Edward M. Lerner
Page 27
“T’bck Fwa,” Kudrin presumed to correct her.
“No, T’bck Ra. Unity artificial intelligences share the ‘family’ name T’bck. T’bck Ra is the shipboard AI.”
An outpouring of human questions almost drowned out the reply, spoken by an unseen someone whose voice was reminiscent of, but deeper than, T’bck Fwa’s translations. “I am here, ka.”
“Standby.” Eva remained in the hospital. What Gwu had shared with Eva about the takeover and the crew-kindred’s recent sabotage must not have been disseminated. Gwu summarized quickly. “Until your arrival, opportunities to communication with the newly reawakened T’bck Ra have been risky and fleeting. T’bck Ra, have you been monitoring?”
“Yes, ka.”
“Then a proposed Plan E: Can you shut off the engines?”
“No. The K’vithians have fully isolated that subsystem.”
As Gwu’s last hope died, to feel merely old and tired and insane would have been welcome.
CHAPTER 40
Deck sixty-seven was Eva’s favorite. The smell of sulfur was gone here. Level sixty-six was more a narrow circular balcony than a full deck, allowing “her” deck’s spiky trees to stretch a good eight meters into the air. A rich scent of yeast and freshly turned soil permeated the air. Blue-green leaves fluttered and rustled in an artificial breeze. Graceful constructs that were both fountains and sprinklers dotted the setting, burbling and bubbling and spraying water in patterns she had yet to parse. Gauzy, many-winged creatures swooped and soared in elaborately evolving 3-D formations. With soft vibratos of what she took to be immersion in the moment, a few Centaurs circled the park swinging branch to branch. Keizo would have been fascinated, she thought, but he is far safer where Art last saw him: Callisto.
Immersed herself in the moment, Eva stubbed a boot tip on a gnarled root. Art caught her good arm to spare her a nasty fall, but even the light tug on her coverall made the healing shoulder twinge. “I should watch where I’m going.”
“No adventure in that.” He kicked a loose rock.
She linked her good arm through his. Touching felt good. Thinking about the future did not. “You’re blaming yourself again.”
“I’m relieved to know you’re okay. What’s eating me alive is that more people than ever are trapped here.” They caught up to his rock, which he punted again. “The more I figure out, the worse I make things.”
Eva halted, forcing him to stop. “No, what’s eating you alive is that despite everything, you would not be anywhere else.” Or with anyone else? Maybe only she was thinking that. Somehow, this did not seem the time to consider such things.
“Look at them move in those trees.”
Not faulting him for the change to an impersonal subject, she resumed walking. “I remember you fixating on holes in the corridors. Now most decks in our part of the ship have ceiling-mounted racks and hooks, although those can’t be half the fun of swinging through the trees.”
“Around and around and around she goes,” Art said. “Where she stops, nobody knows.”
Huh? “She, the ship? She, the ka?”
“She, the roulette wheel of life. That said, I think I’ll leave you here for a while. I want to have a chat with the ka. Are you up to watching where you place your feet?”
Despite prodding he would say no more, but Eva could see yet other metaphorical wheels turning behind his eyes. She had encountered that look often enough to anticipate yet more adventure.
“Somehow,” Mashkith said, his avatar as stoic as ever, “I am not surprised to discover you joined us aboard Victorious.”
Art guessed that Mashkith in person, in claw or shooting range, would exhibit more emotion. Fortunately, an in-person meeting was unnecessary. After a few rounds of jamming each other’s ship-spanning wireless networks, both sides had quietly decided to stand down. It was better that way. The UPIA ‘bots all over the ship watched the Snakes, and he assumed similar sensors controlled by the Snakes watched them. Either side, or both, could encrypt for privacy when they wished, but any overt aggression—went the common wisdom—was forestalled by the knowledge the other side would see the preparations. Non-jamming, like the ship-wide return of ambient lighting, was part of a cautious evolution toward coexistence. “I’ve come to think of it as Harmony.”
“Why have you called?” Behind the avatar spread a sea of stars.
“To arrange your surrender, Foremost,” Art replied.
