"Check every compartment. I want voice report on fnything out of the ordinary."
" He could not hear the Jig"s reply. He must be wear-; f.a.g a pressure suit and using its com unit to report..Didn"t the captain realize that Dupaynil could hear the ^intercom? Or didn"t he care? Meanwhile there was his problem: that emergency part.i.tion. Dupaynil decided that the hissing was merely an air leak between compartments, an ill-fitting part.i.tion, and set to work to override its controls.
Several hot, sweaty minutes later, he had the thing shoved back in its recess, and edged past. The main pa.s.sage forward looked deceptively ordinary, all visible hatches closed, nothing moving on the scarred tiles of the deck, no movement shimmering on the gleaming green bulkheads. Ahead, he could see another part.i.tion. Beyond it, he knew, the pa.s.sage curved inboard and went up a half-flight of steps to reach Main Deck and access to the bridge and three escape pods there.
Dupaynil stopped to disable the manual controls on pods six and four. Now only three pods might still be a problem: five and seven, the two most forward on the alternate pa.s.sage, and pod three, accessible from the bridge and a.s.signed to the weapons tech. Tliat one he could disable on his way to the bridge, a.s.suming he could get through this next part.i.tion. Five and seven? Panis might be able to open them from outside, although the controls would not work normally.
How long would it take him? Would he even think of it? Would the captain try to free the man in pod three? At least the odds against him had dropped. Even if they got all three out, it would still be only five to one, rather than twelve to one. With this much success came returning confidence, almost ebullience. He reminded himself that he had not won the war yet. Not even the first battle. Just a preliminary skirmish, which could all come undone if he lost the next bit.
"I don"t care if it looks normal," he heard on the intercom. "Try to undog those hatches and let Siris out."
Blast. Ollery was not entirely stupid. Panis must be looking at pod five. Siri: data tech, the specialist in computers, sensors, all that. Dupaynil worked at the forward part.i.tion, hoping Ollery would be more interested in following his Exec"s progress, would trust to the part.i.tion to hold him back. A long pause, in which his own breathing sounded ragged and loud in the empty, silent pa.s.sage.
Then: "I don"t care what it takes, open it!"
At least some of his reworking held against outside tampering. Dupaynil spared no time for smugness, as the forward part.i.tion was giving him more trouble than the one before. If he"d only had his complete kit... But there, it gave, sliding back into its slot with almost sentient reluctance to disobey the computer. Here the pa.s.sage curved and he could not get all the way to the steps. Dupaynil flattened himself along the inside bulkhead, looking at the gleaming surface across from him for any moving reflections. Lucky for him that Ollery insisted on Fleet-tike order and cleanliness. Dupaynil found it surprising. He"d always a.s.sumed that renegades would be dirty and disorderly. But the ship would have to pa.s.s Fleet inspections, whether its crew were loyal or not.
He waited. Nothing moved. He edged cautiously forward, with frequent glances at his handcomp. The captain"s blob stayed where it had been. Panis"s was still in the alternate pa.s.sage near the hatch of pod five. At the foot of the steps, he paused. Above was the landing outside the bridge proper, with the hatches of three pods on his left. One and two would be open: the a.s.signed pods for captain and Exec. Three would be dosed, with the weapons tech inside. The hatch to the bridge would be closed, unless Panis had left it open when he went hunting trouble. If it was open, the captain would not fail to hear Dupaynil coming. Even if he weren"t monitoring his sensors, and he would be, jhe"d know exactly where Dupaynil was. And once Dupaynil came to the landing, he could see him out the Open hatch. If it was open.
Had Panis left the bridge hatch open? Had he left the part.i.tion into the alternate corridor open? It would fluke sense to do so. Even though the captain could Control the part.i.tions individually from the bridge, over-the computer"s programming, that would take a seconds. If the captain suspected he might need , he would want those part.i.tions back so that Panis any freed crewmen had easy access.
He started up the steps, reminding himself to breathe deeply. One. Two. No sound from above, and he could not see the bridge hatch without being visible from it. Another step, and another. If he had had time, if he had had his entire toolkit, he would have had taps in place and would know if that hatch...
