'Och, I don't know that much,' Donny said, sipping
   wine. 'But I do know that of the government's secret,
   hush-hush projects, there was one whose success rate
   was way out in front, and that's who I think Pyatkov's
   got with him. Probably wants them moved to a safe
   house near Trond, or further north, knowing my luck.'
   'Enhanced,' Akesson muttered darkly. 'It was terrible
   what they did to those children.'
   Solvjeg sat forward. 'When I was young and still at
   school, one of my closest friends got herself pregnant by
   a young man from a neighbouring town, a very pretty
   boy who could dance most dashingly and play the
   bala . . . anyway, she and her parents were distraught,
   but at that time Zhilinsky was promoting his New
   Children's Programme, with government backing,
   encouraging women not to have abortions but to
   donate the unwanted offspring to his Programme, even
   before they had reached full term.
   'They never admitted in public that Zhilinsky's sur-
   geons were trying to create Human computers - they
   used words like adjustment or modification or enhance-
   ment. Eventually the whole truth was made public when
   the failures could no longer be concealed. One of them
   was especially heartbreaking, a young woman of nine-
   teen who had tried to kill herself forty times or more,
   even though assessments showed her to be a calm,
   rational mathematical genius - 95 per cent of the time.
   The other 5 per cent she was monomaniacal, self-hating
   and self-destructive. When she was discussed on the
   radio and in the papers they showed her picture and
   gave her first name, which my close friend recognised
   right away as her daughter . . .'
   A name emerged from Theo's memory. 'Maria . . .
   Groenvold,' he said.
   Solvjeg smiled. 'Yes, that's right, and her daughter
   was called Ulrike - perhaps some of Mr Pyatkov's com-
   panions might remember her.-..: .'
   Akesson held up a hand for silence, and a moment
   later Theo heard the sound of a vehicle outside, tyres
   crunching on gravel.
   'I'll make sure,' Akesson said, heading out to the hall.
   Donny, meanwhile, was already on his feet and standing
   closer to the other doorway. Theo and his sister looked
   at him askance.
   'Hey,' he said. 'Just in case.'
   Then Akesson appeared at the door, beckoning them
   to follow.
   The hallway was busy with Akesson giving orders to
   some of his staff while Pyatkov, wrapped in a fur-trimmed
   greatcoat, ushered several unsmiling people, three men
   and two women, through to another room off the hall.
   The Enhanced were wearing thin indoor clothes which
   probably accounted for their morose expressions, yet
   there was also a certain hauteur to their demeanour and
   they regarded no one else as they trooped through the
   hall. Solvjeg watched them a moment then put a hand
   on Theo's arm, smiled and followed the newcomers.
   Observing this, Pyatkov shrugged.
   'I'm afraid that your sister may find them a little
   close-mouthed,' he said to Theo. 'They've exchanged
   barely a dozen words with me since I got them out of
   the Delta Facility, and that was over twenty-four hours
   ago.' He loosened his coat. 'In any case, this is a short
   stopover, five minutes then we have to get back on the
   road. And I need both of you to come with us, and any
   help from your Diehards, Major, if there are any in the
   area.'
   Theo and Donny exchanged puzzled looks.
   'Expecting trouble on the road north, Vitaly?' said
   Donny.
   'Not north, Captain, but east,' Pyatkov said stiffly.
   'President Sundstrom reached a secret agreement with
   the Imisil ambassador that, in the event of a de facto
   takeover by the Hegemony, particular researchers would
   be offered political asylum by the Imisil. Their ambas-
   sador is currently in talks with Kuros, which means that
   an Imisil shuttle is sitting on a runway at Port Gagarin
   right now - we have to get there with all speed, bypass
   security and see the Enhanced safely on board that shut-
   tle.'
   'Is that all?' Theo said. 'What's so special about these
   people?'
   'Aye,' said Donny. 'What's their gimmick?'
   Pyatkov's lips were set in a thin line. 'I cannot reveal
   what I know, but I can tell you that the Hegemony must
   never find out what is in those Enhanced minds.'
   Donny looked at Theo. 'Must be that recipe for rein-
   deer haggis - telling ye, the rumours I've heard . . .'
   'Barbour, can you be serious for . . .'
   'Okay, Pyatkov,' said Theo. 'Then why are we hand-
   ing these people over to the Imisil? Are they really to be
   trusted?'
   'Yes - the Imisil government has nominated a
   member of the Intercessor Council as their guardian.'
   'The who?' said Donny.
   Pyatkov frowned. 'An interplanetary organisation
   which, I'm told, has a high reputation for honesty and
   impartial arbitration.'
   Theo shrugged and glanced at Donny, who rolled his
   eyes then took out his handgun.
   'A 50-calibre Chokhov,' he said. 'Just the thing to
   encourage honesty and impartiality.'
   Checking the magazine, he snapped it back in, then
   winked.
   Theo laughed and turned to Pyatkov. 'Some of my
   men will be waiting at the observation point near
   Membrance Vale.'
