The Iron Admiral: Conspiracy
Page 12
He cleared the space between them in a single stride.
Chapter Twenty One
Allysha slept, her head on Saahren’s shoulder, her arm draped across his chest. He listened to her
breathe and savored the scent of her hair. And that idiot O’Reilly had given her away? For the dubious delights of the likes of the tarts on Tisyphor? The man had to be stark, raving mad. Then again, perhaps he ought to be grateful. Without O’Reilly he wouldn’t have met her.
She stirred, muttered in her sleep and settled again. One of these days he’d have to tell her his name and maybe then his love life would be over.Face it, Saahren, you’re frightened. Yes, true. He’d have to find out what the problem was and try to fix it. But not just now. He still had the Qerran Crisis to resolve.
And he was beginning to think she might be able to help with that.
He awoke to the insistent beeping of an alarm. Allysha sat up, eyes wide. The sheet slipped off her
body, revealing her breast. He enjoyed the view.
“What’s wrong?” she said
“Nothing. We’re coming up to the jump gate for Chollarc. We have an hour. Plenty of time for a few
moments to ourselves.”
She smiled and lay down beside him again, her fingers sliding down his breastbone. “Oh, good.”
****
Saahren slipped into the pilot’s seat and checked status. All green. He hadn’t expected anything else.
Once the ship had entered shift-space, the IS had taken over. An alarm would have sounded in the event of problems.
“I can’t understand why they wouldn’t have a talking IS,” Allysha said. She’d sat down at the
engineering station, fresh from the shower. The clean smell of her filled his nostrils.
“Too close to an intelligent machine, I suppose.”
“But it isn’t intelligent. An IS is programmed to put on an act to make people feel comfortable. It can’t really think. What’s really stupid is this ship could easily have a talking IS. The tech’s there, it just hasn’t been connected. All this stuff with buttons and dials is idiotic. The IS does all the work anyway.”
“Agreed, my love. But that’s their dogma. They call us machine men.”
She swiveled the seat to look at him.
“Why?”
“Because of our implants.” He pointed at his skull behind his left ear. “And our improved genome.”
She frowned, digesting that.
“I can sort of see why some people would have a thing about an implant, although I can’t imagine what I’d do without mine. But… who’d be against preventing diseases?”
“Them. They say it’s unnatural, against the will of God.”
“God. Right.” She shrugged. “Oh, well. To each his own.”
“But you can do much more with your implant than most, isn’t that so?”
She covered the wariness quickly. “What makes you say that?”
“You don’t need a keyboard, do you? You work with the IS with your mind.” He pointed a finger at his
own head.
“Don’t be ridiculous. That’s not possible.” But he’d seen the flicker in her eyes.
“Your eyes change when you’re working with the machine,” he said softly. “The keys you press are just for show. I’ve been watching you. When you’re looking for something your eyes lose focus. It’s as if
you’re not there; as if you’re in the machine. That’s how you found the mountain garden, down there in the tunnel, without projecting a keyboard.”
She didn’t answer for a while. He could almost see the tumult in her mind. Should she brazen it out? Tell him he was wrong? He knew he’d won when the tension drained, her rigid shoulders sagged.
“I suppose I can’t deny it. You’re right. The techpack gives me a connection to a data point—the things the InfoDroids hook into. From there I just…” she made a gliding motion with her arms, “slide in. No
one else has noticed that.”
“How? How can your brain interact with an IS?”
“It doesn’t. I work through my implant. Both my mother and father were Confederacy, so I have the
improved genome and Papa made sure I had a chip fitted. It was his design, with some added
functionality. You could say it gives me extra processing power, a place to store data.”
“Yes, ours do that, too. Go on.”
“Papa asked for the vision modification at the same time the implant was fitted. The Tor doctors did the operation; it involves neural as well as retinal changes. Your brain has to know how to interpret what you see.”
“Your parents allowed ptorix doctors to operate on your brain?”
“It’s not something Papa talked about much. My mother died soon after I was born. I think that was
why.” Her hand slipped through her hair, a habit he’d noticed when she was flustered. “She died. Killed in an accident. She walked out in front of a vehicle. Professor Xanthor, my father’s greatest friend, told me Mama didn’t want them to operate but father insisted.”
Easy to enough to imagine the man insisting on the operation, the distraught mother making a lethal
mistake. “So you connect with your implant with your eyes.”
She nodded. “That must have had something to do with the neural change for my vision. I can…” she
cast around, looking for words, “almost see the pathways in the computer, follow the data, interpret the codes.”
“That helps you with other systems? This ship, the ptorix systems?”
“Yes. Papa and I discovered my talent by accident when I was about ten.” She barked a short laugh. “It certainly explained why I appeared to be a child prodigy in everything IS related.”
“You keep this talent secret?”
“Oh yes. My father insisted. He explained to me that I was strange enough with my peculiar eyes. If
people found out I can talk to machines they’d put me in hospital, test me, try to use me for things I didn’t want to do. I took his advice and it made sense.”
