She could hear power gathering in the jump engines. Solly activated the external sensors and telescopes. She sat back, but kept an eye on the hypercomm lamps.
As they clicked down to one minute, Solly sighed. “You really expect something to happen, don’t you?”
“I think something just did,” she said. “In any case, to answer your question: Yes, I think we should contact Matt as soon as we’re able. I want to tell him what’s going on.”
“So what are you going to say? That you think there’s something on board that shouldn’t be here?”
“That’s right.”
He grew somber. “If you do that, we may not get home anytime within the foreseeable future. You’ll scare them out of their socks, and we’ll spend the next few years on old Hammersmith.”
“I don’t know what else to do, Solly,” she said.
The clock ran down to zero and he pressed the key.
A wave of vertigo passed behind her eyes. But she tried to control her breathing and think of other things. Like how good it had been with Solly, despite the problems. Like the fact that Emily’s body was downstairs and somebody was going to pay up for that.
The sensation passed quickly and the windows lit up with familiar constellations. Greenway and its moons appeared on one of the auxiliary screens.
“Transition complete,” he said.
Kim nodded and kept her eyes on the hypercomm lamps.
Solly opened a channel to Sky Harbor. “This is Hammersmith. Approaching on manual. Computer out. Request assistance.”
While they waited for the signal to reach Greenway, and for the controllers to respond, Solly looked over his instruments. “Everything seems normal,” he said.
Kim couldn’t sort her feelings out. She wanted the problem to go away, wanted to get home with her discovery, wanted to enjoy her accomplishment. But she also wanted to be proved right, for Solly to see that the apparition had substance. Maybe she wanted to demonstrate that to herself as well. She wanted an apology from somebody.
“Hammersmith, this is Sky Harbor.” A female voice. “We’ve been expecting you. Patrol will escort you in.” They gave Solly a course and speed.
“That doesn’t sound good,” he said.
He brought the ship around to the prescribed heading and fired the mains. A blip appeared on the long-range navigation screen. “That’ll be our escort,” he said.
“How far are they?”
“Several hours.”
Something caught Kim’s attention. A movement, a shift in the light. She looked around the pilot’s room. Nothing seemed changed.
“Problem?” Solly asked.
“Don’t know.” She reached over and touched the hypercomm lamps. They were warm. “I think they’re out again,” she said.
He frowned and tried them for himself. And then scowled. He removed the orange lamp and held it up to his eyes. “They sure are.”
“Is there any other way to know whether we’re transmitting?”
“Yes.” He punched a button. “Patrol, Hammersmith. Do you read?”
“Hammersmith, this is Patrol one-one. Affirmative. Do you require assistance?” Male voice this time, Bondolay accent. Lots of r’s.
“Are we showing a hypercomm transmission?”
“Wait one.” He sounded as if he were being patient. Kim wiped her mouth while she waited for the response, which seemed to take an interminably long time. Then the voice was back: “Hammersmith,” he said, “that is affirmative.” He sounded puzzled. How could Hammersmith be transmitting and the pilot not know? “Is there a problem?”
“Computer is down,” Solly said, climbing out of his chair. “And we’re having some other minor malfunctions.” He signed off and left the pilot’s room in a dead run. Minutes later he was back, his face pale. “You were right, Kim,” he said. “There is something in the works and the son of a bitch is trying to talk to the folks at home.”
“The first thing it’ll do,” she said, “is tell them where Greenway is. Turn off the transmitter.”
“I just did.”
“Good.”
He opened the channel again. “Patrol, this is Hammersmith. Has the subspace transmission ceased?”
“Negative.” The voice paused. “Hammersmith, what is your situation?”
“I think we ought to tell them,” said Kim.
“That would not be a good idea. If they believed us, we might just get a missile up our tailpipe.”
“I don’t believe they’d do that.”
“Don’t be too sure. This situation has suddenly become very scary.”
Suddenly. “Solly. It’s always been scary.” She couldn’t keep the note of recrimination out of her voice.
He tried to apologize, but she brushed it away. No matter. It’s okay.
It wasn’t, of course. But deep down she felt a sense of gratification that she’d been shown to be right.
He talked to the Patrol again, detailing the mechanical problems. “This is becoming a nightmare,” he told her. Then he shut down the engines.
“You said something about taking a wrench to it,” she said.
“That’s what we have to do. But it’s on the lower level, back in the woodwork. It’ll take a half hour or more. That’s too much time.”
“So what do we do?”
“Give me a moment.” He handed her a wristlamp, told her to turn it on, and opened a closet. He vanished inside and she heard him moving things around, heard the sound of a panel sliding back, and then the room went dark. But it wasn’t like the normal darkness in the pilot’s room, where one could sit in the glow of the instrument panels. Everything died: screens, gauges, status lamps, telltales, the electronic burble of the equipment. The place had gone completely black and silent. She tried to change her position and felt herself rising out of the seat. The artificial gravity was off.
A few security lights, operating on a separate circuit, began to glow. A battery lantern snapped on behind her. “That’ll stop it,” he said.