Blink blink: a sneer. “I think not.”
“You may feel somewhat differently when the fusion drive stops.” The deck trembled beneath Art’s feet.
Mashkith felt it, too. “What are you doing?”
“Me? Nothing.” As Art spoke, several decks flexed, separated, and retracted. Pumps moved fluids between tanks. “The shipboard AI, or what you left of him, now he is quite busy.”
Just once, while Allyson was still a baby, Maya had talked Art into attending the ballet. The spin up/down process K’choi Gwu ka and T’bck Ra had described in typical literal Centaur fashion struck Art as the very embodiment of choreography. The split-second timing, the careful matching of counterbalanced masses, the precise movements along graceful arcs—make one mistake, and the results could be far more consequential than dancers colliding.
“For the longest time, Mashkith, you know what I could not understand? The holes in the ceilings and walls. I hate not getting something.”
“Mounting points for the herd’s swinging racks. They were removed in any part of the ship humans might see. Why do you change the subject?”
For his cyber-conferencing backdrop, Art had chosen an outside image of the starship, its attitude jets fired more and more often, the duration of the burns growing. Did Mashkith yet suspect he was being given a visualization of real-time events? “Ceiling-mounted swinging racks. What finally penetrated my consciousness only a little while ago was the holes in the walls. In spin mode, ceilings become walls and some walls become ceilings.”
Blink blink. “I am aware of the operation of my ship.”
We’ll see whose ship it is, Foremost. “I was enjoying a lovely park on deck sixty-seven when I realized: This landscape would tear apart were the ship to spin up. I couldn’t reconcile that with my experience on earlier visits, when the whole ship was spinning.” Another tremor came as Art spoke. “The ka was kind enough to explain the various mechanisms involved in reconfiguration between acceleration and spin modes.”
“Doctor Walsh, if you have a point, please get to it. I have pressing duties.”
The simulated Harmony now fired its attitude jets almost continuously. If you looked closely, the hull had begun precessing like a top around its main axis. “Yes, preparing to surrender. Do you feel it yet?”
The avatar briefly froze—Mashkith’s thoughts had gone elsewhere. Did he get it? Moving selected deck segments in an unbalanced way created a wobble, the carefully timed actions pumping a resonant motion. “You are shaking Victorious. Why?”
Plan D. “Very soon that wobble, which Centaur automation still controls, will increase beyond the ability of the attitude jets, which you control, to compensate for. When that happens, Harmony will tumble uncontrollably. Or it would—except that accelerometers integral to the fusion drive will sense the problem and shut it down. Then we’ll stop rocking the boat. Restart the drive, and we’ll shut it down again.”
Mashkith’s avatar’s stare was no less fierce for being computer-generated. “Drifting endlessly through space … are there not simpler and faster ways to commit suicide?”
Plan D. As soon as we can radio back to Sol system to confirm our ability to maintain the shutdown, the UP rescue fleet will launch. “Trust me, Foremost. Suicide is the furthest thing from my plans.”
CHAPTER 41
Had the Foremost become too old and timorous?
Far away, Mashkith had acted boldly. His actions had saved the clan, saved all their lives, for which Lothwer would always be grateful. Still….
They were to
uring a barracks hastily constructed for displaced Hunters. Was that their best use of time now? Somehow, Lothwer doubted it. “Urgent need for action, sir.”
“Drifting not to your satisfaction?” The Foremost’s head traced an ironic circle as they floated down a narrow aisle between tiers of hammocks.
“Recommendation: immediate and full assault. Enemy overconfident in his tactical success.” In Lothwer’s more detailed conception, netted for security, the battle would be glorious. He would coordinate large-scale attacks from bow and stern, recapture the ship, and enforce cooperation among the surviving prisoners. Arblen Ems would return in triumph—and with overwhelming technological superiority—to hegemony over K’vith.
“Well and bravely fought.” Mashkith’s attention had wandered to a clan veteran, wounded in the recent fighting, patched, and discharged to make room in the hospital. “The clan’s thanks to you for your sacrifice.”
“Foremost,” Lothwer interrupted. “My proposal?”
