'Hermes to Pilipoint Station - still awake down
   there? What's yer name, by the way?'
   'Still here, Hermes. My name is Axel, and we've got
   you on satellite tracking . . . my God, and we see those
   missiles! Bail out, Captain . ..'
   'Wish I could, Axel, but I'm stuck here for the dura-
   tion - right, here we go ...'
   On the external monitor Donny saw a huge spread-
   ing cloud of silvery chaff while a decoy dropped away
   on a dying curve towards the moon's green face. And he
   grinned as both missiles took the bait and plunged after
   it.
   'Very smart, Hermes, very cunning . . .' said the
   Pilipoint comsman. 'You're like the magician, yes? The
   hand is quicker than the eye . . .'
   'Maybe so, laddie, but I don't reckon that wee shell
   game'll work a second time . . . and he's just launched
   another pair . . .'
   'I see them, Captain - tell me, are you the man who
   stole the Earther's shuttle?'
   'Heard about that up here, Axel? Aye, that was me
   a'right, a bad yin through and through!'
   'We've heard what's been going on downstairs, all
   those Brolturan troops working hard to keep Darien
   free from unrest and protest and such nuisances as free
   speech,' said the comsman. 'I have no doubt that in time
   we too will be similarly blessed. But tell me, why are you
   doing this?'
   'What, bearding the lion in his den, y'mean? I guess
   ye could say I was overcome with a sense of public duty
   and a calm appraisal of the crisis ... but that wouldna
   be true.'
   'It would not?'
   'Nah, it was pure, unadulterated loathing. Ye know
   what I really hate? - being lied to. Soon after the
   Heracles arrived, that Hegemony envoy Kuros toured
   the colony, giving speeches about the Sendrukan
   Hegemony's deep sense of liberty and freedom and their
   boundless desire to spread freedom throughout known
   space and beyond .. . aye, right! All the time he was
   coming out with that self-important, sanctimonious
   cack, him and his minions were planning how to get us
   down on our knees, how to make things so bad that
   we'd be happy to have their boots on our necks, just so
   long as the bombings stopped . . .'
   'I saw one of Kuros's speeches,' said the Pilipoint
   comsman. 'It was a real performance but it did not seem
   right for us, as if he was performing for another audi-
   ence ...'
   'Excuse me, Axel, got some missiles to take care of
   here ...'
   Donny could feel the sweat trickling down the side of
   his face as he watched a dark blue display where two
   bright specks moved nearer to his position while associ-
   ated readouts gave figures for velocity, distance and
   altitude. In the cockpit's enclosed darkness, the pilot
   console was a strange, muffled cubbyhole crammed with
   glowing, touch-sensitive controls and displays, with
   small vidscreens showing external views while the over-
   head holo gave the wider tactical sweep. The next
   countermeasures sequence was running, suspensors and
   thrusters were online and ready, and the navigationals
   were tracking the enemy interceptor. From the previous
   encounter the shuttle's expert system overlay had quan-
   tified the missiles' minimum turn radius so now it was
   down to timing.
   And a mountain of luck.
   Then the missiles, gaining with every microsecond,
   crossed a certain trigger boundary and the countermea-
   sures activated, another chaff burst, silver clouds of
   glittering, reflective strips spreading behind the hurtling
   Hermes like a silver comet's tail. As before a decoy was
   dropped, but this time the missiles ignored it and stayed
   on target while the interceptor began moving closer, as if
   the end was near. Then it too crossed an invisible line
   and the shuttle's forward suspensors came to life, kick -
   ing the shuttle's nose up and over as the thrusters
   roared. The combination of momentum and extreme
   force vectors threw the Hermes into a brutally tight ver-
   tical turn.
   G-force shoved Donny down into his couch. Over the
   wheeze of his breathing he heard the infrastructure com-
   plain before the autoalerts began - 'Warning, exceeding
   performance tolerances ... minor structural failures in
   subassemblies 19a, 21d, 37k . . . major structural failure
   will occur in thirty seconds or less . . .'
   Then the Hermes was out of the turn and heading
   back, upside down. The Brolturan pilot had seen
   Donny's crazed attempt at an acrobatic manoeuvre and
   had merely banked slightly to avoid a repetition of the
   earlier force-field collision. But Donny was still ahead of
   him and about to cross over his oncoming flight path.
   And that was when the countermeasures released the
   last of the chaff on maximum dispersal. And when the
   interceptor plunged into the spreading, silvery, instru-
   ment-fogging cloud he met his own missile coming the
   other way.
   On his rear external monitor, Donny saw the dual
   explosion flashes, an eruption of light and ignited gases,
   and an expanding shell of vapour and wreckage mixed
   with glittering fragments of chaff. He was about to
   breath a sigh of relief when he noticed that one of the
   flying pieces of debris was leaving a hot gas trail and
   curving round in his direction.
