"Execute him? Maybe we can get the team back here, save him from—"
"There's no time.'*
Starbuck looked toward the platform. Thane was gesturing with his head down toward his jacket. The Cylon took a box out of Thane's clothes. A small electronic packet. Where've I seen that before? Starbuck thought. Then he remembered where, and he shouted to the Tennas and Ser 5-9:
"We've got to get out of here."
Thane's soft voice filled the cavernous chamber as the crowd fell silent:
"Just press that button."
Leading the three clones into a corridor, Starbuck yelled back at them:
"It's a hand mine! Get down!"
The shock waves from the explosion made the ground beneath Starbuck's body rumble. The rumbling was accompanied by screams and the sound of falling rocks in the main chamber.
The sound of the explosion faded. Starbuck rolled over and looked back. The execution area was a shambles, rocks and debris nearly enveloping it. Some smoke still clung to the ground and the walls, but Cylons and clones could be seen stirring and moving about, perhaps searching out the dead.
"What happened?" asked one of the Tennas. Starbuck had no idea which one.
"God," he mumbled, not ready yet to answer a question straight. "Thane. I didn't think he had the—no, I should have known, those eyes, those—I took him for a coward, Tenna. I thought the cold look was all a fake to hide what a misfit he actually—"
"Starbuck," Tenna interrupted. "What did he do?"
"He carries packs. Chemicals, explosives. That box was a hand mine. I guess he decided to take some Cylons with him. And, unfortunately, some of your people. I'm sorry."
"He was your friend?"
"Friend? He could have been. Maybe. Maybe we weren't so different. Ah, this ain't my style of thinking. We better get back."
"That way," the voice of Tenna said, but it was not the Tenna he was looking at. He turned and saw the other one pointing at a nearby corridor.
FROM THE ADAMA JOURNALS:
I keep thinking about Sharky Star-rover. Last night I dreamt I had a copy of the book in my hands, but when I opened it, the print was blurred and I couldn't make out a single word, no matter how close I held the volume to my face.
There was this one scene in the book, set on a lushly landscaped planet. Sharky, having fallen exhausted from being chased by some fierce hirsute denizens of the land, looked up at a beautiful tree that seemed to lunge toward the sky from his prone vantage point. It had, I seem to recall, a jagged irregular bark that, in the planet's gloomy darkness, glowed luminescently in abstract bloblike patterns. One particular blob reminded him of Jameson, who'd been captured by the natives. The last sight Sharky had had of Jameson, it had looked to him like the captors were considering boiling him for their evening meal. (I can't remember whether Jameson was rescued by Sharky or fate—for some mysterious reason the really exciting adventures seem to have slipped my memory. I don't even think Jameson was edible.) Anyway, Sharky—saddened by thinking of Jameson—starts to consider this oddly barked tree in more detail. Far above him, on snakelike branches, its leaves were ugly, furry, and dripping with an oily liquid, drops of which fell like miniature deadly bombs around Sharky. He did nothing to try to avoid the drops, but none of them hit him and he thought they even curved in their downward flight as if to miss him intentionally.
He stared at the tree for a long time. He had never seen one like it. His mind contemplated all the trees, all the landscapes, all the natural phenomena he had seen on his travels. Before, it had all impressed him, reminded him of the vast scope of the universe. Now, he wondered if that impression was an illusion. The universe was not so darn gosh-awful big, he thought, we are just too small to appreciate its finitude. This tree might be the only one of its kind on this planet, it might be found nowhere else in the universe, but it was just a tree. Other planets had trees, some did not. He knew that, of kinds of trees, there was only a finite number existing in the universe. Whatever the number was, it was not often increased by one more. That thought made Sharky think of how small the universe was. Perhaps, he thought, people had always been wrong in contemplating their insignificance in the universe. They, too, represented merely a finite number in a finite universe. Insignificance was not the point, that was only investing the number with an unnecessary emotional aspect. If trees contemplated the varieties of human being, or even the varieties of sentient creatures in the universe, they could come to their own similar conclusions about the significance or insignificance of trees. Then he began to laugh. (I remember the scene of his laughter very vividly.) Significance or insignificance, finity or infinity, the tree was extremely beautiful at that moment. For him. Nobody else would ever experience this moment, he thought, no matter who rushed in and sprawled beneath this tree.