A clamor broke out on the other side of the ship, crashing metal, cries. And, above him and around the curve, the captain"s voice both live and over the intercom.
"Go on, Sins!"
Then the clatter of feet, as the captain left the bridge (no sound of the hatch opening: it had been open) and headed down the alternate pa.s.sage. Dupaynil had no idea what was going on, but he shot up the last few steps, and poked his head into the upper end of the alternate corridor. And saw the captain"s back, headed aft, with some weapon, probably a needier, in his clenched fist. There were yells from both Panis and the man he had freed.
It burst on Dupaynil suddenly that the Ollery intended to kill his Exec. Either because he thought he was in league with Dupaynil or was using this excuse to claim he"d mutinied. Dupaynil launched himself after the captain, hoping that the crewman wasn"t armed. Panis and Sins were still thrashing on the floor. Dupaynil could see only a whirling confusion of suit-clad bodies. Their cries and the sound of the blows covered his own approach. Ollery stood above them, clearly waiting his chance to shoot. Dupaynil saw the young officer"s face recognize his captain, and his captain"s intent. His expression changed from astonishment to horror.
Then Dupaynil flipped his slim black wire around the captain"s neck and putted. The captain bucked, sagged, and dropped, still twitching but harmless. Dupaynil caught up the needier that the crewman reached for, stepping on the man"s wrist with deceptive grace. He could feel the bones grate beneath his heel.
"But what? But who?" Panis, disheveled, one eye already blackening, had the presence of mind to keep a firm controlling grip on the crewman"s other arm.
Dupaynil smiled. "Let"s get this one under control first," he said.
"I don"t know what happened," Panis went on. "Something"s wrong with the escape pod hatches. It took forever to get this one open, and then Siris jumped me, and the captain-" His voice trailed away as he glanced at the captain lying purple-faced on the deck.
Siris tried a quick heave but the Jig held on. Dupaynil let bis heel settle more firmly on the wrist. The man cursed viciously.
"Don"t do that," Dupaynil said to him, waving the needier in front of him. "If you should get loose from Jig Panis, I would simply kill you. Although you might prefer that to trial. Would you?"
Siris lay still, breathing heavily. Panis had planted a few good ones on him, too. His face was bruised and he had a split lip which he licked nervously. Dupaynil felt no sympathy. Still watching Siris for trouble, he spoke to Panis.
"Your captain was engaged in illegal activities. He planned to kill both of us." Even as he spoke, he wondered if he could possibly convince a Board of Inquiry that the entire scheme, including the rewired escape pod controls, had been the captain"s. Probably not, but it was worth considering in the days ahead.
"I can"t believe..." Again Panis"s voice trailed away. He could believe; he had seen that needier in his captain"s hand, heard what the captain said. "And you"re?"
"Fleet Security, as you know. Apparently that spooked Major Ollery, convinced him that I was on his trail. I wasn"t, as a matter of fact."
"Liar!" said Siris.
Dupaynil favored him with a smile that he hoped combined injured innocence with predatory glee. It must have succeeded for the man paled and gulped.
"I don"t bother to lie," he said quietly, "when truth is so useful." He went on with his explanation. "When I found that the captain planned to kill me and that you were not part of the conspiracy, I a.s.sumed he"d kill you, too, so he wouldn"t have to worry about any un-Jhendly witness. Now! As the officer next in command, you are now technically captain of this ship, which means that you decide what we do with Sins here. I would not recommend just letting him go!"
"No." The Jig"s face had a curious inward expression that Dupaynil took to mean he was trying to catch up to events. "No, I can see that. But," and he looked at Dupaynil, taking in his rank insignia. "But, sir, you"re senior."
"Not on this vessel." Curse the boy! Couldn"t he see that he had to take command? Sa.s.sinak would have, in a flash.
"Right." It had taken him longer, but he came to the same decision; Dupaynil had to applaud that. "Then we need to get this fellow-Siris-into confinement."
"May I suggest the escape pod he just came out of? As you know, the controls no longer respond normally. He won"t be able to get out, and he won"t be able to eject from the ship."
