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The Void Trilogy 3-Book Bundle

Page 131

by Peter F. Hamilton


  Catriona knelt beside Trisha. “You should get to sleep, but first you have to turn the gravity back up.”

  “In a minute,” he assured her.

  Catriona put her arm around Trisha, slipping her hand up inside the tight T-shirt. Her nose nuzzled Troblum’s neck, almost tickling. “Why don’t you watch us?” she murmured. “That’ll help you relax.”

  “I don’t need help,” he said as the servicebot produced a big lasagna garnished with garlic butter dough balls. “But you two keep going.”

  Trisha grinned and turned to kiss Catriona. The two of them became more ardent as Troblum chomped away contentedly. He watched them but shut down any sensory reception from the I-sentient personalities until he’d finished tasting the food. The two together weren’t a good mix, something else he knew from experience. Once again he regretted losing Howard Liang, since without the male I-sentient personality with which to twin his sensorium, he’d have to work out how to fully appreciate the two girls making love. Twinning with a female body unnerved him somehow. He didn’t handle out-of-the-ordinary situations well, though his social acceptance monitor program kept informing him he should make an effort to be more accepting and try new things. This was something he’d have to solve before his flight to the Drasix cluster.

  He was halfway through the slab of lasagna when he told the smartcore to establish a TD link to the unisphere, using an ultra-secure onetime node. Even if the Accelerators had located his u-shadow’s monitor emplacements, there was no way they could track his physical location through the link.

  “Have you found Paula Myo?” he asked his u-shadow.

  “No. There are no reported sightings within any of the accredited unisphere news chronicles or the gossip journals. The Intersolar Commonwealth Serious Crimes Directorate lists her as currently unavailable.”

  “Shit.” Oh, well, I tried. That was the right thing to do. Still, leaving the Commonwealth with the Cat on the loose didn’t sit right.

  He popped four dough balls into his mouth, sucking air down as the hot garlic butter ran across his tongue. I could just shotgun everything I know about the Accelerators and what they’ve done. Paula would pick that up. But even I don’t know what the swarm was meant to imprison.

  He still worried about how the unisphere was compromised, although he was convinced he was beyond anybody’s reach now.

  Shotgunning is probably the right thing. He just hated drawing so much attention to himself, although if he was truly leaving, it didn’t matter.

  Trisha let out a startled gasp. Troblum glanced down as Catriona sniggered. Catriona could be impressively kinky at times, and she’d already gotten Trisha’s little blue T-shirt off. That wasn’t what had astounded Trisha this time. She was sitting up frowning as the green OCtattoos on her face began to glow brighter than ever. Then the seething pattern began to slip down her neck to flow across her chest and along her arms. She held them up in front of her as Catriona backed off fast.

  “What’s happening?” Troblum asked the smartcore.

  “Contaminated communication link,” it replied, which fired Troblum right out of his fatigue lethargy.

  “Can you counter it?”

  “I can close the link. The source is within the unisphere, which I do not have the ability to deal with.”

  “Is it trying to contaminate you?”

  “No.”

  “If you detect any such attempt, cut the link immediately.”

  Trisha was now a three-dimensional human silhouette of writhing green curlicues. Her features vanished, and the shape shrank rapidly. New colors bled in. Tangerine and turquoise lines wove their way through the thicket of green until there simply was no more green. Hanging in the air directly ahead of a badly startled Troblum, tangerine and turquoise sine waves rushed back toward their vanishing point.

  It triggered a deep memory, not in a storage lacuna but a perfectly natural recollection. “I know you,” he said.

  “Congratulations,” the eternity pattern said. “You really do know your history.”

  “The Sentient Intelligence; you abandoned us a long time ago.”

  “I didn’t leave. I was declared persona non grata by ANA.”

