Ship Who Searched

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Ship Who Searched Page 11

by Mercedes Lackey


  “So, why are you insisting on partnering me?” she asked, deciding that if he had manipulated her, she was going to be blunt with him, and if he couldn’t take it, he wasn’t cut out to partner her. No matter what he thought. Hmm, maybe frankness could scare him away. . . .

  He blinked. “You really don’t know? Because you are you,” he said. “It’s really appallingly simple. You have a sparkling personality. You don’t try to flatten your voice and sound like an AI, the way some of your classmates have. You aren’t at all afraid to have an opinion. You have a teddy bear walled up in your central cabin like a piece of artwork, but you don’t talk about it. That’s a mystery, and I love mysteries, especially when they imply something as personable as a teddy bear. When you talk, I can hear you smiling, frowning, whatever. You’re a shellperson, Hypatia, with the emphasis on person. I like you. I had hoped that you would like me. I figured we could keep each other entertained for a long, long time.”

  Well, he’d out-blunted her, and that was a fact. And—startled her. She was surprised, not a little flattered, and getting to think that Alex might not be a bad choice as a brawn after all. “Well, I like you,” she replied hesitantly, “but . . .”

  “But what?” he asked, boldly. “What is it?”

  “I don’t like being manipulated,” she replied. “And you’ve been doing just that: manipulating me, or trying.”

  He made a face. “Guilty as charged. Part of it is just something I do without thinking about it. I come from a low-middle-class neighborhood. Where I come from, you either charm your way out of something or fight your way out of it, and I prefer the former. I’ll try not to do it again.”

  “That’s not all,” she warned. “I’ve got—certain plans—that might get in the way, if you don’t help me.” She paused for effect. “It’s about what I want to hunt down. The homeworld of the Salomon-Kildaire Entities.”

  “The EsKays?” he replied, sitting up, ramrod-straight. “Oh, my—if this weren’t real life I’d think you were telepathic or something! The EsKays are my favorite archeological mystery! I’m dying to find out why they’d set up shop, then vanish! And if we could find the homeworld—Hypatia, we’d be holo-stars! Stellar achievers!”

  Her thoughts milled about for a moment. This was very strange. Very strange indeed.

  “I assume that part of our time Out would be spent checking things out at the EsKay sites?” he said, his eyes warming. “Looking for things the archeologists may not find? Looking for more potential sites?”

  “Something like that,” she told him. “That’s why I need your cooperation. Sometimes I’m going to need a mobile partner on this one.”

  He nodded, knowingly. “Lovely lady, you are looking at him,” he replied. “And only too happy to. If there’s one thing I’m a sucker for, it’s a quest. And this is even better, a quest at the service of a lady!”

  “A quest?” she chuckled a little. “What, do you want us to swear to find the Holy Grail now?”

  “Why not?” he said lightly. “Here—I’ll start.” He stood up, faced not her column but Ted E. Bear in his illuminated case, and held his hand as if he were taking the Space Service Oath. “I, Alexander Joli-Chanteu, do solemnly swear that I shall join brainship Hypatia One-Oh-Three-Three in a continuing and ongoing search for the homeworld of the Salomon-Kildaire Entities. I swear that this will be a joint project for as long as we have a joint career. And I swear that I shall give her all the support and friendship she needs in this search, so help me. So let it be witnessed and sealed by yon bear.”

  Tia would have giggled, except that he looked so very solemn.

  “All right,” he said, when he sat down again. “What about you?”

  What about her? She had virtually accepted him as her brawn, hadn’t she? And hadn’t he sworn himself into her service, like some kind of medieval knight?

  “All right,” she replied. “I, Hypatia One-Oh-Three-Three, do solemnly swear to take Alexander Joli-Chanteu into my service, to share with him my search for the EsKay homeworld, and to share with him those rewards both material and immaterial that come our way in this search. I pledge to keep him as my brawn unless we both agree mutually to sever the contract. I swear it by—by Theodore Edward Bear.”

  He grinned, so wide and infectiously, that she wished she could return it. “I guess we’re a team, then,” she said.

