lay in the air as an invitation. Holt started to relax just a little. Their fingers remained lightly touching.
It was rarely simple or easy for Holt to explain how he had been raised in the wild by the "Reen. A casual listener might toss it off as a joke or an elaborate anecdote. But then Holt rarely talked about his background with anyone. The few hearers invariably were impressed with his sincerity.
He found himself not at all reluctant to tell Morgan.
Simply put, Holt had been set out on a hillside to die, while only an infant, by the North Terrea villagers.
In the laissez-faire way of all Almira, no one had wanted to take the rap for doing in the baby. It all had something to do with Holt"s parents who had perished under hazy circ.u.mstances that had never been explained to their son"s satisfaction-but then, that circ.u.mspection was part of the eventual pact between Holt and the villagers.
At any rate, following the death of his parents, a very young Holt Calder had been placed on the steep, chilly flank of a small mountain, presumably to perish. Within hours, he was found by a roving band of "Reen hunters. The "Reen were a stocky, carnivorous, mammalian, sentient species with mythically (according to the human settlers) nasty temperaments-but in spite of colonists" scare-the-children stories, they didn"t eat human babies. Instead the "Reen hunters hissed and grumbled around the infant for a while, discussing this incredible example of human irresponsibility, and then transported the baby down to North Terrea. Under cover of the night, they sneaked past the sentries and deposited Holt Calder at the threshold of the a.s.sembly hall.
North Terrea held a village meeting the next night and again voted-although by a smaller margin than the first time-to set Holt out on a hillside.
It took longer for a "Reen band to happen across the infant this time. Holt was nearly dead of exposure.
Rather than return him to what the "Reen presumed would be a barbaric and certain death, they took him into their own nomadic tribe.