   'We can divert to pick them up without losing time.'
   'Also I don't even have a weapon.'
   'That will not be a problem,' Pyatkov said. 'I brought
   a selection.'
   A few minutes later, as the Enhanced filed back out,
   now wearing scarves and hats donated by Akesson,
   Theo went to say goodbye to his sister. She was standing
   with one of the Enhanced, a slender woman with short
   black hair and attractive if sombre features. As Theo
   approached, she solemnly shook Solvjeg's hand and
   went to join the rest outside.
   'Her name is Julia,' Solvjeg said to him. 'She remem-
   bers Ulrike and said that she was like a comet among
   shooting stars . . .' She faced him. 'Are you going too?'
   'Yes,' he said. 'It seems that Pyatkov still has need for
   an old dog of war ... we're going to break into Port
   Gagarin and get these folk aboard a shuttle that is wait-
   ing to take them up to the Imisil ship in orbit.'
   She nodded, gnawed her lip, then shook her head. 'I
   cannot tell you that you're too old for this, because in
   truth it's only your body which is too old for it!' Just
   then, Donny handed him his coat, which he put on. 'I
   am not your wife, only your sister, but that gives me the
   right to tell you, Theodor Karlsson, to come back alive,
   with or without your shield!'
   'Ja, little spear-maiden - who would dare disobey
   such a command?'
   They embraced, then Theo hurried out to where
   Pyatkov's transport, a battered-looking freight bus, wa
s
   waiting with its twin flatwheels running. Fine rain was
   sweeping and swirling down with a gusting breeze,
   making golden haloes of flying motes around the farm-
   house pathway lamps. He leaped up the entry steps, the
   door concertinaed shut behind him and they drove off
   into the night.
   51
   KAO CHIH
   He stared with a kind of morose hope out of the view-
   port at the hazy stars, which were few and far between -
   only the nearest were bright enough to pierce the cloudy
   veils of the Huvuun Deepzone. Also, they allowed the
   navigationals to make some kind of approximation of
   their position after each microjump - the last three had
   zigzaggingly carried the Castellan towards the subsector
   where the Darien system was most likely to be, going by
   the ship's archive of tiernet news.
   But those were the last three out of twenty-four
   microjumps. The hyperspace jump from Shafts to Yonok
   with its midjourney dropout to normal space had not
   gone as planned when the exit left them dozens of
   lightyears inside the Huvuun and unable to get an accu-
   rate fix on their location. That was a day and a half ago,
   since which time Drazuma-Ha* had been employing
   point-phase variations in the microjump computations
   while the jumps themselves had to be 42.8 minutes apart
   because that was how long the tesserae power cells took
   to self-recharge.
   And for Kao Chili, it was stressful, the waiting, the
   build-up to the six- or seven-minute microjump, the
   moment of stomach-churning disorientation at the start
   and the end, then the moments it took the navigationals
   to plot their unreliable position. No, it was beyond
   stressful. As he sat there, staring at those few, haze-
   haloed stars, he could feel a tide of impatience starting
   to swamp his reason.
   'Have the concise data been computed, Drazuma-
   Ha*?'
   'Yes, they have, Gowchee.'
   'Then let us make the jump, now - we're getting
   closer with every jump, so let's not waste any more time
   than we have to.'
   'I must point out that engaging the hyperdrive before
   the power cells have recharged will cause a drain on
   our irreplaceable fuel reserves. And there is no guaran-
   tee that we will maintain our progress towards Darien,'
   'I realise that, but just this once I feel that we should
   go, now, without delay, immediately.'
   'The cells will be recharged in another twenty-eight
   minutes, Gowchee. Can you not wait that long?'
   'I'm afraid not.'
   'If you wish, we could play one of the ship's games to
   help pass the time for you.'
   'Thank you for the offer, Drazuma-Ha*, but I would
   be incapable of concentrating. Please engage the hyper-
   drive - we may even be lucky enough to come within
   range of one of those cloud-harvesters.'
   Three times during the earlier microjumps the
   Castellan's sensors had picked up at the outer limits an
   occasional solitary vessel with an odd emission curve,
   which suggested that it was sometimes 150 metres
   long and other times 2.5 kilometres long. By the third
   sighting Drazuma-Ha* had identified them from a
   popnet infodoc he had archived years before as cloud-
   harvesters, ships that scooped up the interstellar dust
   and debris with kilometres-long energised fields. They
   were industrial vessels owned by large-resource corpo-
   rations and operated by AIs or small crews. More
   important, their drives were T2-capable, as were their
   shuttlecraft - one of those could execute far more accu-
   rate microjumps.
   'We can rely on that occurring with as much certainty
   as arriving perfectly in orbit around Darien,' the mech
   said. 'However, I perceive that my refusal may lead to an
   unpredictable outburst on your part. . .'
   'I protest, Drazuma-Ha"' - I am merely . . .'