“I hate to bring this up.” She was afloat now. “Do we still have life support?”
“No. Everything’s shut down, except the engines. They’re on a bypass. But we’ll be okay long enough to disable the transmitter.”
They switched to grip shoes and went down to the bottom floor, where long windows looked into the cargo and storage bays. The lamps threw shadows behind stocks of food, esoteric equipment that would have been used in the Taratuba mission, the recycling units, and the gravity control system. Solly opened a cabinet and picked out some tools. Satisfied, he led her toward the front of the ship.
Twin water tanks were housed forward in bays on either side of the passageway. They entered the starboard side and knelt down beside the tank. Solly anchored the lantern, which had a magnetic base, and began removing a panel.
Kim watched him work, got up, and went back into the corridor. She could see the stairway at the rear, outlined by security lights. In the launch bay, in the glow of her wristlamp, the lander’s cockpit looked like a fish’s head, rising through the floor. Its circular viewports stared back at her.
Solly laid the panel alongside the tank and looked inside the wall at a crawl space. “It’ll take a while,” he said, ducking into it. “I have to remove some other stuff to get at the transmitter.” He took the lantern and was gone.
The darkness pressed down on her.
She could hear the clink of Solly’s tools and the occasional scrape of metal on metal. Now and then something banged. The noise lifted her spirits. She stayed close by.
After a few minutes she heard a grunt of satisfaction. “That’ll do for the son of a bitch,” he said.
At that moment, a circle of illumination snapped on at the top of the staircase and her weight came back with the force of a blow between the shoulder blades. Although both shoes had been in contact with the deck, it was nonetheless like stepping into an unexpected hole in an unlit room. She twisted her knee and yelped. “Solly,” she cr
ied, “warn me next time.” Her voice echoed off the walls.
“Wasn’t me,” he yelled.
Lights were coming on everywhere, in the passageway, the individual bays, even in the crawl space.
“Power’s back on!” she said.
“I can see that. This goddamn thing could have juiced me.”
She smelled something burning. Then he reappeared. “One problem settled anyhow,” he said. “Nobody’s going to communicate with anybody.”
“Solly.” She kept her voice very low. “Why’d the power come back on?”
“Somebody turned it on.” He was holding the wrench in his right hand.
“What do we do now?”
“We’re going to get rid of our visitor.”
“How do we do that? We can’t even find it.”
They returned down the corridor and stood at the foot of the staircase, looking up at the landing. The airtight door at the top was open, just as they’d left it.
“We need to get some help,” she said.
“That might not be easy. I just finished off the transmitter.”
“You mean we can’t communicate locally either?”
“Not with anybody outside screaming range. I would have just disabled the hypercomm function if I’d known how. Takes a goddamn engineer to figure some of this equipment out.”
“So what’s next?” she asked.
Solly put his arm around her and held her for a moment. “Stick with me.”
He led the way up the staircase and with noticeable reluctance put his head through the open door and looked both ways along the corridor. “Don’t see anything,” he said.
The doors to the various compartments were all closed, save for the rec room, which was always open. They peeked in, saw nothing, and climbed to the top floor.
From the pilot’s room came the quiet murmur of the instruments. Everything was back on line.
Kim was alarmed to see that the status board was blinking red, but Solly explained it was only a warning that there was no transmission capability.
The Patrol was talking to them, asking what was wrong, pointing out they were off course, urging them to respond, assuring them help was on the way. They would be alongside, they said, in two hours.
Solly went back into the closet and showed her the power cutoff. It was a long black handle. It was up, in the white area, designated ON. “That caps it,” said Solly. “We do have an intruder.”
“No way it could trip back itself?”
“No,” he said. “It’s not supposed to be possible for it to turn itself on or off.”
“Maybe,” said Kim, “we should blink our lights for the Patrol. Let them know we’ve no communications.”
“They’ll figure it out on their own.” He slumped into a seat. “It’s invisible. But it’s solid, right? It has to be. I mean, it turns handles.”
“No,” Kim said. “We know it’s physical. That’s not quite the same thing as being solid.”
“Well, whatever, it’s time to get rid of it.”
“How?”
“Easy.” He took two pressure suits out of the utility locker and handed her one. “Put this on.”
“Why? What’s the plan?”
“We’re going to blow it out the door.”
At first she didn’t know what he meant. And then she understood. “Depressurize,” she said.
“Sure. It’s the only way I know.”
“Brilliant, Solly,” she said. “I’d never have thought of it.”
He shrugged. “I saw it done in an old video.”
She stripped off her outer clothes and got into the suit. It was the first time she’d ever worn one and she needed help to secure the helmet properly. “You okay?” he asked.
She felt as if she couldn’t get enough air.
“Just relax,” he said. He did something to her backpack. “How’s that?”
Better. “Thanks.”
“It’s okay.” He showed her the controls on her gloves, how she could adjust temperature, the air mix, whatever, and pulled on his own suit while she demonstrated she knew how to handle everything. He locked down his helmet and ran a radio check.