As I search the universe for a place to escape to, I often consider Sharky's momentary dilemma. Are our possibilities for escape so finite that we'll eventually have to climb into the nets of a Cylon trap? Or should we continue to consider them infinite, or at least as a high number—say, the number of kinds of trees in the universe—in order to invest those possibilities with hope?
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
"I have reports now that your puny mission on the surface of the ice planet Tairac is failing," Imperious Leader said to the Starbuck, who seemed to be half-sitting and half-lying on his simulated chair.
"That right? You capture everybody?"
"Well, not everybody yet, but soon."
"How about me, am I on the mission? You capture me?"
"I do not know of your presence on the mission."
"I probably am. I manage to get myself in trouble in spite of myself. If you haven't captured me, the mission isn't failing."
"Do you think you make a significant difference?"
"Any one of us makes a significant difference as long as we're alive. But I've always got a little edge. Luck, we call it. You guys don't know how to utilize luck."
"If it is not a tangible factor, we will not apply it to our strategy."
"Your mistake. It's tangible but you'll never see it."
Imperious Leader chose not to pursue that line of thought.
"One of your people is to be executed, another will be eventually."
"Oh? What're their names?"
"Thane and Cree."
"I don't know them."
"But they are a part of the information we—
"Recall that, when I was programmed, it was based on the most recent information. This reproduction of me doesn't know of Thane or Cree yet, because they were not part of your latest information from captured prisoners. Your data banks can't get milk from a daggit, after all."
Imperious Leader wondered if the simulator, perhaps forced into overload in maintaining the Starbuck figure, was now itself actually talking back to him.
First Centurion Vulpa hoped that news of the explosion had not somehow reached Imperious Leader. It had seemed uncanny to him how Imperious Leader sometimes knew what had happened even though no one had transmitted him information concerning the subject. Perhaps, Vulpa thought, that also was a function of the third brain that he so desired. The prisoner's suicide made no sense to him, and frightened him a bit. He could counter human acts that conformed with the knowledge Cylons had of the species, but an act like the prisoner's, suicidal sabotage, was beyond his ken. Vulpa also did not want Imperious Leader to know the extent of casualties, the depletion of his already understaffed garrison.
"Stand by for a message from the High Command," the communications officer announced.
Vulpa turned to his telecom screen. All the other Cylons stood in a rigid silence. As the contact was made, the image on the screen was first a scramble of dots and lines, and then it slowly resolved into the awesome many-eyed face of Imperious Leader. The face was not clear, because the Leader sat in shadow.
"First Centurion Vulpa!" Imperious Leader barked.
"By your command," Vulpa answere
d, according to the honored ritual.
"The time for our final attack is nearing. Our base ships are approaching the Galactica and its fleet. The major assault on them is imminent. They will be in full range of the pulsar cannon soon. What is the status of the installation on Mount Hekla?"
"Fully operative."
"Good. Initiate random firing. Sweep the entire corridor. You may be able to catch the Galactica when it first enters your sector. Begin at once."
"By your command."
"I expect no less than the annihilation of that battlestar and the entire fleet. The way will then be clear for your return to the executive-officer staff on the command-base ship, Vulpa."
"Yes, sir."
As Imperious Leader's image disintegrated into an array of swarming and swimming bits, Vulpa considered the meaning of the Leader's last statement. With the success of the operation Vulpa's days of exile on this dreadful ice planet were nearly over. He swung around in his command chair and ordered the officers still standing at attention:
"Transmit those orders to Summit Station. Program for automatic fire. Random sweeps covering the corridor. Tell the gunnery squad I will be joining them to guide the entire operation. I will take the supply ship up to the station. Alert the control tower there to prepare for my arrival."
