Hayden took a step down. He'd been planning this moment for years. Every nerve in his body screamed at him to rush past her, hurdle the desk, and plant his knife in Admiral Fanning's throat.
He took another step down.
Something came over Venera Fanning's face. Softness? Some subtle giving-in to an interpretation of his actions that he didn't understand? “It will all be made clear tonight,” she said in as soothing a tone as she was likely capable of.
Although in his mind and heart Hayden was running up and back to the office, he found his feet take another step and another, and then he was turning and clattering down the steps as though he actually had some other place to go. An agony of shame blanked his thoughts as he shouldered past one of the other manservants; he didn't come to himself again until he knelt in one of the servant's washrooms and, for long minutes, vomited wretchedly into the privy.
Admiral Chaison Fanning pulled himself hand over hand up the docking rope and did a perfect free-fall flip to land on the quarterdeck of the Rook. He'd practiced that maneuver many times when he was younger, just as he'd practiced wearing the uniform of the admiralty, keeping the cut of the jacket just so, the toeless boots polished to perfection and his toenails manicured and clean. The men watched for weakness using every possible standard—some couldn't follow a man with a thin voice, others couldn't respect an officer who didn't occasionally smile. Sometimes it seemed he'd spent the past two decades learning sixty varieties of play-acting, with a special role for every rung on the ladder to his success.
There was a particular style to be cultivated when you were leaving port; he needed to project confidence and purpose into the airmen so that they didn't look back and obeyed his orders without question.
Rook was not the flagship of the fleet. A mid-sized cruiser, she was beginning to show her age, and several years ago had been refitted to buttress Slipstream's dwindling Winter fleet. Still, she was a good ship: a hundred feet long, thirty in diameter, basically cylindrical, but with curving ends that terminated in vicious spiked rams. Her thick wooden hull was festooned with hatches and ports through which could be thrust rifles, rocket racks, jet engines, braking sails, or mutineers as the situation warranted. Many of the hatches were open as she hung in the air next to the docking scaffolds, a mile from the admiralty. The sun was glowering from behind the docks, whose caged catwalks cast long curving shadows across the amber hull of the ship, while tongues of light had found and lit random intricacies of its interior. Inside, the ship was a series of interlocking cells, most of them made of wooden lattices through which you could see men working or the tanned sides of tarpaulined and lashed crates. Some of the cells were big blocks of metal, such as the armory and the rocket magazine. And to the fore of the ship, just behind the bridge, an exercise centrifuge spun lazily. Its side walls made a turning mandala of admiralty notices, wooden walls, and plumbing. The men were required to spend a few hours a day in the centrifuge, and he would too; nobody was going to lose their fighting trim on this voyage.
Captain John Sembry saluted the admiral. His staff were lined up in midair behind him, their toes pointed precisely in the same direction. “The ship is ready, sir,” announced Sembry.
A quick glance told Chaison that everything was where it should be, and the men were all working hard—or at least giving the impression of working hard. That was all that mattered, if things were truly ready. “Very good, Captain. I'll be on the bridge. Carry on.” He turned and did a hand-over-hand walk through a narrow passage under the centrifuge, heading for the prow.
On the way to the bridge he checked his cabin. Venera was not there. Neither was her luggage. Fuming, he continued on up to the cylindrical chamber just behind the fore rocket battery. The navigator and helm were waiting, looking expectant. They hadn't yet received their orders and were expecting to be told to set a course for Mavery. He was going to surprise them.
But not, apparently, yet. “Where is she?” he demanded of a petty officer. The man snapped to attention, slowly drifting upwards and away from his post.
“Semaphore said, on her way, sir!"
“And when was that?"
“Half—half an hour ago, sir."
He turned away, composing himself before the man could see his mask of professionalism slip. He was looking for something to do—a tie-down to criticize, a chart crib to fold—when the navigator said, “She's here, sir,” with some relief in his voice. He was floating next to a porthole; Chaison stepped over fifteen feet of empty air to join him there, and look where he pointed.