"NO!" Dupaynil could not tell if it was fury or fright. "I"m not going back in there. I"d die before you get anywhere!"
"Frankly, I don"t much care," Dupaynil said. "But you will have access to coldsleep. You know there"s a cabinet built in."
Siris let fly the usual stream of curses, vicious and unimaginative. Dupaynil thought the senior mate would have done better, although he had no intention of letting him loose to try. Panis squirmed out of his awkward position, half-under the crewman, without losing his grip on the man"s shoulder and arm or getting between Du-paynil"s needier and Siris. Then he rolled clear, evading a last frantic s.n.a.t.c.h at his ankles. Dupaynil put all his weight on the trapped wrist for an instant, bringing a gasp of pain from Siris, then stepped back, covering him with the weapon. In any event, Siris went into the escape pod without more struggle, though threatening them both with the worst that his illicit colleagues could do.
"They"ll get you!" he said, as Panis closed the hatch, Dupaynil aiming through the narrowing crack just in case. "You don"t even know who it"ll"be. They"re in the Fleet, all through it, all the way up, and you"ll wish you"d never..."
With a solid chunk, the hatch closed and Panis followed Dupaynil"s instructions in securing it. Then he met Dupaynil"s eyes, with only the barest glance at the needier still in Dupaynil"s hand.
"Well, Commander, either you"re honest and I"m safe, or you"re about to plug me and make up your own story about what happened. Or you still have doubts about me."
Dupaynil laughed. "Not after seeing the captain ready to kill you, I don"t. But I"m sure you have questions of your own and will be a lot more comfortable when I"m not holding a weapon on you. Here." He handed over the needier, b.u.t.t first.
Panis took it, thumbed off the power, and stuck it through one of the loops of his pressure suit.
"Thanks." Panis ran one bruised hand over his battered face. "This is not... quite... like anything they taught us." He took another long breath, with a pause in the middle as if his ribs hurt. "I suppose I"d better get to the bridge and log all this." His gaze dropped to the motionless crumpled shape of Ollery on the deck. "Is he?"
"He"d better be," said Dupaynil, kneeling to feel Ollery"s neck for a pulse. Nothing, now. That solved the problem of what to do if he"d been alive but critically injured. "Dead," he went on.
"You... uh..."
"Strangled him, yes. Not a gentlemanly thing to do, but I had no other weapon and he was about to kill you."
"I"m not complaining." Panis looked steadier now and met Dupaynil"s eyes. "Well. If I"m in command? And you"re right, I"m supposed to be, I"d best log this. Then we"ll come back and put his body..." he finished lamely, "somewhere."
Chapter Nine.
Diplo.
Although Zebara had said that few oflworlders knew about, had ever seen or heard, Zilmach"s opera, Lunzie found the next morning that some of the medical team had heard more than enough. Bias waylaid her in the entrance of the medical building where they worked. Before Lunzie could even say "Good morning," he was off.
"I don"t know what you think you"re doing," he said in a savage tone that brought heads around, though his voice was low. "I don"t know if it"s an aberration induced by your protracted coldsleep or a perverse desire to appease those who hurt you on Ireta..."
"Bias!" Lunzie tried to shake his hand away from her arm but he would not let go.
"I don"t care what it is," he said, more loudly. Lunzie felt herself going red. Around them people tried to pretend that nothing was going on, although ears Sapped almost visibly. Bias pushed her along, as if she weren"t willing, and stabbed the lift b.u.t.ton with the elbow of his free arm. "But I"ll tell you, it"s disgraceful. Disgraceful! A medical professional, a researcher, someone who ought to have a minimal knowledge of professional ethics and proper behavior..."
Lunzie.s anger finally caught up with her surprise. She yanked her arm free.
"Which does not include grabbing my arm and scolding me in public as if you were my father. Which you"re not. May I remind you that I am considerably older than you, and if I choose to..