   'No, I do not wish to be the cause of any extreme
   reaction . . .'
   'That is quite ridic—' Kao Chih began to say, but
   Drazuma-Ha"" activated the hyperdrive and the words
   and sounds in his throat ran together into a fluttering
   slur. Then there was that vaguely numb period lasting a
   few minutes before he was tilted into the exit-surge of
   spinning-sliding-vertigo, and when it faded he was still in
   his couch, waiting for the mech to announce their new
   position.
   'I am sorry to have to tell you that we are now 7.9
   lightyears further away from the target subsector,'
   Drazuma-Ha'"" said.
   Kao Chih made an inarticulate sound that was equal
   parts anger and despair. 'How much longer can this
   take?' he groaned. 'How much more can I stand?'
   'At the current rate of consumption, fuel reserves will
   be exhausted in eleven months and seven days, and the
   air will remain breathable for another eight months and
   twenty-four days, assuming that scrub filters are used.
   Unfortunately, your food will only last for another three
   months and nine days, provided that you restrict your
   intake to quarter-rations.'
   Kao Chih listened and nodded soberly while striving
   against an urge to burst out laughing at the idiocy of the
   situation. It was irrational, he knew, and a wild mood
   swing away from the grimness he had been feeling just
   minutes ago.
   'Alternatively,' the mech went on, 'I may be able to
   adapt one of the large equipment lockers for use as a
   cryo-unit, or at least something that will lower your .. .'
   The mech stopped in mid-sentence and bright field
   rods stabbed out at the console. Screens flickered and
   symbol arrays pulsed.
   'A ship,' it said, 'has just appeared 1,823 kilometres
   away. Its profile is that of an Erdishi midhaul freighter
   but there is no ident signal and the thrust motors seem
   to be only partly shielded. Their sensors have just found
   us . . . they have ignited their thrusters and are heading
   straight for us.'
   'Have we got them on visual?' Kao Chih said as the
   viewport hypershield rolled back. 'Are they responding
   to hails?'
   'Too far for realtime depiction ... and no comm traf-
   fic at all.'
   'What about the computations? Are we ready to
   jump?'
   'Yes, Gowchee, the computations are complete but
   another premature jump would further deplete our fuel
   reserves.'
   'You may recall that we have no weapons with which
   to fend them off, unless you want me to sit out on the
   hull and throw empty gas canisters at them . . .'
   'Their acceleration curve is very steep,' the mech said.
   'That and the degraded state of the superstructure
   means that the crew cannot be organic'
   One of the screens flashed up an image of the
   freighter and to Kao Chih it looked like a wreck. Those
   parts of the hull still attached were charred and holed,
   while pipes, feeds and cable sprouted from exposed and
/>
   shattered bulkheads. Something, either a collision or a
   weapon, had sheared off a slanted portion of the prow
   while the port side was disfigured by a ragged gouge
   from the bridge to the midsection. Seconds ticked past
   and as Kao Chih watched, something bulky and metal-
   lic clambered up that gouge, through torn and twisted
   plating to the gaping bridge where it was met by another
   two large mech shapes.
   Recognition and an awful sense of dread made Kao
   Chih's stomach feel hollow.
   'Those are the droids from Blacknest!' he said.
   'Your debt collectors! How did they track us here?
   Why . . .?'
   'Because they are very cunning and very persistent,'
   Drazuma-Ha * said. 'There may not be sufficient time
   for the cells to recharge. Brace yourself, Gowchee!'
   And his senses spun and swung and plunged, then a
   few minutes of stability, then another surge of dizzi-
   ness . . . and he opened his eyes, holding onto the
   armrests. Another jump, another shot at Darien.
   'Why are they going to all this trouble for a bad
   debt? . . .' Kao Chih paused, thoughts assailed by
   suspicion. 'You said they were cunning and persistent -
   how much do you know about these droids, Drazuna-
   Has"? And exactly why are they chasing you?'
   'I have encountered them before, in circumstances
   not conducive to negotiation and polite behaviour . . .
   Gowchee, the answers to your questions would demand
   careful exposition. Please, allow me a few moments to
   set up the jump computations then we may discuss the
   matter.'
   Frowning, Kao Chih sat back in his couch and folded
   his arms. Then his bad temper waned as the tiredness he
   had ignored made itself felt, and when he sighed it
   turned into a yawn.
   'If you are weary, Gowchee, perhaps you should rest,'
   said the mech.
   'My mind is unable to relax when faced with mortal
   peril, Drazuma-Ha*. It is a Human foible.'
   'How inexpedient for your species - perhaps you
   should consider cyber-augmentation after all . . .'
   Suddenly a console alarm started pinging. 'A ship has
   appeared at 1,560 kilometres ... it is the freighter and it
   is altering course in our direction . . .'
   'This is not a coincidence, is it?'
   'No, Gowchee - they are tracking us through hyper-
   space somehow. Engaging hyperdrive - now.'
   Again the disorientation, senses gyring, the pause,
   
 
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