  “Then here—” he lifted an invisible glass “—is to our joint career. May it be as long and fruitful as the Cades’.”

  He pretended to drink, then to smash the invisible glass in an invisible fireplace, little guessing that Tia’s silence was due entirely to frozen shock.

  The Cades? How could he—

  But before she vocalized anything, she suddenly realized that he could not possibly have known who and what she really was.

  The literature on the Cades would never have mentioned their paralyzed daughter, nor the tragedy that caused her paralysis. That simply wasn’t done in academic circles, a world in which only facts and speculations existed, and not sordid details of private lives. The Cades weren’t stellar personalities, the kind people made docudramas out of. There was no way he could have known about Hypatia Cade.

  And once someone went into the shellperson program, their last name was buried in a web of eyes-only and fail-safes, to ensure that their background remained private. It was better that way, easier to adjust to being shelled. The unscrupulous supervisor could take advantage of a shellperson’s background for manipulation, and there were other problems as well. Brainships were, as Professor Brogen had pointed out, valuable commodities. So were their cargoes. The ugly possibilities of using familial hostages or family pressures against a brainship were very real. Or using family ties to lure a ship into ambush. . . .

  But there was always the option for the shellperson to tell trusted friends about who they were. Trusted friends—and brawns.

  She hesitated for a moment, as he saluted Ted. Should she tell him about herself and avoid a painful gaffe in the future?

  No. No, I have to learn to live with it, if I’m going to keep chasing the EsKays. If he doesn’t say anything, someone else will. Mum and Dad may have soured on the EsKay project because of me, but their names are still linked with it. And besides—it doesn’t matter. The EsKays are mine, now. And I’m not a Cade anymore, even if I do find the homeworld. I won’t be listed in the literature as Hypatia Cade, but as Hypatia One-Oh-Three-Three. A brainship. Part of the AH team—

  She realized what their team designation looked like. “Do you realize that together our initials are—”

  “‘Ah’?” he said, pronouncing it like the word. “Actually, I did, right off. I thought it was a good omen. Not quite ‘eureka,’ but close enough!”

  “Hmm,” she replied. “It sounds like something a professor says when he thinks you’re full of lint but he can’t come up with a refutation!”

  “You have no romance in your soul,” he chided mockingly. “And speaking of romance, what time is it?”

  “Four thirty-two and twenty-seven point five nine seconds,” she replied instantly. “In the morning, of course.”

  “Egads,” he said, and shuddered. “Oh-dark-hundred. Let this be the measure of my devotion, my lady. I, who never see the sun rise if I can help it, actually got up at four in the morning to talk to you.”

  “Devotion, indeed,” she replied with a laugh. “All right, Alex—I give in. You are hereby officially my brawn. I’m Tia, by the way, not Hypatia, not to you. But you’d better sneak back to your dormitory and pretend to be surprised when they tell you I picked you, or we’ll both be in trouble.”

  “Your wish, dearest Tia, is my command,” he said, rising and bowing. “Hopefully I can get past the gate-guard going out as easily as I got past going in.”

  “Don’t get caught,” she warned him. “I can’t bail you out, not officially, and not yet. Right now, as my supervisor told me so succinctly, I am an expensive drain on Institute finances.”
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  He saluted her column and trotted down the stair, ignoring the lift once again.

  Well, at least he’ll keep in shape.

  She watched him as long as she could, but other ships and equipment intervened. It occurred to her then that she could listen in on the spaceport security net for bulletins about an intruder—

  She opened the channel, but after a half an hour passed, and she heard nothing, she concluded that he must have made it back safely.

  The central cabin seemed very lonely without him. Unlike any of the others—except, perhaps, Chria Chance—he had filled the entire cabin with the sheer force of his personality.

  He was certainly lively enough.

  She waited until oh-six-hundred, and then opened her line to CenCom. There was a new operator on, one who seemed not at all curious about her or her doings; seemed, in fact, as impersonal as an AI. He brought up Beta’s office without so much as a single comment.