Hanging limbs akimbo in the cage of a docking arm twenty meters away was a long-haired woman with an imperious nose and heavily made-up eyes. She wore an outlandishly bright jumpsuit that was also too tight in all the right (or, on a ship like this, wrong) places. Her hands were twisting nervously, but her expression was intent and focused as she directed some navvies to push a small mountain of crates and trunks through the narrow exit of the docking arm.
Aubri Mahallan was not the “she” Chaison had been hoping to see. He'd assumed this particular passenger was already on board. Forgetting himself he frowned virulently at her, as if she could see him behind the sun-drenched hull.
“That ... costume ... will not do,” he muttered under his breath.
“Two women on board, sir,” said the navigator neutrally. “It's..."
“Far from unprecedented,” Chaison finished smoothly. “There's a great tradition of female ship officers in Virga, Bargott—just not of late in the enlightened principality of our beloved Pilot."
“No, sir, ah, yes sir."
“Summon the armorer to the chart room when she boards. I'll meet her there.” Chaison left without another glance at the bridge staff.
Located behind the bridge, the chart room was the traditional inner sanctum of the ship's commanding officer. Nobody was allowed in here except the bridge staff and Chaison himself—nobody except for the one person he did find when he entered the drum-shaped room. Gridde, Chaison's chart-master, was fabulously old and bent over—so much so that he retained the stoop even in free fall. As Chaison entered, he was teasing a tiny ruby clip out of its nestle in the crook of two fine hairs inside the chamber's main chart box. “Ah, Admiral,” he said without turning around, “it's an interesting challenge you've given me this time."
Chaison's irritability evaporated, as it always did around Gridde. “It would have been a shame for you to retire without helping us navigate Winter."
“I've done it before,” wheezed Gridde, smiling at Chaison's surprise. “Thirty-five years ago,” continued the chart-master. He returned his attention to the large glass chart box. Inside the box was a three-dimensional lattice of fine, almost invisible blonde strands—actual hairs, harvested from the rare young lady whose locks met Gridde's standard. Clipped to these strands were dozens of tiny jewel-clusters: a single sapphire stood for a small town, double-sapphires for larger towns, and so on. The box was a scintillating galaxy of light: sapphires, rubies, emeralds, topaz and jet, pale quartz and peridot. At the very center of the chart was a large diamond, which stood for the Slipstream sun. Gridde was adjusting the position of a ruby according to the latest semaphore information.
“Well, don't leave me drifting,” said Chaison, crossing his arms and smiling. “What happened thirty-five years ago?"
Gridde snorted. “Why, the whole damn nation nearly drifted into Winter! Don't they teach you any history at that academy? I remember a day when half the chart box was empty!” Despite the vehemence of his tone, his fingers were absolutely steady as they gripped the tiny ruby between a pair of wires and moved it infinitesimally to the left. “There. That ought to hold you for a day or two."
Chaison gripped the side of the chart table and pulled himself close to examine the three-dimensional representation of the one hundred miles of air surrounding Rush. “And our course?"
“Don't push me.” Gridde slowly withdrew his wires and shut the case. “See, if this was one of th
ose new gel charts, just drawing the wires out would move everything! You can't let them standardize on gel charts, sir. Would be a disaster."
“I know, Gridde, you've only told me a thousand times."
The chart-master sailed over to the wall and shut the metal bullet shield over the porthole. Now the room was lit only by the gleam of a gas lantern. Chaison wound up the lantern's little fan, without which it would starve itself of oxygen in seconds, and handed it to Gridde. The chart-master closed the metal door of the lantern, and now light only shone out of a tiny pipette. He carefully arranged this miniature spotlight in a set of flexible arms attached to the chart table, and aimed it.
Only a narrow column of jewels was lit now; the big diamond gleamed at its end. “The way-point,” said Gridde, “is Argenta Town, the double-ruby.” The two little red gleams were the only town within the beam of light. The beam represented the course the expeditionary force would take; Chaison could see that they would pass unseen by the majority of the local population.
“Good—” Chaison turned his head at a rap on the door. “Enter!"