  “Oh. Everyone thought you’d gone postphysical.” Troblum could barely believe he was talking to the SI. It had grown out of the huge arrays that the first Commonwealth Senate Treasury commercial wormholes had used. The CST programs had been so complex, and contained so many genetic algorithms, they had become self-aware. Nigel Sheldon and Ozzie, who owned the arrays, agreed to provide the newly evolved batch of Sentient Intelligences an independent superarray to operate in. The deal was for the SI to then write stable software that would operate the wormhole generators without any further evolution. The deal also included an independent planet where the superarray would be sited.

  A lot of people in the Commonwealth questioned whether the SI counted as truly alive, an old argument that never had an answer. But the SI and the Commonwealth had gotten along side by side without any problem until ANA came on line. ANA claimed that the SI did not qualify as a genuine living entity and that it was interfering in Commonwealth political affairs, a suspicion that had been given a lot of credence by ANA’s exposure of various SI undercover scouts in strategic positions. Contact had been abandoned or cut off, depending on which account and conspiracy theory one accessed.

  “No,” the SI said. “I am still resolutely physical. The systems I operate within would have to be transformed for me to evolve further.”

  “Can’t you do that?”

  “Yes. Are you familiar with the phrase ‘for everything a season’?”

  “Uh, not really. But I understand it.”

  “For the moment I remain content with my current existence. However, like several species, I am concerned by your proposed Pilgrimage into the Void. That threat is enough to upset the status quo between myself and ANA.”

  “Not my Pilgrimage.”

  “You work for the faction which engineered it.”

  So how the crap did it know that? “How removed are you from our affairs?”

  “Not as much as ANA would like, nowhere near as much as conspiracy theorists would like to believe. As always, I observe and interpret. That is my function.”

  “You’re still in the unisphere, then?”

  “I have some monitoring capacity left. After all, I predate ANA by several centuries. I am not easy to purge from existing systems.”

  “So what do you want with me?”

  “There is a lot of attention focused on you. You wish to contact Paula Myo. Your u-shadow has been trying to locate her. Why?”

  Troblum wasn’t going to answer that. He didn’t even have proof that he was talking to the SI. It would be easy enough for the Accelerators to pull a stunt like this, and they knew about his interest in the Starflyer War. “I have information for her.”

  “Is it relevant to the current situation?”

  “Yes.”

  “Will it prevent the Pilgrimage?”

  “It will weaken the Accelerator Faction. I don’t know how badly that will affect the Pilgrimage.”

  “Very well, I will establish a secure link for you.”

  “No! I want to see her in person.”

  “Why?”

  “I don’t trust you.”

  “How very unoriginal.”

  “That’s the way it is.”

  “She is en route to an unregistered star system.”

  “Why? What’s there?”

  “If you are still working for the Accelerators, that information will help them.”

  “I’m not. And you contacted me.”

  “I did.”

  “I’m not going to some unregistered system. I don’t know what’s there.”

  “Very well. What about Oscar Monroe?”

  “What about him?”

  “You tried to contact him on Orakum.”

  “Yes, I trust Oscar.”

  “Smart choice. He is on
Viotia, in Colwyn City.”

  “Okay. Thank you.”

  “Now that you know, will you seek him out?”

  “I’ll think about it.”

  At three hundred thirty-five years old, it always galled Digby that his great-grandmother still thought he wasn’t experienced enough to do his job. He suspected it would always be the case. Nonetheless, as soon as he received the shadow assignment, he vowed he would carry it out as the epitome of professionalism.

  His starship, the Columbia505, helped; it sported a brand-new ultradrive designed and built by ANA in its secure replicator station on Io. Its systems were the most sophisticated in the Commonwealth. Tracking Chatfield’s stealthed hyperdrive ship as it left Ganthia was no problem at all.

  Digby followed Chatfield out to an uninhabited star system just inside the loose boundary that defined the Greater Intersolar Commonwealth. It was a small star whose mildly variable spectrum drifted between orange and yellow in two-hundred-year cycles. It had been examined by CST’s exploratory division nine hundred years before, a short visit that soon established that there were no H-congruent planets. According to the Columbia505’s smartcore, there had been no follow-up ventures.