  As she halfway expected, Beta was present. And the very first words out of the woman’s mouth were, “Well? Have you picked a brawn, or am I going to have to trot the rest of the Academy past you?”

  Hypatia stopped herself from snapping only by an effort. “I made an all-night effort at considering the twelve candidates you presented, Supervisor,” she said sharply. “I went to the considerable trouble of accessing records as far back as lower schools.”

  Only a little fib, she told herself. I did check Alex, after all.

  “And?” Beta replied, not at all impressed.

  “I have selected Alexander Joli-Chanteu. He can come aboard at any time. I completed all my test-flight sequences yesterday, and I can be ready to lift as soon as CenCom gives me clearance and you log my itinerary.” There, she thought, smugly. One in your eye, Madame Supervisor. I’ll wager you never thought I’d be that efficient.

  “Very good, AH-One-Oh-Three-Three,” Beta replied, showing no signs of being impressed at all. “I wouldn’t have logged Alexander as brawn if I had been in your shell, though. He isn’t as . . . professional as I would like. And his record is rather erratic.”

  “So are the records of most genius-class intellects, Supervisor,” Tia retorted, feeling moved to defend her brawn. “As I am sure you are aware.” And you aren’t in my shell, lady, she thought, with resentment at Beta’s superior tone smoldering in her, until she altered the chemical feed to damp it. I will make my own decisions, and I will thank you to keep that firmly in mind.

  “So they say, AH-One-Oh-Three-Three,” Beta replied impersonally. “I’ll convey your selection to the Academy and have CenCom log in your flight plan and advise you when to be ready to lift immediately.”

  With that, she logged off. But before Tia could feel slighted or annoyed with her, the CenCom operator came back on.

  “AH-One-Oh-Three-Three—congratulations!” he said, his formerly impersonal voice warming with friendliness. “I just wanted you to know before we got all tangled up in official things that the operators here all think you picked a fine brawn. Me, especially.”

  Tia was dumbfounded. “Why—thank you,” she managed. “But why—”

  The operator chuckled. “Oh, we handle all the cadets’ training-flights. Some of them are real pains in the orifice—but Alex always has a good word and he never gripes when we have to put him in a holding pattern. And—well, that Donning character tried to get me in trouble over a near-miss when he ignored what I told him and came in anyway. Alex was in the pattern behind him—he saw and heard it all. He didn’t have to log a report in my defense, but he did, and it kept me from getting demoted.”

  “Oh,” Tia replied. Now, that was interesting. Witnesses to near misses weren’t required to come forward with logs of the incident—and in fact, no one would have thought badly of Alex if he hadn’t. His action might even have earned him some trouble with Donning. . . .

  “Anyway, congratulations again. You won’t regret your choice,” the operator said. “And—stand by for compressed data transmission—”

  As her orders and flight-plan came over the comlink, Tia felt oddly pleased and justified. Beta did not like her choice of brawns. The CenCom operators did.

  Good recommendations, both.

  She began her pre-flight check with rising spirits, and it seemed to her that even Ted was smiling. Just a little.

  All right Universe, brace yourself. Here we come!

  CHAPTER FOUR

  “All right, Tia-my-love, explain what’s going on here, in words of one syllable,” Alex said plaintively, when Tia got finished with tracing the maze of orders and counter-orders that had interrupted their routine round of deliveries to tiny two- to four-person Exploratory digs. “Who’s on first?”

  “And What’s on second,” she replied absentmindedly. Just before leaving she’d gotten a datahedron on old-Terran slang phrases and their derivation; toying with the idea of producing that popular-science article. If it got published on enough nets, it might well earn her a tidy little bit of credit—and no amount of credit, however small, was to be scorned. But one unexpected side-effect of scanning it was that she tended to respond with the punch lines of jokes so old they were mummified.

  Though now, at least, she knew what the CenCom operator had meant by “hang onto your bustle” and that business about the wicked witch who’d had a house dropped on her sister.

  “What?” Alex responded, perplexed. “No, never mind. I don’t want to know. Just tell me whose orders we’re supposed to be following. I got lost back there in the fifth or sixth dispatch.”

