"Now!"

That was definitely Sa.s.sinak, no doubt about it. This is not like 1 imagined it would be, he thought. His memory reminded him tiiat so far it never had been. Helmet on, connections made. He looked at the fat red b.u.t.ton and pushed it, then got his hands on the other controls just as the shuttle surged up, sucking a good bit of the landfill"s carefully planted gra.s.s in its wake.

He was high over the city in moments, balancing on a delicate combination of atmospheric and insystem drives. He had time to enjoy the knowledge that he had made a perfect liftoff and was doing a superb job now in precisely the right position.

The coordinates he"d been given, entered into the 330.

shuttle"s nav computer, now showed a red circle on a displayed map that matched what he could see below. Hard to believe that beneath that vast warehouse a silo poked into the ground ready to launch a fast yacht. But the displays were changing color. The IR scan showed the change first as the warehouse roof sections lifted away. Then the targeting lasers picked up the vibrations, translated as seismic activity.



The inner barriers lifted and the yacht"s nose poked out, rising slowly, slowly. As if on an elevator lift, then faster, then . . . Tim remembered he was supposed to give one official warning and poked the b.u.t.ton to turn on the pre-recorded tape. Sa.s.sinak had not wanted to trust his impromptu style.

"FSP Shuttlecraft Seeker to ship in liftoff. You are under arrest. Proceed directly to shuttleport. You have been warned."

Sa.s.sinak had said they could divert to the shuttleport, even immediately after liftoff. But she didn"t think they would.

"Don"t even try it, Tiny!" came the reply from the yacht. "You haven"t got a chance."

He hoped that wasn"t true. Supposedly, the constraints of taking off from a silo meant that the most common weapons systems couldn"t be mounted until after the yacht was out of the atmosphere in steady flight. And his shields should deflect all but heavy a.s.saults. The problem was how to stop the yacht. Shuttles were just that-shuttles-not fighter craft. He had a tractor beam which was not nearly powerful enough to slow the yacht and a midrange beamer designed to clear brush when landing in uncleared terrain. Could he disable the yacht"s instrument cone? That"s what Ford had suggested.

He got the targeting lasers fixed on the yacht"s bow as he kept the shuttle in alignment, and pressed the firing stud. A line of light appeared, splashed harmlessly along the yacht"s shields. It wasn"t supposed to have shields. They were high in the atmosphere now. His displays told him the yacht should be planning to release its ma.s.sive solid-fuel engine. This didn"t worry .

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him because the more ma.s.sive yacht, with its limited drive system, could not possibly outmaneuver a Fleet shuttle as long as it stayed below lightspeed. But he still could not figure out how to stop it- If it made the transition to FTL, he could not follow.

Of course he could ram it. No shields on a ship that size could withstand the strain if he intercepted at high velocity. But what if he missed? How could he keep track of it, keep it from going into FTL, if he couldn"t stop it cold? The yacht"s booster separated and it surged higher. Tim sent the shuttle after it. What if it had more power then they"d thought? What if it could distance the shuttle? Then it would be free to go into FTL and disappear forever and he ... he would get to explain his failure to Commander Sa.s.sinak.

Who had not explained, this time, exactly what to do. Who was not in her cruiser, this time, ready to come to his rescue. He found he was sweating, his breath short. He had to do something and, except by a land of blind instinct, he had never been good at picking alternatives. The yacht opened a margin on him. Tim uttered a silent prayer to G.o.ds he couldn"t name and redlined the shuttle to catch back up to it. If he was right... if he could remember how to do this ... if nothing went wrong, there was a way to keep that yacht from making a jump. If things did go wrong, he wouldn"t know it.

Sa.s.sinak picked herself out of the tangle of bodies with a groan. A dull ache in her leg promised to develop into real pain as soon as she paid attention to it. Tim should be on his way. Arly was out there somewhere doing something with the invasion fleet. And here . . - here was death and pain and carnage. One Lethi delegate smashed into amber splinters and dust that stank of suHur compounds. A Ryxi whimpering as its broken leg twitched repeatedly. The singed feathers on its back added another noxious reek to the chamber. Aygar? Aygar lay sprawled, motionless, but Lunzie knelt beside him and nodded encouragingly as she looked up. Ford, gray around the mouth, held out his blistered hands for the medics as they sprayed a pale-green foam on diem.

332.

Sa.s.sinak limped over to Lunzie and thought about sitting down beside her. Better not. She didn"t think she could get back up. "How bad is he?"

"Near as I can tell, a stunner beam got him. Not too badly. He should wake up miserable within an hour. What else?" Lunzie still had that intense stare of someone in full Discipline.

"The Paraden representatives here, the ones in the guest box, got away. To their yacht."

"Blast it!" Lunzie looked ready to smash through walls barehanded.

"Never mind. I had a trap for them."

"You . . . ?"

Sa.s.sinak explained briefly, looking around as she did. The surviving delegates were safely sealed into their places. She could just see them watching her. What must they be thinking? And what should she do?