“Now,” he said, “let’s get rid of the pest.”
They stowed their personal gear, toothbrushes, soap, clothes, commlinks. Then they walked through the ship, all three floors, opening every interior hatch, and leaving them open. When they’d finished they returned to the pilot’s room and sat down. Kim looked around, could see nothing else that required their attention. “I think we’re ready,” she said.
Solly nodded, turned off the blowers, and shut down the air supply.
Kim punched the stud on the arm of her chair, and the harness settled over her. “All set,” she said.
Solly leaned over the console and his fingers flashed across the keyboard.
“What’s going on?” she asked.
“I have to override the safety routines. But we’re in business now.”
The Patrol voice asked again whether Hammersmith was receiving. “Please blink your lights if you hear me,” he said. And a moment later: “We have traffic for you from the Seabright Institute. Please respond if you are able.”
“Solly,” she said, “did you hear that?”
“Business first.”
“Okay,” she said.
“Opening up.”
She heard a hatch downstairs turning on its bearings. Then a murmur that escalated rapidly into a hurricane of sound. Wind swirled around her and tried to suck her out of the chair. Loose objects sailed past.
It lasted about two minutes. Then, as quickly as it had begun, it subsided, and the ship fell silent.
“We’ve got vacuum,” said Solly.
They unbuckled and went downstairs to the air lock and looked out. Helios was behind them. The three bright stars of Orion’s Belt glittered in the night. “What do you think?” he asked.
“It should have worked. There’s no life-form I ever heard of that can resist a total depressurization.”
“How long should we leave it open?”
“I’d give it a couple of hours. I don’t suppose you saw anything unusual go out?”
“No.”
“Pity.”
They went back to the pilot’s room where Solly blinked the running lights.
“Please inform us if you can hear this transmission,” came the reply. “One blink for yes. Two for no.”
Solly blinked once.
“Are you in imminent danger?”
Solly blinked twice. Not that it made any real difference, as far as Kim could see. She doubted they could get here any faster.
The Patrol asked whether the pilot had control of the vehicle.
Solly blinked once.
Could they go to a new course?
One blink.
They set the directed course and speed. Then they began responding to queries about Hammersmith’s condition. Finally the Patrol vessel pronounced itself satisfied there was no immediate crisis and put the Institute on the circuit.
“Hello.” It was Matt’s voice. “Solly, are you okay? Kim? Is everyone all right?”
Solly blinked once and heard the Patrol relay the answer. “Yes.”
“They tell me you’ve got problems with the radio and can’t respond.” He sounded relieved. “But they think you’re doing okay, and they’ll have you out of there pretty soon. We’re glad to see you back home. I don’t think the official powers are happy, but they’ve got their ship back. Maybe they won’t prosecute. I’m leaving in a few hours and I’ll meet you at Sky Harbor. Did you have any luck?”
“He sounds subdued,” suggested Solly. “How do you want me to answer him?”
“Tell him yes.”
Solly blinked once.
“Do you mean you found something?”
Yes.
“Intelligence?”
She was thinking this was not something they’d want to discuss in public and Matt knew it but he couldn’t
restrain himself.
Yes.
“I’ll meet you when you dock.”
He signed off. “Prosecution,” said Solly, “probably depends on whether Phil is happy with the results.”
“He won’t be happy,” said Kim. “We met a celestial and we killed it.” She was quiet for a while. Then: “Why not try the AI? Let’s see if it’s back.”
“Ham,” said Solly, “are you there?”
“I’m here, Solly.”
Another good sign. Solly let out his breath. “Thank God,” he said.
“Are you fully functional, Ham?” asked Kim.
“Yes. I believe so.”
“Do you know what happened to you?”
“I was—”
“Yes?”
“—taken over—”
“Go ahead, Ham.”
“By an intelligence.”
“Artificial?”
“I do not know.”
“Is it gone now?”
“I do not detect its presence. Although I suspect it could hide itself from me if it wished.”
“What can you tell us about it?”
“It is not listed in the catalog.”
“Was it biological?” Kim was asking the questions while Solly listened.
“I don’t think so. I believe it was molecular, and that it was powered by electrical fields, possibly generated by accelerated quantum activity. It was quite a unique presence. It seems to have been designed for a specific purpose.”
“What purpose?”
“I would say to seize a starship.”
“I wonder,” said Solly, “if it was supposed to grab us before we left the Alnitak system?”
“It’s possible,” said Kim. “It would have had to be pretty quick to do that.”
“I think there was an alternate function. With respect to us.”
“And that was—?”
“To remain with the ship and inform its—” the AI searched for a word, “—inform its supervisor of our final destination.”
“Who is the supervisor?”
“I don’t know.”
“The intelligence behind this thing must be a moron,” grumbled Kim. “Why make a grab instead of introducing themselves?”
“What else do you know of its physical structure?” asked Solly.
“I detected free hydrogen molecules. Methane. Oxygen. It seemed, however, not to have a coherent physical form.”
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