  “I’ve got it all straight now, and it’s dual-duty,” she replied. “Institute, with backup from Central, although they were countermanding each other in the first four or five sets of instructions. One of the Excavation digs hasn’t been checking in. Went from their regular schedule to nothing, not even a chirp.”

  “You don’t sound worried,” Alex pointed out.

  “Well, I am, and I’m not,” she replied, already calculating the quickest route through hyperspace, and mentally cursing the fact that they didn’t have Singularity Drive. But then again, there wasn’t a Singularity point anywhere near where they wanted to go. So the drive wasn’t the miracle of instantaneous transportation some people claimed it was. Hmm, and some brainships too, naming no names. All very well if there were Singularity points littering the stellarscape like stars in the Core, but out here, at this end of the galactic arm, stars were close, but points were few and far between. One reason why the Institute hadn’t opted for a more expensive ship. “If it were an Exploratory dig like my—like we’ve been trotting supplies and mail to, I would worry a lot. They’re horribly vulnerable. And an Evaluation dig is just as subject to disaster, since the maximum they can have is twenty people. But a Class Three—Alex, this one had a complement of two hundred! That’s more that enough people to hold off any trouble!”

  “Class Three Excavation sites get a lot of graduate students, don’t they?” Alex said, while she locked things down in her holds for takeoff with help from the servos. Pity the cargo handlers hadn’t had time to stow things properly.

  “Exactly. They provide most of the coolie labor when there aren’t any natives to provide a work force—that’s why the Class Three digs have essentially the same setup as a military base. Most of the personnel are young, strong, and they get the best of the equipment. This one has—” she quickly checked her briefing “—one hundred seventy-eight people between the ages of twenty-five and thirty-five. That’s plenty to set up perimeter guards.”

  Alex’s fingers raced across the keypads in front of him, calling up data to her screens. “Hmm. No really nasty native beasties. Area declared safe. And—my. Fully armed, are we?” He glanced over at the column. “I had no idea archeologists were such dangerous beings! They never told me that back in secondary school!”

  “Grrr,” she responded. She flashed a close-up of the bared fangs of a dog on one of the screens he wasn’t using. In the past several weeks she and Alex had spent a lo
t of time talking, getting to know each other. By virtue of her seven years spent mobile, she was a great deal more like a softperson than any of her classmates, and Alex was fun to be around. Neither of them particularly minded the standard issue beiges of her interior; what he had done, during the time spent in FTL, was to copy the minimalist style of his sensei’s home, taking a large brush and some pure black and red enamel, and copying one or two Zen ideographs on the walls that seemed barest. She thought they looked very handsome—and quietly elegant.

  Of course, his cabin was a mess—but she didn’t have to look in there, and she avoided doing so as much as possible.

  In turn, he expressed delight over her “sparkling personality.” No matter what the counselors said, she had long ago decided that she had feelings and emotions and had no guilt over showing them to those she trusted. Alex had risen in estimation from “partner” to “trusted” in the past few weeks; he had a lively sense of humor and enjoyed teasing her. She enjoyed teasing right back.

  “Pull in your fangs, wench,” he said. “I realize that the only reason they get those arms is because there are no sentients down there. So, what’s on the list of Things That Get Well-Armed Archeologists? I have the sinking feeling there were a lot of things they didn’t tell me about archeology back in secondary school!”

  “Seriously? It’s a short list, but a nasty one.” She sobered. “Lock yourself in; I’m going to lift, and fast. Things are likely to rattle around.” With drives engaged, she pulled away from her launch cradle, acknowledged Traffic Control and continued her conversation, all at once. “Artifact thieves are high on that list—if you’ve got a big dig, you can bet that there are things being found that are going to be worth a lot to collectors. They’ll come in, blast the base, land, kill everyone left over that gets in their way, grab the loot and lift, all within hours.” Which was why the hidey was so far from our dome, and why Mum and Dad told me to get in it and stay in it if trouble came. “But normally they work an area, and normally they don’t show up anyplace where Central has a lot of patrols. There haven’t been any thieves in that area, and it is heavily patrolled.”

 

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