"Sa.s.sinak. A statement?" One of the students had come down to the floor, with a camera on his shoulder. So they had secured the newslines. She frowned, trying to clear her mind, to think. She felt the weight of it all on her. She glanced around for Coromell who should, as the senior, make any statements. Then she saw his crumpled body in the unmistakable posture of the dead.

"I ... Just a moment." Had Lunzie seen? What would she do? She touched Lunzie"s shoulder. "Did you know? Coromell?"

Lunzie nodded. "Yes. I saw it. I"d just gone to full Discipline. Couldn"t save him . . . and he was so decent." She blinked back tears. "I can"t cry now, and besides ..."

"Right."

Coromell dead. The Speaker dead. The Justices, if not dead, at least unable to take over. Someone had to do it. She limped up the step to the Speaker"s podium and stepped gingerly between the bodies that lay at its foot: the Speaker, who had reminded her of her first captain, and the Diplonian delegate she herself had killed. The Speaker"s podium had had status screens, an array of controls to record votes, and grant the right to speak. But none of that worked. Her own shots, most .

333.

likely, had shattered the screens. Still, it was the right place, and she stood behind it as the student with the camera moved in for a close shot. She could imagine what it looked like. A tired, rumpled Fleet officer in front of the Federation shield, the very image of a military coup, the end of peace and freedom. But she would do better than that.

"Delegates, Justices, Citizens of the Federation of Sentient Planets," she began. "This Federation, this peaceful alliance of many races, will survive ..."

Arly, in the command seat on Zaid-Dayan"s bridge, had the best view of what happened next. Although the Central System"s defenses were concentrated along the three most common approaches from other sectors, the Seti had not chosen an alternative route. They had counted on most of the defenses being knocked out by collaborators. Once she realized that their approach was in feet along a mapped path, she had been able to use the Zaid-Dayan"s capabilities against them.

At first she had used the defense satellites as cover, taking out two of the flanking escorts, and one medium cruiser as if the satellites had been active. So far, the Seti commanders had a.s.sumed that the losses were, in fact, due to pa.s.sive defense systems that had escaped inactivation. At least, that"s what her Ssli told her they were thinking. She hoped they were also wondering tf their human allies were double-crossing them.

When that got too dangerous-for the Seti clearly knew exactly where such installations were and they began attacking them-she used the stealth capability and the Ssli"s precision control of tiny FTL hops to disappear and reappear unpredictably, firing off a few missiles each time at the nearest ship, and then vanishing again. She could not actually destroy die invaders, not with one cruiser, but she could inflict serious losses.

Now they were well into the system, inside the outer ranks of defenses, still in numbers large enough to threaten all the inhabited planets. It would be another day or more before any Fleet vessels could arrive, a.s.suming the nearest had come at once on receipt of 334.

the mayday. By then FedCentral might be in range of the Seti ships.

She was just considering whether to sacrifice the ship by going in for close combat for she thought she might do 3ie Seti flagship enough damage to force the invaders to slow, when the scans went crazy, doppler displays racing through color sequences, alarms flashing. Then the ship"s drive indicators rose slowly from green to yellow with some strain as if a ma.s.sive object had appeared not far off.

"Thek," said the very pale Weft, its form wavering before it steadied back to human.

"Thek?"

She had seen before the way Thek moved, and how it seemed to violate a lifetime"s a.s.sumptions about matter and s.p.a.ce. She had just not realized that her instruments felt the same way about it.

"Many, many Thek. They . . . more or less vacuum packed the Seti fleet."

The sensors reported the right density and ma.s.s for more Tliek than Arly had ever seen, but what she thought of was Dupaynil. Dupaynti being squashed by granite pyramids.

"No," said die Weft, shaking his head. "Not that ship. TTiat one"s whole, but can"t maneuver. The Thek have made it quite clear to the Seti that their prisoners had best stay healthy."

"What about us?" After all, humans had been involved in the plot, too.

"We"re free to go, although they"d prefer that we picked up the prisoners from that Seti ship."

"Fine with me. I"m not arguing with flying rocks." She hoped the Thek wouldn"t consider that disrespect-fill. "Are you . . . talking with them?"

He looked surprised. "Of course. You know we"re special to them. They think we"re ... I suppose you"d say, cute."

"No one ever told me that you Wefts could talk to Tliek."

"Not that many know we"re telepathic with some humans, or most Ssli."

335.

"Mmm. Right. So where does this Thek want us to go to pick up pa.s.sengers?"

In the event, they sent a shuttle which the Thek guided through the interstices of the trap they"d shut on the Seti. While it was on its way, Arly remembered to prepare quarters for the alien guests, including a sealed compartment for the Lethi where the fumes from their obligatory sulfur wouldn"t bother anyone else.

Arly decided the shuttle"s arrival required a formal reception to rea.s.sure the allied aliens that Fleet was loyal to the FSP and not part of the plot. With the crisis over, she left the bridge to a junior officer and came to Flight Deck herself, with a squad of marines in dress uniform.