"What about the human invasion force?" an officer asked.
"I doubt they're much danger anymore. But double the guard at all strategic points, at the garrison here and the command post, and send a whole platoon to guard the elevator accessway, should they get foolish and think they can use it."
Vulpa noticed Cree still lying unconscious in his corner.
"We have no further need of that one. Take him to a cold cell. I will examine his cortex later. Is the supply ship ready?"
"Yes, First Centurion."
Vulpa swaggered out of the room. Two of the remaining Cylons picked up Cree, his body still limp, and dragged him out of the command-post headquarters.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Croft:
Apollo's only just had time to catch his breath, when the door behind him begins sliding open. He spins around with his laser drawn. The smiling face of Starbuck peeks in through the opening, saying:
"Is that any way to greet a fellow warrior?"
Apollo looks disgusted at Starbuck, says:
"I thought I left you in charge."
"I made a command decision to reconnoiter."
Starbuck edges into the room. He's wearing a clone worker outfit, and it's filthy with dust. Apollo reaches out and touches the fur, then examines the dirt that comes off on his fingers. Ser 5-9 and a couple of the Tennas follow Starbuck into the room, looking quite downcast.
"What happened?" Apollo asks.
"Didn't you hear?"
"I thought I heard something when I was rushing back here through the corridors, but—"
"It was a big explosion. Thane's work. He's dead."
I glance at Wolfe and Leda. None of us speak. The old code: never show emotion when you hear one of your kind's been killed. Apollo studies all our faces for reactions to Starbuck's news. I'm glad we don't show him anything. We all learned long ago you get no prizes for compassion.
Starbuck tells about the explosion. I have to say I'm impressed. I always knew Thane had no regard for human life, but I always thought he had some regard for his own. Still, he's dead by his own choice, and that's the kind of control he always demanded.
"One thing sure," Starbuck finishes, "he didn't betray us on the mission."
The mission. I almost forgot that part of it. I counted on Thane to help me lay the solenite. He knew more about the stuff than I do. Without him, that puts us all a couple of steps closer to our own deaths. In the mission plan Leda's backup to Thane in helping me with placing the demolitions. That should be cozy. Well, she may kill me while we're working together, but she does know something about laying down the solenite.
"We've got a problem," Apollo declares.
"Tell me something I—" Starbuck starts, but gets a mean look from Apollo and stops. "Yes, sir. A problem."
"Ravashol says our best chance is a—
"The father-creator helped you!" Ser 5-9 blurts out, astonished and pleased.
"Yes. We've worked out a simultaneous-attack strategy. It's our best chance."
Using maps supplied by Ravashol, Apollo explains the layout at the top of Mount Hekla and at the foothills garrison. Then he gets down to brass tacks:
"There're three phases to the assault and they must be coordinated precisely. Croft, Wolfe, Leda, and myself will make the ascent up Hekla. After we reach the top, Croft and Leda will take care of planting the explosives. At the same time, Wolfe and I'll take on the small guard stationed there, and keep them out of the way of Croft and Leda,then—"
"You're taking Wolfe in with you, Captain?" Starbuck asks.
"That's right."
All of us look toward Wolfe. He looks as mean and surly and insubordinate as ever. I were Apollo, I wouldn't take him anywhere.
Starbuck doesn't know where to turn.
"But, Captain, respectfully, I think Wolfe should be assigned to another part of the assault. I'll go with you up the mountain."
"No, Starbuck, you're in charge of attacking the main garrison, so they can't respond to any calls and interrupt our little task on Hekla."