She’d told him much more than she’d intended, he was sure. He’d bet a year’s salary it wasn’t just the implant she used. “I’ll keep it to myself.” But it wouldn’t matter, because she’d be working for him. And married to him. “Can you do this sort of thing in any IS?”
“I have administrator rights in this one on Tisyphor, which makes it easy. But I’d back myself on most systems, given enough time. I find the back doors.”
“Explain.”
“ISs have heaps of redundancy. There are always ways if you know how. What’s useful for someone
like me is when the old system has some means for an external entity,” she indicated the techpack, “to interface with it. In that case, I can get into the IS using that loophole, break open its security and get into the rest of the system from there.”
“And that’s possible for any IS?”
“Some are harder than others. But every IS has a port to allow access for an InfoDroid. Often that’s all I need. That and my techpack.”
So she needed the techpack. But not the keyboard. “You could be a rather dangerous lady.” And he
would have to take that fact into account when the time came.
She laughed. “Only to an information system. What’s this Chollarc place like?”
“Mixed ptorix-human population, economically depressed, which is why they take jobs on Tisyphor.
We won’t be staying. I have a ship there. I’m going to cruise past my own ship and we’re going to
abandon this one, wearing exo-suits. Then we just slip into the external hatch on my ship and fly away.”
Her eyes grew round. “What’s an exo-suit?”
“A space suit for wearing outside a vehicle. They’re standard safety issue. They have shielding against radiation, an air supply and small thrusters so you can move around.”
She made a face. “Sounds scary. Why don’t we just
park in the normal way?”
“Tisyphor has a multi-dim transmitter, so our friends could have contacted Chollarc in real time. Which means they may have organized a welcoming committee. In fact, I’d say they’ve almost certainly
organized a welcoming committee. I’d rather not take the risk.”
“Oh. So when do we do jump out of here?”
“When we can get to my ship and do so without being noticed.”
The status changed. The letters marched across the bottom of the screen. “Approaching jump gate.”
Saahren turned his attention back to the ship. They’d know on Chollarc that a ship approached. He’d
thought briefly about getting Allysha to change the ship’s ID but if the space station had been alerted, it would be looking at any ship which emerged from the gate. Hopefully, seeing the unchanged ID they’d
underestimate him. Always a plus in a battle.
The chrono wound down on the status screen, still in minutes, then seconds. His hand hovered over the levers for the forward thrusters. He hoped the ship would automatically adjust to the rigors of real space but in a GPR ship, who could say?
Three… two… one… zero. His brain registered the familiar weird shimmy as the ship exited shift-space
and the view screens displayed normal space in all its glory. Stars and nebulae appeared as a backdrop to the bright sphere of Chollarc. The planet’s orbiting space station, the usual multi-wheeled structure turning slowly on its axis, gleamed in the sunlight a thousand klicks off to starboard.
The thrusters came on as soon as the ship had cleared the jump gate. He took his hand away from the
levers. Allysha was right; the IS did all the work. Why bother with levers unless you needed to go to manual? He called up the space station’s controllers and requested a docking bay. The response came
back as he would have expected; no questions, no suspicion, no delay.
“Come along, Allysha. Time to suit up.”
He levered himself out of his seat and pulled open a hatch in the cockpit’s bulkhead marked
‘Emergency’. Three suits hung in a line, air packs attached. He pulled out a suit and handed it to Allysha.
“Put it on, leave the helmet until we’re ready to exit the ship. It will react automatically to vacuum.”
He’d done this hundreds of times before, usually in drills. He’d finished and even slipped the holster holding the Emson onto his belt before Allysha had done up the zip at the front. He helped her adjust the gloves and closed the zipper.
“It’s a lot more comfortable than I thought,” she said.
He showed her how to handle the thruster jets via controls on each glove. On a Star Fleet suit he could have used a connection with his implant.
Ahead, the space station filled the screen. The ship had been allocated level C bay six. His own ship occupied Level D, bay four. Timing was the thing. Slow this ship down so D-4 was in the frame and bale out, having set the ship on auto-pilot to proceed on.
He waited.
“GPR SV-TS78 you are losing slot position. Is there a problem?”
Damn. The station had picked up he was out of position. He grabbed the microphone. “A slight hiccup
in thruster calibration sequencing. Remedial action successful. Proceeding.”
He turned to Allysha. “I want to set the destination as the allocated bay. Can you delay the action until we get off the ship?”
“Um… Yes. What if I send the instruction to the ship as we get off?”
“Perfect. Let’s go.”
He angled the ship to slip along the station’s curve, just faster than the speed of rotation, and then ran down to the airlock.
“Helmets on.”
The door cycled open and they hurried inside. He locked the hatch. The air began to drain out and the suits responded, stiffening and locking the helmets in place. Allysha’s eyes looked wide and frightened behind the transpex faceplate.
“All right?” He asked her via the helmet mike.
“Yes.” But she gulped the word, obviously terrified out of her wits.
“Concentrate on your breathing. In… out. It’s fine. We have plenty of air for this. One hundred minutes.