To what? She hadn"t done what Bias thought she had done. In some respect, she agreed with him. If she had been having a torrid affair with the head of External Security, it would have been unprofessional and stupid. In Bias"s place, in charge of a younger (older?) woman doing something like that, she"d have been irritated, too. She"d been irritated enough when she thought Varian was attracted to the young Ire tan, Aygar. Her anger left as quickly as it had come, replaced by her sense of humor. She struggled for a moment with these contradictory feelings, and then laughed. Bias was white-faced, his mouth pinched tight.
"Bias, I am not sleeping with Zebara. He"s an old friend."
"Everyone knows what happens at that opera!"
"I didn"t." That much was true. "And how did you know?"
This time it was Bias who reddened, in unattractive blotches. "The last time I came I... ah. Um. I"ve always liked music. I try to learn about the native music anywhere I go. A performance was advertised. I bought a ticket, I went. And they didn"t want to let me in. No one admitted without a partner, they said."
Lunzie hadn"t known that. After a moment"s shock, she realized that it made sense. Bias, it seemed, had argued that he had already paid for the ticket. He had been given his money back, with the contemptuous suggestion that he put his ticket where it would do him more good than the performance would. He finally found a heavyworlder doctor, at the medical center, willing to explain what the opera was about, and why no one wanted him there.
"So you see I know that no matter what you say..."
Lunzie stopped that with a laugh. They entered the lift with a crowd of first-shift medical personnel and Bias kept silence until they reached their floor. He opened his mouth but she waved him to silence.
"Bias, it came as a surprise to me, too. But they don"t... mmm. Check on it. Besides which," and she c.o.c.ked her head at him, "there"s the problem of a pressure suit."
Bias turned beet-red from scalp to neck. His mouth opened and closed as if he were gasping for air, but formed no words.
"It"s all right, Bias," she said, patting his head as if he were a nervous boy about to go onstage. "I"m over a hundred years old and I didn"t live this long by risking an unexpected pregnancy."
Then, before she lost control of her wayward humor, she strode quickly down the corridor to her own first ch.o.r.e.
But Bias was not the only one to broach the subject.
"I"ve heard that heavyworlder opera is really something, hmm? Different..." said Conigan. She did not quite smirk.
Lunzie managed placidity. "Different is hardly the word, but you may have heard more than I saw."
"Or felt?"
"Please. I may be ancient and shriveled by coldsleep but I know I don"t want to have a half-heavyworlder child. The opera re-enacts a time of great tragedy. I"m an outsider, an observer, and I have the sense to know it."
"That"s something, at least. But is it really that good?"
"The music is. Unbelievable; I"m ashamed to admit I was so surprised by the quality."
Conigan appeared satisfied. If not, she had the sense to let Lunzie alone. More troubling were the odd looks she now got from the other team members, and from one of the heavyworlder doctors they"d been working with. She could not say she had no feeling for Zebara. Even had it been true, their tentative cooperation required that she appear friendly. She wondered if she should have feigned a more emotional response to the opera.
And on the edge of her mind, kept firmly away from its center during the working day, was the question of coldsleep. Not again! she wanted to scream at Zebara and anyone else who thought she should use it. I"d rather die. But that was not true. More particularly, she did not want to die on Diplo, in the hands of their Security or in their prisons. In feet, with the renewed strength and health of her refresher course in Discipline, she did not want to die anywhere, any time soon. She had a century of healthy life ahead of her, if she stayed off high-G worlds. She wanted to enjoy it.
The Venerable Master Adept had said she might need to use coldsleep again. She had trained for that possibility. She knew she could do it. But 1 don"t want to, wailed one part of her mind to another. She squashed that thought down and hoped it would not be necessary. Surely she and Zebara could find some other way. That night she had no message, and slept gratefully, catching up on much-needed rest.
The next step in Zebara"s campaign came two days later, when he invited her to spend her next rest day with him.
"The team"s supposed to get together for a progress evaluation." Lunzie wrinkled her nose; she expected it to be a waste of time. "If I go off with you, I"ll get in trouble with them."
She was already in trouble with them, but saw no reason to tell Zebara. And that kind of trouble would make it seem his employers" plot was working well. Surely a lightweight alienated from her own kind would be easier to manipulate. She shivered, wondering who was manipulating whom.