"But, Captain—
"No more buts. Wolfe has extensive climbing experience, you don't. And don't hand me any of that bilge about you and Boomer being stationed on some ice planet somewhere. You and I both know how that little detail found its way into your records. This mission is too important for me to have to be crawling down crevasses to get you out. Your job will be to strike the garrison—with the help of Ser 5-9 and a contingent of his best fighters. You have to render any Cylon rescue teams inoperable, especially keep them from launching an attack on us from the airfield. Then, you have to get to the underground complex below the garrison, and get through the tunnel there and encounter the Cylon troops guarding the elevator. It's located at this point on the map. Our best escape route from the emplacement is down that elevator. If we try to go down the mountain, we'll more than likely be killed by the explosion or buried in its debris. I don't want any Cylons waiting for us by the elevator when we get down there. Okay, Starbuck?"
"We won't let you down."
"I'm counting on your success. The survival of the rest of us depends on your gaining control of that elevator."
Starbuck nods, but his face still shows concern. Can't say as I blame him. I don't even know if I could control Wolfe on a run-in like that. Apollo better keep all ten eyes on Wolfe.
Ser 5-9 steps forward and speaks in his formal voice:
"Captain. I can delegate someone to join the attack squad on the main garrison, and lead those troops of our people. My real usefulness to you is on the mountain. Tenna"—he points to the nearest Tenna—"and I have considerable experience on that mountain. We can help you cut your time in half."
"No, Ser 5-9,I don't want to risk you on the mountain. Your people'll need your leadership and—
"Captain Apollo," I interrupt, "we do need someone of Ser 5-9's abilities on Hekla. Remember, we've never seen it, never had a chance to scout the terrain up close. It's like he said. He may know the trails, the chimneys, the easy slopes—he can save us a lot of time."
Apollo lets all this bounce around inside his head for a moment, then nods in agreement.
"All right," he says. "Let's set our timepieces."
We all look at the chronometers supplied us by the Galactica quartermaster. I never could make out how to use one, but I fake the synchronization anyway, and I press my button when Apollo tells us to start timers. After the synchronization ritual, Apollo gets grim, tightens his mouth, and says:
"We'll reach the top and start our attack in exactly eighty-five centons."
"Captain," I say, "it takes me eighty-five centons just to lace my boots."
God, the loo
k he gives me is so hard I couldn't drive a piton into it.
"We must reach the top in eighty-five centons," he says. "The Galactica will be moving forward after that."
"You say so, Captain," I say, then mutter to Ser 5-9: "You guys don't know any shortcuts, you'll have to throw us to the top."
Ser 5-9 smiles. A revelation: clones have a sense of humor. I'm glad he's joining us.
"You're the key down here, Starbuck, you and Boomer," Apollo says. "We can't get down the elevator, we blow up with the gun. For all our sakes, Starbuck, don't be late!"
Again Starbuck reacts to a mean look from the captain; then he says:
"No, sir. We'll be there."
As I test all twelve points of each crampon before attaching them to my climbing shoes, I feel the kind of fear I felt during my preparations for every tough climb I've had to make. It's a good sign.
Ser 5-9 brings us out a cave set in the foothills of the mountain. Surrounded by high boulders and snowdrifts, we can't be seen from the main Cylon garrison. I turn around and look up at Hekla. Although not a high mountain in the usual mountaineering judgment of height, it is still awesome, since it rises from a relative flatland, with no easy smaller mountains or hills to make the approach to it gradual.
Like the best mountains I've seen, Hekla looks designed. Its slopes and angles seem freshly handled by a master sculptor who'll never grow tired of altering the look of it. Although this mountain's surfaces do not change their colors with the seasons and the position of a sun in the sky, its dark gray cast is varied with mysterious, and mysteriously attractive, shadows. The howling winds and the irregular plumes of blowing snow make Hekla all the more mysterious and terrifying. As the bitter cold begins to penetrate the many layers of my clothing, I feel more confident about the whole escapade. Well, if not confident, at least more buoyant in spirits. Like all experienced cragsmen, I long for the challenge of a mountain such as Hekla. The pain it will cause, the imminence of sudden death, the possibility of exhaustion and defeat—they're all part of the challenge. My body begins to long for the pain, the exhaustion, the cold. Maybe even the death, since I'd rather die huddled in the niche of a mountain than spread out in the most luxurious cell a prison has to offer.
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