   Cunning dog, he thought. Must've fired that at the
   last moment, knowing that I'd got him ... well, ye've
   not got me yetl
   He nearly made it, at the tail end of a long, twisting,
   dodging pursuit down through Nivyesta's atmosphere,
   seeking every advantage, trying to lose the missile in
   clouds, even trying to shoot it down with the laser
   cannon. But on it came, doggedly undeterred and unwa-
   vering. And as the chase descended, he kept up a
   running commentary to Axel the comsman at Pilipoint
   Station, never letting on how desperate his situation
   was, livening up the discourse with merciless caricatures
   of certain public figures, like Kuros who was 'the
   Hegemony's interstellar bile duct', and President
   Kirkland, 'the bowel movement that walked like a man'.
   When the end came it was quick. He was flying north
   at about 900 feet over Nivyesta's southern ocean, less
   than 100 kilometres from Segrana's coast. Fuel was low,
   most of the suspensors were burnt out, and he was getting
   continual structural alerts as a result of the contorted
   manoeuvres he had attempted. His last throw of the dice
   was to try and ditch in the waters, but the missile found
   him 50 feet up, rushing across the waves. There was a ter-
   rible brightness... then a terrible darkness ...
   Then forever claimed him.
   55
   CATRIONA
   Through a black night of rain they searched for the
   downed ship. A casing collector had spotted its descent
   in late afternoon while he was ransacking the hi
gh web
   festoons near Overglowatch. A wedge-shaped craft trail-
   ing ragged flags was the description that was relayed to
   Catriona, from which she knew that its braking chute
   had torn after deploying. The chances of someone sur-
   viving a crash landing under those conditions were not
   good. However, there was a lot of dense, deep foliage to
   absorb such a craft's kinetic energy, so assuming it didn't
   hit an outcrop or an especially large tree, the odds
   maybe weren't so bad.
   Like most of her twenty-strong search party, Cat was
   wearing a cowled coat made from a mixture of plain
   fibre and silk - it was light and kept her cool and dry as
   she rode on trictra-back with the rest. Following the
   casing collector's directions, they were heading north to
   the wide valley that lay between Girdle Ridge and the
   Northern Uplands while water dripped, trickled and
   spattered all around them. A cold, black night of rain,
   with lamplight and the piercing beams of battery torches
   striking clusters of gleams from wet leaves, turning
   droplet-strewn webs into flashing regalia, rivulets into
   rippling, silver snakes.
   After another hour, one of the search parties reported
   finding a trail of damaged forest foliage. Everyone con-
   verged and hastened along the path of snapped branches
   and severed trunks until it became a ragged furrow
   gouged in the ground which finally terminated at the
   foot of a big prul tree. The craft was small, less than fif-
   teen feet long, so it had to be an escape pod from one of
   the ships seen dogfighting far up in the sky earlier. Small
   thruster nozzles were spaced along its curved stern,
   while its hull tapered to a flat, narrow prow that was
   solidly wedged under a gnarled prul root as thick as a
   Uvovo's waist.
   For a moment all the scholars and their Listener
   paused and stared wide-eyed at the escape pod while
   sending expectant glances her way.
   Hmm, okay, so Mummy Pathmistress has to make sure
   the alien box is safe, she thought, dismounting from the
   trictra. By the time she reached the pod, with light from
   lamps held nearby, she could see from the characters and
   symbols on the hull that this had to be from the Heracles.
   Without hesitation she rapped her knuckles on it.
   'Hello - anyone in there?'
   Immediately there were a few thuds in response, and
   a man's voice:
   'Thank God you found me! - please, can you help?
   Something is jamming the hatch on this thing ...'
   Cat laughed, realised that the big prul root was hold-
   ing the pod shut.
   'I can see what the problem is,' she said. 'We'll have
   ye out of there in a wee bit.'
   With a dozen Uvovo lending their strength, they man-
   aged to drag the escape pod out from under the prul's
   roots. A moment later the upper hull was pushed up
   from within and locked into an open position. A grey-
   haired man in a hunting jacket and camouflage trousers
   climbed wearily out and sat on the edge of the recess,
   pulling lumps of something white off his clothing and
   tossing them into the pod. It took Cat a moment but
   suddenly she recognised him.
   'You're Greg's Uncle Theo,' she said.
   He straightened in surprise, then peered closer in the
   meagre light and nodded.
   'Ah, Doctor Macreadie - an unexpected pleasure,
   here in the middle of the forest.'
   'What is that stuff?'
   'Crash foam,' he said. 'It smells terrible yet I find
   myself most grateful.' He looked at her and smiled. 'In
   case you were wondering, Greg is alive and well, mostly.
   He was slightly wounded yesterday ... or perhaps the
   day before . . . but some of my people told me he's
   mending well ...' He looked about him at the Uvovo
   and the drips and trickles coming from above. 'Did
   someone see me come down here, Catriona?'
   'Aye,' she said, half-wishing he had said more about
   Greg. 'An Uvovo from a town several miles away saw
   your pod swooping over Segrana after those explosions
   in the sky.'