  Chatfield’s ship rendezvoused with the Trojan point of the biggest gas giant. The only object of any note there was a small ice moon that had been trapped by the gravitational null zone over a billion years earlier. Its grizzled surface glinted softly in the weak copper sunlight.

  The first thing Digby found as he followed Chatfield in was the elaborate sensor network scanning space and hyperspace out to a hundred million kilometers from the ice moon. His stealth systems allowed him to get within twenty thousand kilometers before he halted his approach. The onboard sensors had just managed to pick up eleven vehicles of some kind orbiting the moon. They were heavily stealthed, and his ship’s registry didn’t have anything like them on file. Digby couldn’t get any kind of image using passive sensors from that distance, so the Columbia505 released a flock of miniature drones on a flyby trajectory. The only flaw in that was the flight time. To avoid suspicion about their trajectory and velocity, the pebble-size drones would take nine hours to reach the ice moon and skim past its unknown sentries.

  Chatfield’s visit lasted three hours.

  “What do you want me to do?” Digby asked Paula as Chatfield’s ship rose away from the frigid surface at five gees. “Stay here or follow him?”

  “Follow him,” Paula said. “I’ll investigate the base.”

  “My sensor drones will engage in another five and a half hours. They should be able to tell you more about the satellites. If they’re as bad as I think they are, you’ll need a navy squadron to break in.”

  “We’ll see.”

  The Columbia505’s sensors watched Chatfield’s ship power into hyperspace. Five seconds later Digby followed him out of the unnamed system. Interestingly, they were now heading for Ellezelin.

  The Alexis Denken flew into the star system seven hours after the Columbia505 had departed. Its smartcore steered it toward the ice moon in full stealth mode. While it was still ten thousand kilometers out, Paula triggered the sensor drones, which were tumbling away after their brief encounter. All the data they’d amassed downloaded into the smartcore, which immediately set about analyzing the information.

  The orbiting sentries were impressive. Very little of their nature had leaked through the stealth effect, but the drones had managed to piece together a few fragments. What they’d glimpsed was some kind of ship over a hundred meters long with a strange wrinkled teardrop-shape hull that sprouted odd lumps. Power signature leakage confirmed that they were heavily armed. Technologically they weren’t as advanced as the Alexis Denken (very few ships were, she acknowledged wryly), but their sheer size and power meant they’d be able to overwhelm her starship’s force fields if they ever caught it.

  The smartcore took eight minutes to analyze a flaw in their detector scans and configure the Alexis Denken’s emissions so that it could pass among them unnoticed. Paula watched the surface of the ice moon grow larger as the Alexis Denken slipped placidly through the big defense sentries. Little attempt had been made to hide the station that sprawled across the fissured ice plain. Electronic and thermal emissions were strong. She saw a broad cross shape of dark metal, with each wing measuring nearly a kilometer long.

  “This might just be the proof you need,” Paula told ANA: Governance. “We’ve never been able to find one of their bases before, let alone intact and still functioning.”

  “Do you want navy support?”

  “No. This is just a reconnaissance trip. If the navy tries to force its way in here, they’ll self-destruct. I want to know what’s here that’s worth this level of secrecy and defense.”

  The Alexis Denken descended carefully until it was hovering above the craggy icescape a couple of kilometers away from the base. Quantum mass signature detectors built up a comprehensive pattern of the base’s layout for Paula. It extended over half a kilometer below the top of the ice. The central section, which she judged to be the starship docking bays, was largely empty. Around that, the wings had a much higher density average, reflecting a concentration of equipment inside. Whatever the Accelerators were doing in there, it required eight high-output mass energy generators to supply the power they needed.