The Zaid-Dayan had no military band, but she had a recording of the FSP anthem piped in as more suitable to aliens than anything else. The shuttle hatch opened and two of the crew came out, carrying the Lethi. The Ryxi bobbed out on its own, fluffing feathers nervously, and chittered vigorously before greeting her in Standard with eflusive thanks. Then came the Bronthin, its normal pastel blue fur almost gray with exhaustion and fear. Two more of the shuttle crew, with the larval Ssli"s environmental tank. Finally, Dupaynil emerged.

Arly stared at him in frank shock. The dapper, elegant officer she remembered was a filthy, shambling wreck, red-rimmed eyes sunken.

"Commander!"

"Is Sa.s.sinak aboard?" That had an intensity she couldn"t quite interpret.

"No. She"s onplanet."

"Thank the ..." he paused. "The luck, I suppose. Or whatever. I ..." He staggered and the waiting medics came forward. He waved them off. "I don"t need anything but a shower-a long shower-and some rest."

"But what happened to you?"

Dupaynil gave her a look somewhere between anger and exhaustion. "One d.a.m.n thing after another, Arly, and the worst of it is it"s all my fault for thinking I was smarter than your Sa.s.sinak. Now please?"

"Of course."

336.

He did reek and she felt her nostrils dilate as he pa.s.sed her. She wondered how long he"d been in that pressure suit. She hardly had all the survivors settled when the Weft liaison to the Thek called her back to the bridge. One last ch.o.r.e remained. The humans most responsible had escaped the planet in a fast yacht, and although a Fleet vessel had kept it in sight, it could not stop it.

"Tim and that shuttle!" Arly said. "I forgot him.

Com, get us a link!"

Tim had the yacht"s position and the Ssli flicked the cruiser in and out of FTL s.p.a.ce in a minute jump that put them well in range. Her weapons officer reported that the yacht lacked anything to penetrate the cruiser"s shields. Too bad Sa.s.sinak wasn"t here. She would enjoy this. But she"d had the onplanet fun. Arly put their message on an all-frequency transmission.

"FSP Cruiser Zaid-Dayan to private vessel Celestial Fortune. Going somewhere?"

"Let us alone, or you"ll regret it!" came the reply. "You"re nothin" but a lousy little short-range shuttle tryin" to play big shot."

"Take another look," suggested Arly and cut back the visual screens. "Do you want to argue with this?"

She sent a missile past their bows, and heard a yelp from Tim on one of the incoming lines. A spurt of annoyance. He should have had sense enough to get out of the way.

"Get that shuttle back in here," she told him.

"Sorry, ma"am "

"What do you mean, sorry?"

"I ... uh ... It was the only way I could think of."

"What did you do?"

"I ... locked shields with "em."

Arly closed her eyes and counted to ten. So that"s why they hadn"t gone into FTL yet But it meant that blowing the yacht would mean blowing the shuttle, and Tim. Nor could he pull away. Locking shields was hard enough going in. She"d never heard of anyone getting back out, unless both ships agreed to damp the shields simultaneously.

337.

"Who"s with you?" asked Arly.

"n.o.body," came the reply.

From his tone he knew exactly what that meant. If Sa.s.sinak had been aboard . . . but one ensign, who had been unable to think of any way to impede the enemy but bonding to it? He was very expendable.

"You suited up?"

"Yes. But..." But what good would it do?

Shuttles had no escape pods, for the very good reason that in normal operation they were useless. And being blown out of an exploding shuttle was a little more than hazardous.

"I can flutter their shields, Commander. Give you a better chance of getting "em with the first shot."

"Dammit, Tim, don"t be so eager to die."

It would help, though, and she knew it.

"I"m not," he said. Was that a quaver in his voice?

He was not going to die if she could help it. But the yacht had meanwhile refused to cut its acceleration outsystem or change course. Its captain seemed sure he could make his FTL jump anyway.

"Even if I do sc.r.a.pe a louse off our hide."

"Do that and you"re dead for sure. We"ve followed more than one through FTL flux." She flipped that channel off. "And why can"t the blasted Thek help us now?" Arly demanded of the Weft at her side. "I hate the way they pick and choose. If these are the bigshots . . ."

The Zaid-Dayaris proximity alarms blared. The artificial gravity pulsed. Arly swallowed hastily, clutching the arms of her chair. Small objects tumbled about and a dust haze rose, to be sucked rapidly away by the fans.

"Do me a favor, Captain, and don"t bad-mouth the Theks any more," said the Weft.

This time he"d shifted completely and hung now from the overhead, bright blue eyes gleaming at Arly. Then he shifted back, leaving a mental image of strings of innards trailing down in a most abnormal way to rea.s.semble into a living person.

"I just said ..."

"I know. But you people complain all the time about how slow the Thek are and how they don"t pay atten- 338.

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