Sunlight washed away the illusion of hovering above a miniature world. Silhouetted in the doorway was the curving shape of Aubri Mahallan. “That will be all, thank you, Gridde,” said Chaison. “Come in, armorer."
As Venera Fanning's small party wound their way through the labyrinth of docking arms, Hayden stared at their destination with claustrophobic dread. Above him, below, and to all sides hung the bannered cruisers of Slipstream. These were the very ships that had invaded and conquered Aerie. He found himself searching the nearest ship for some sign of a scar—of burned hull, long since painted over—though the ship he had flown Can Two into six years ago had been incinerated before his eyes. He would not have been surprised had it turned up here, intact, a malignant ghost. Indeed, the cluster of bloated cylinders that shadowed the walkway seemed more nightmarish than real. This was the very last place in Virga he would have chosen to go.
“I'm definitely going to miss those Friday evening soirees,” Venera was saying to some acquaintance of hers who had come to see her off. “Strange. The crowd has stopped cheering."
Only a low muttering came from the wall of people who pressed against the naval base's security netting. Hayden knew exactly why, but he was obligated to hold his tongue in the presence of his mistress. The crowd had come out to watch the fleet depart. They were eager for spectacle—for the proof that the Pilot was acting decisively after last night's outrageous attack on the city. People had been arriving all day, forming a curving half-shell made of human beings like tiles in a mosaic, that gradually came to obscure the backdrop of Rush's whirling towns. Charged up and indignant, they periodically broke into chants and songs, while continuously flinging sandwiches, drinks, and children up and down the surface of the wall. Bikes and folded wings, picnic baskets and man-sized wicker spheres containing food and souvenir vendors made a kind of base coat behind the human surface.
The fleet had been due to depart an hour ago. The sun was shutting down for the day, its light sputtering and reddening. The light made the docks seem like an alternation of photographs with different exposures and tints—now sepia, now plum-red, now black and white. As soon as the sun shut down, heat would flee the air. Few in the crowd had dressed for that. So now they were complaining.
Also muttering were the non-coms and military police who were hurrying Venera's party down the arm to the shadow-striped Rook. As they approached, the ship's jets growled into life for a moment, and it began to rotate until it was vertical compared to the approaching party. The rest of the ships began executing the same turn as word of their initial course and heading was relayed from the Rook.
“Ooh, Venera,” said the socialite clinging to Fanning's arm, “they're excited to see you!” She waved at the crowd, which had burst into song again at the sight.
The grumbling engines and motion of ships made Hayden's head spin—but he kept going. There was only one way he was going to redeem himself for his earlier cowardice. Fanning was leaving Rush, and Hayden had to follow.
And if—an idea so heretical he refused to take it seriously—if he should be unable to kill Fanning (he would never choose not to!), then Hayden could still do some good by acting as a spy aboard the Rook. If what he'd heard outside Fanning's office was any indication, there was more to this expedition than met the eye.
They reached the end of the docking arm. Hayden hauled on the rope to halt the forward drift of Venera's trunks while she showed her papers to the waiting deck officer. He barely glanced at them, waving her on.
“Now don't forget my camera!” shouted the socialite from behind the shoulders and arms of the MPs. Venera's other friends waved and shouted similar platitudes, as though Lady Fanning were going on a Sunday cruise and not leaving the country under mysterious circumstances. Hayden gathered the two trunks, each by its leather handle, and stepped across the two-meter gap between the arm and the ship.
As the big doors swung shut behind him Hayden was met by a chaos of detail: beams and ropes in gaslight, the smell of jet fuel and soap, racks of rifles and swords, the flickering motion of a giant centrifuge wheel—and everywhere people, a mob of silent men all of whom seemed to be looking at him.
He spun around, because it was Venera Fanning they were staring at. She stared back for a second, a half-smile crinkling the scar on her chin. Then she turned and shot in the direction of a narrow corridor that passed under the centrifuge. Hayden was left holding her bags.
As he moved to follow her he realized that only one other person had accompanied them on board: a nondescript, passive-faced man of middle age. He looked like some minor bureaucrat. Now he smiled at Hayden.