See?” He showed her the gauge.
The status on the external hatch for the airlock cycled to green.
“Send the ship the instruction,” he said as he pushed the hatch open.
She nodded. He waited for two seconds, grabbed her hand and dragged her outside.
They tumbled, end over end. Saahren fired his thrusters and controlled the roll. The space station rose beside him inside of rotating over his head. Allysha over compensated and tumbled the other way, her
eyes and mouth all round with fear. It happened to some people. He’d always enjoyed the sensation of
flying without a ship.
“It’s all right. Move your hand down and press the jet for just a second. Better. And again.”
He could almost hear her heart thundering. He gave the jets a short burst and came closer to her.
“Hold onto me,” he said. “I’ll take us in.”
She clamped her arms around his waist. The ship they’d just left drifted on, around the curve of the
station and angling up toward C wheel. Bay three of wheel D had almost cleared them. He could see the stern of his ship, clamped in place in bay four. He fired the suit jets, getting in close to the station’s superstructure. He braked, turned and angled for the ship’s hull.
They drifted. He put his legs out, braked… contact. He stood upright on the curved surface and helped Allysha steady herself. She clung to him. The bay cavity soared above them, long girders connecting the wheels.
“The emergency hatch is just up there, Allysha.” He pointed at the outline on his ship’s hull, a bright yellow square just above the engine cowling.
He shaped to fire the jets.
“Stone. Where the fuck are you? This is Tyne.”
Saahren took his fingers off the jets. Tyne had used his implant to contact him. He must be nearby.
“What’s happened?”
“My operation’s blown. They’re waiting for you. On your ship.”
Chapter Twenty Two
Saahren’s heart lurched. They’d be waiting for him at bay C-6, as well. “Where are you?”
“I managed to get out and called in a favor with a friend. Can you get to bay B-3?”
“Not easily. I’m on the outside of my ship at D-4 in an exo-suit. I’d planned to get in through the emergency hatch.”
“Right. Stay there. We’ll come around the station. Be ready to come across. The ship’s name is ‘Maxine’—a long, white luxury yacht. I’ll give you notice.”
Allysha stared at him. “Hostiles, my love. Possibly at the docking bay here, just as possibly on the ship.
But help is on the way.”
If the hostiles were on his ship and they realized he and Allysha were here on the hull, there was likely to be trouble. He hoped Tyne moved fast. And that the hostiles weren’t equipped to pursue. The idea of a luxury yacht wasn’t comforting.
She edged closer to him. “How long?”
“I don’t know. Look for a white ship, close to the station.”
The emergency hatch cracked.
Heart racing, Saahren grabbed Allysha, fired up the thrusters on his suit and dived off the hull, her frightened yell echoing in his ears. If he could keep out of sight for long enough they might yet make it.
Using the smallest possible jets he maneuvered the two of them around underneath the ship’s engine exhausts.Come on, Tyne. Hurry up . He swiveled his head, looking around him. If they realized what he’d done they could easily follow.
“Brad.” Allysha’s voice gasped in his helmet.
He’d already seen them; two suited figures, one on each side of the ship, both jetting toward them.
He let go of the hull, aimed a jet at the nearest assailant and fired at full power. The suited figu
re jerked, arms and legs thrashing. Allysha did the same, sending the figure on her side into a tumble and stabilizing their position at the same time. But it wouldn’t be for long. He angled the jets to drive him and Allysha out into space away from the station, but not too far. The massive cylinder reared above and below, turning slowly, punctuated with the staggered ranks of the ass-end of ships stuck into bays like so many ticks into a host. Chollarc’s daylight face filled the left-side view. Allysha hung onto his belt. He caught a brief glimpse of her face. Frightened but resolute. He’d accept that in a trooper, any day.
The attackers had regrouped, but they weren’t following. Neither were they withdrawing. They would have called up a transport, something to scoop them up like a couple of fish in a net, while they waited to cut off escape.Damn it, Tyne. Where are you?
“Here’s help. Or trouble.”
He turned to see the blunt nose of a ship edging toward them. A grey ship. “Trouble.”
The two people floating beside his ship had started to move. They were trying to herd them into a trap.
Push them from behind, straight into the ship. Well, he wasn’t going to play. Tyne would be around somewhere.
“Hold on to me, Allysha. We’re going up.” She nodded at him as he fired the jets down. He’d have to be careful not to go too high.
“Trouble with hostiles, Tyne. Looks like the station’s shuttle ship.”
“Copy. We are armed.”
“Make it fast, will you?”
A hatch at the top of the shuttle ship opened and a grey-suited figure emerged wielding a net. They’d normally use that for scooping up debris. Saahren pulled out his pistol.
“When I fire this, we’ll shoot backwards. Can you use the jet to balance us here?”
“Yes.”
He fired at the netman. At this distance the beam wouldn’t pierce the hardened suit but the man let go of the net and ducked back into the ship. Saahren shifted his fire to the net, blasting it down below the vessel’s hull and out into space while Allysha held their position with her jet.
“Well done,” he said to her.