Zebara"s image grimaced. "We have so little time, Lunzie. Your research tour is almost half over. We both know it"s unlikely you"ll come back and even if you did, I would not be here."
"Bias has told me, very firmly, that the purpose of this medical mission was not to reunite old lovers."
"His purpose, no. And I respect your professional work, Lunzie. I always did. We know it could not be a real relationship. You must go and I will not live long. But I want to see you again, for more than a few minutes in public."
Lunzie flinched, thinking of the agents who would, no doubt, snicker when they got to that point in the tapes being made of this conversation. If they weren"t listening now, in real-time surveillance. She glanced at the schedule on her wall. Only one rest day after this one. Time had fled away from them, and even if she had not had the additional problem of Zebara and her undercover a.s.signment, she would have been surprised at how short a 30 day a.s.signment could be.
"Please," Zebara said, interrupting her thoughts. Was he really that eager? Did he know of some additional reason she must meet him now, and not later. "I can t wait."
"Bias will have a flaming fit," Lunzie said. His face relaxed, as if he"d heard more in her voice than she intended. "I"ll have to talk to Tailler. I don"t see why you couldn"t wait until the next rest-day. Only eight days."
"Thank you, Lunzie. I"ll send someone for you right after breakfast."
"But what about?" That was to an empty screen. He had cut the connection. d.a.m.n the man. Lunzie glowered at the screen and let herself consider ignoring his messenger in the morning. But that would be too dangerous. Whatever was going on, in his mind, or that of his employers, she had to play along.
When she told him, Tailler heaved a great sigh and braced his arms against his workbench.
"Are you trying to give Bias a stroke, or what? I thought you understood. Granted he"s not entirely rational, but that makes it our responsibility to keep from knocking him loopsided."
Lunzie spread her hands. If the whole team turned against her, she could lose any chance of a good position after the mission. And after the mission you could be one frozen lump of dead meat, she reminded herself.
"I"m sorry," she said and meant it. That genuine distaste for hurting others got through to Tailler. "I think they should have studied me for the effects of prolonged coldsleep, instead of stuffing me full of current trends in medicine and shipping me out here. But they said they were desperate, that no one else had my background. Perhaps my reaction to Zebara is partly that, although I think no one who hasn"t been through it can understand what it"s like to wake up and find that thirty or forty years have gone by. Did you know I have a great-great-great-granddaughter who"s older than I am in elapsed time? That makes us both feel strange. Zebara knew me then. Though to me that"s the self I am now. Yet he"s dying of old age. I know that personal feelings aren"t supposed to intrude on the mission, but these are, in a sense, relevant to the work I"m doing. My normal lifespan, without coldsleep, would be twelve to fourteen decades, right?"
"Yes. Perhaps even longer, these days. I think the rates for women with your genetic background are up around fifteen or sixteen decades."
Lunzie shrugged. "See? Even the lifespans have changed since I was last awake. But my point is that each time I"ve come out of a prolonged coldsleep, I"ve battled severe depression over the relationships I"ve lost. The kind of depression which we know impairs the immune system, makes people more susceptible to premature aging and disease. This depression, this despair and chaos, will affect the heavyworlders even more, because their lifespan is naturally shorter, especially on high-G worlds. My feelings -my personal experiences- are what got me scheduled for this mission. While I can"t claim that I consciously chose to consider Zebara as part of a research topic, his reaction to my lack of aging and my reaction to his physical decay, are not matters I can ignore."
Tailler stood, stretched, and leaned against the bench behind him. "I see your point. Emotions and intellect are both engaged and so tangled that you can"t decide which part of this is most important. Would you say, on the whole, that you are an intuitive or a patterned thinker?"
"Intuitive, according to my psych profiles, but with strong logical skills as well."
"You must have or I"d have said intuitive without asking. It sounds as if your mind is trying to put something together which you can"t yet articulate. On that basis, meeting Zebara, spending a day with him, might give you enough data to come to some conclusions. But the rest of us are going to have a terrible time with Bias."
"I know. I"m sorry, truly I am."