“But the other servants—” They had come here in a large group. Surely Hayden wasn't the only one who was going?
“You're the driver?” asked the bland man; his voice was as colorless as his appearance.
“Uh ... yes."
“Stow the bags in the captain's cabin and then go to the centrifuge. You bunk with the carpenters."
“Ah.” He stuck out his hand tentatively. “I'm Hayden Griffin."
The man shook it distractedly. “Lyle Carrier. Get going, then."
Hayden grabbed the trunks in an awkward embrace and went to find Venera Fanning.
Darkness shuttered the sky well before the last ship had left the docks. Chaison Fanning sat in the command chair, chin on his fist. He had no duties at this moment: the ship was in the hands of Captain Sembry. Sembry's voice rang out confidently, sending commands down the speaking tubes to the engines and rudder gangs. All eyes were on him just now, and that was a relief.
Chaison rotated a little cup-shaped object in his fingers. It had been given to him by that problematic armorer, Mahallan, a few minutes ago. This device was intended to make real for him an idea he'd thought ridiculous when Venera had first brought it to him. He supposed he should try it.
It was hard to focus past his anger, however. He glanced around; nobody was looking at him. No, they wouldn't. But it would be all through the fleet in hours. This was a humiliation he wouldn't be able to escape.
Why had she done it? He wondered. More importantly: why had he let her? He could have set sail and forced her to catch up. Except that she had information that she could—and would—use against him, her own husband, if he didn't do exactly what she said. He had no doubt she would move against him—he had known Venera long enough not to doubt her ruthlessness.
He gripped the cup tightly and almost threw it at the wall. But that would just add to the talk later, he knew. With a sigh he held it up to his ear.
The sound was surprisingly loud—he pulled the cup away, then gingerly replaced it. What he heard was a roaring din—a steady hissing, weird warbling noises that came and went, and a sound like giant teeth grating. Overlaid on all this was a deep tearing sound, like some impossibly heavy fabric being ripped. It went on and on, hypnotic, an argument between demons.
He took the speaker away from his ear. This was supposed to explain everything, this incessant grumbling. He did admit it was a compelling demonstration, but in no way did it lend credence to any of the wild claims Venera had made.
Anyway, he didn't care. All Admiral Fanning could think of right now was the fact that his wife had, no doubt deliberately, made the national fleet of Slipstream ... late.
* * * *
5
A column of ragged clouds twisted like smoke in the night. The shapes wheeled grandly like wary duelists, occasionally testing one another's defenses with half-hearted lightning bolts. Every now and then, a transient corridor of clear air would open to some distant sun through the shuffle of gray shapes that receded for thousands of miles in every direction. Then the flanks of one or another silent combatant would momentarily throw the rest into invisibility as it shone in shades of dusty rose and burgundy.
These were young clouds, the progeny of a mushroom-shaped column of warmer air that had penetrated into Slipstream territory earlier in the day. Being young, these banks and starbursts of mist had just begun to condense. The realm through which they drifted was filled with the remnants of an earlier mass of clouds: its droplets had come together and fused over the hours and days, each collision making fewer and larger drops. Now great spheres of water, some head-sized, some as large as houses, punched through the clouds like slow cannonballs, adding to the chaos of the mixing air.
Wakeful citizens on bikes hovered outside the two towns and a farm that were the only habitation for miles. The sentries kept a watch out for any large mass of water that might loom out of the dark on a collision course with the spinning wheels, or the dark nets of the farm. For one sentry, the only sound was the whirring of the little fan that kept his lantern alive as he waited in silence, cloak drawn around his shoulders to ward off the damp, feet ready on the pedals to kick his bike into motion.
Thus huddled, he at first didn't notice something nose out of a cloud shaped like a bird's head. When he finally spotted it he muttered a curse, because at first it looked like a town-wrecker of a waterball. He reached for his horn with numb fingers, but as he raised the brass horn to his lips he hesitated. The shape no longer appeared rounded, but rather like an extra beak to the diaphanous bird, this one hard and sharp. It was the prow of a ship.
Analog SFF, November 2005 Page 6