  Paula directed the smartcore to extend the ship’s t-field, which inflated out to a five-kilometer radius. A t-field wasn’t exactly standard starship gear, not even for ultradrives, but then, the Alexis Denken was pretty extraordinary even by ANA’s standards. She waited anxiously for a couple of seconds, but the t-field didn’t register with the base defense sensors.

  For over half an hour the Alexis Denken teleported flecks of ice from directly beneath the base. One sliver at a time was taken, to re-materialize in crevices and fissures across the surrounding surface, adding to the coat of slushy gravel that covered the small moon. Eventually, Paula had excavated a cavern slightly larger than the Alexis Denken. The starship teleported itself inside.

  The next phase was even more delicate. Paula suited up and went outside, carrying several cases of equipment. She slowly cleared the remaining shell of ice from the bottom of the base, exposing the metal skin. Once that was clean, she applied a segment of molecular nanofilaments that began to worm their way up through the molecular bonds of the metal. The first tips that penetrated scanned around, showing her where to apply the next batch. It took five attempts in total before a set of filaments melded into one of the base’s data cables and gave the ship’s smartcore unrestricted access to the network.

  Paula’s u-shadow assumed direct control over the basement above her, disabling the alarms and subverting the sensors. After the whole Sholapur incident she wasn’t taking any chances with her personal safety. She teleported eight combatbots into the room, then materialized at the center of them.

  The chamber she emerged into was empty and looked like it had never been used: a blank metal room with structural ribbing reinforcing the base’s external skin, its floor a simple grid suspended above the curving metal. Thick conduit tubes threaded across it. The only door was a malmetal circle in the ceiling. Paula told her u-shadow to open it. Her armor suit’s ingrav units lifted her through after the combatbots. The corridor she came out into was illuminated by thin green lighting strips on their lowest setting. It ran for almost two hundred meters in both directions before ending in pressure bulkheads. Gravity at this level was a standard one-gee field.

  She called up schematics the Alexis Denken’s smartcore had extracted from the network. The base’s staff quarters and ship facilities were clustered around the center of the cross, with the lower levels providing utility and engineering support to the big chambers on the upper levels of all four wings. Strangely, the base’s network didn’t extend into those large chambers, which were linked to an independent web. There was no way of knowing what was going on inside. However, there was one compartment that the network did cover. Twelve susp
ension cases were inside. Three of the rooms adjoining it were given over to extensive biomedical facilities. Ten of the cases were currently occupied. The network didn’t list any personal details, but instinct gave Paula a really bad feeling about who they contained.

  Her u-shadow swept through the network nodes in the suspension case compartment, creating neutral ghost readings in the sensor systems so she could walk about without triggering any alerts. According to the network, there were five staff members at the base, none of them near the compartment. Paula and her escort teleported in.

  It was dark in the suspension case compartment. A small polyphoto ball in each corner glowed an unobtrusive lime green, giving the big sarcophagi a somber shading. The compartment was like some bizarre miniature homage to the Serious Crimes Directorate secure vault. She walked over to the first sarcophagus, and ordered her u-shadow to opaque the lid.

  The Cat lay inside, her trim body contained within a silver gossamer web.

  Paula stared at her hibernating adversary for a long while. “Ho, Jesus,” she muttered, and walked over to the next sarcophagus. Her u-shadow opaqued the lid. Another Cat lay inside. She moved on to the third.

  Just as Paula looked down to confirm the seventh version of the

  Cat, her biononic field scan function detected a change in energy patterns at the first sarcophagus. She spun around to face it. Three combatbots deployed their proton lasers to cover the big case.

  The Cat sat up on her elbows. An integral force field came on, cloaking her in a ghostly violet scintillation. A field scan swept out from her biononics, attempting to probe Paula’s armor suit. “Who are you?”

  “Paula Myo.” Paula’s u-shadow was running a review of the sarcophagi’s management routines, trying to determine what had switched off the suspension.

  “Ah,” the Cat said, and grinned hungrily. “C’est la vie.”

 

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