   He became more alert at this. 'Do you know what
   happened up there? Did Pilipoint Station have any con-
   tact. . .'
   'I'm sorry, Theo, I've not been in touch with
   Pilipoint but I did see some of the big show and heard
   about the rest from others. Late in the afternoon there
   were a few contrails high up, then there was a bright
   explosion and, a few minutes later, halfway across the
   sky, there was another. Not long after that your escape
   pod crash-landed, and a short while later some Uvovo
   on the south coast saw a huge explosion far out at
   sea.'
   Hearing this, his manner turned sombre. He nodded
   and smiled sadly. 'It was supposed to be both of us in
   this pod, but he tricked me and sent me off on my own.
   Stayed behind to fight two Brolturan interceptors, from
   that giant warwagon of theirs. And he beat them! - he
   must have . ..'
   'What are you talking about? Who beat them . . .'
   'A brave man called Donny Barbour.' He looked
   at her. 'Can you help me get to Pilipoint Station?
   Perhaps someone there knows exactly how it all turned
   out.'
   Cat nodded. 'I can do that, Theo, though you might
   like to stop off at one of the Uvovo towns for a rest and
   a bite to eat.'
   'That sounds good.' Feeling weariness in his limbs, he
   wiped some water droplets from his beard and brushed
   away a few more fragments of foam. 'I've heard that
   folk on Nivyesta get around on the backs of giant tric-
   tra - is that true?'
   'It is, aye - you've not got a fear of spiders, have
   you?'
   'No, not as such.' He gave a rueful smile. 'I'll be okay.
   So - which way?'
   The Uvovo moved with them in unison as Catriona
   led the way back to where the trictra had been tethered,
   her own flashlight picking out a path through the wet
   undergrowth.
   'You must feel hardly involved in what's been going
   on down on Darien,' Theo said.
   'I wouldn't say that,' Cat said, smiling in the dark-
   ness. 'We caught two Ezgara commandos yesterday.'
   He stared at her, his pace slowing. 'You captured
   them . . .'
   'The first one exploded, killing several Uvovo . . . did
   ye know that they have a binary explosive in their
   bloodstream? Aye, very cunning, very vicious. Oh, and
   they're Human too.'
   Theo nodded gravely. 'Yes, that I knew. It raises a lot
   of questions.'
   'Doesn't it? We got to the second one and sedated
   him before he could trigger himself, then we used some
   extraction roots and what the Uvovo call a cleansing sac
   to filter the impurities from his blood. Now he's awake
   and alert - he understands Anglic but doesn't speak it
   that well. Still, we managed to get a few interesting facts
   out of him.'
   She recalled how they'd ha
d to restrain his arms and
   legs with padded leather straps. He seemed so completely
   at the mercy of his fear and anger, as if he had no under-
   standing of self-control, and she and the rootmasters
   suspected that the cleansing sac had removed something
   else from his system besides the explosive component.
   'His name is Malachi,' she said. 'He's from a colony
   of Humans called Tygra, a highly militarised society,
   going by a few things he let slip.'
   'My God,' Theo said. 'Were they abducted by the
   Hegemony?'
   'Not abducted, Major. It seems that his colony was
   established roughly 150 years ago.'
   'A hundred and fifty years? But Humanity had
   not. . .' He broke off, frowning for a moment before his
   eyes widened. 'Doctor Macreadie, you're not suggest-
   ing . . .'
   Smiling she nodded. 'The Tygra colony was founded
   by a ship from Earth called the Forrestal.'
   Theo was silent, the astonishment in his face replaced
   by a growing horror as he absorbed what she had said.
   'The Forrestal's crew and colonists were a mixture of
   northern and southern Americans, and Australians,' he
   said. 'How could they be turned into the Hegemony's
   shock troops?'
   She shook her head. 'We're not getting much out of
   Malachi at the moment, so these questions remain open
   to speculation. But for now I think we should keep this
   to ourselves. If it got out, how would the people of
   Earth react? And what would the Hegemony do to the
   Tygrans if they decided that the alliance with
   Earthsphere was more valuable than a cadre of Human
   janissaries, no matter how loyal?'
   'You have a point,' he said. 'My God, I cannot imag-
   ine what they went through.'
   'Makes you wonder what happened to the third
   ship, the Tenebrosa,' Cat said, and even as she spoke
   the words she felt a quiver in the perceptive bond she
   shared with Segrana. Was it anticipation? A hint of the
   truth, or the echo of some lost possibility, fading
   amongst the water-veiled trees? She smiled inwardly,
   knowing that Segrana had a liking for convoluted
   mystery.
   'Well, if any of their descendants show up here,'
   Theo was saying, 'we can start a club!'
   She laughed out loud at that, thinking, Aye, would-
   n't that be just amazing?
   56
   KAO CHIH
   
 
 Seeds of Earth Page 53