“Our other options?”
It was hard not to blink-blink in contempt. Once, such questions might have had value as training. Did Mashkith still think of him as some junior cadet, to be reminded of basic analysis? Any such need for guidance had ended long ago. Now the questioning only disguised timidity. “Our submission here, to the raiders. Our submission later, to a UP fleet of conquest.”
More greetings and commiseration. Finally they reached the end of the barracks and the Foremost remembered Lothwer’s presence. “Drifting the wrong perception.” A major mechanical repair, something rebuilt following a human grenade attack, diverted Mashkith’s attention yet again. “Coasting.” The tactical plan that had remained in their consensual virtual space abruptly vanished. A simple navigational animation took its place. The icon for Victorious pulsed on the fringes of the solar system, far above the ecliptic, on a far-red thread that tracked their course since Jupiter. A near-red dotted extrapolation continued into the void. “Velocity at time of fusion-drive cut-off two percent light speed. Without any further acceleration, Victorious soon beyond human reach. Vital matters: Location of human navy? Reason for its absence?”
Lothwer seethed as they next toured an improvised kitchen that replaced one abandoned amidships. He had stolen away the human experts. He had blunted the fiercest human attack shipboard. Why did Mashkith patronize him?
A drifting—my humble correction, Foremost, a coasting—starship might be a derelict, its human and herd and Hunter passengers all dead, its interstellar drive destroyed in battle or spite. Clearly, the human fleet awaited a signal before giving chase. Lothwer thought the more interesting question was: Why had the raiders destroyed most of the antennae? With whom did the humans think to prevent Arblen Ems from communicating? The few antennae still intact, none with interstellar range, were unreachable from the decks the humans controlled—but they could still provide the pretext he sought. “Reason for our immediate assault, Foremost: denial of human access to signaling equipment.”
Mashkith sampled the upcoming meal, limiting his grimace to a private link. “Quite excellent,” he lied to the cook. “Compliments on your creativity.”
Suddenly, the Foremost was all business. “Lothwer, a premise. Naval dispatch contingent upon raiders’ signal. UP fleet absent because of lack of human-usable comm gear.”
“Agreement,” Lothwer said. Had the Foremost no more to contribute than paraphrasing?
“Scenario for assessment: preemptive disassembly of remaining long-range comm gear. Proactive prevention of human replacement.”
Lothwer considered. Raid if and when the humans tried to build. Raid anything they choose to hide, lest they be building. “Scenario unwise, Foremost. Concession of initiative to the enemy.”
But the Foremost was persistent. “Casualties prediction?”
“Dependent upon human actions. Best case: none. Worst case: full-out assault without control of timing. Heavy casualties.”
For a long time, Mashkith was silent. “Long-range antennae the key. Placement of antenna necessarily on, or at least near, the hull exterior. Best case: raid then. Worst case: bombardment from a clan warship.”
If any activity might be an antenna deployment, destroy the region with missiles. Rather than absorb a few casualties now for the sake of certainty, Mashkith would risk major damage to this unique ship. Some would see such caution as strategy. Lothwer knew it for lost nerve, and it pained him to witness such weakness from one once so daring. “Acceptable,” he admitted. “Implementation on priority basis.”
Acceptable, perhaps, but also imprudent and cowardly. Had the time come again for a new Foremost?
Yet another pseudo-random wobble struck Harmony, courtesy of T’bck Ra. The impulse wasn’t much, only strong enough to keep the fusion-drive cutoffs from resetting, but in microgravity it sufficed to detach goop from a spoon held at just the wrong angle. Marines hooted at one of their own suddenly wearing a gray pasty smear on his shirt.
Helmut was not yet hungry enough to try the synthesized glop, although it was reassuring the Centaurs could produce stuff edible for humans. It was too soon to gauge its nutritional completeness, but the stuff had yet to poison anyone. The Snakes had not planned for many human “guests,” nor the would-be rescuers for this lengthy a stay. What few high-energy rations people had carried in their spacesuits were mostly gone. The few human-processed foods the Snakes had somehow obtained were mostly gone. There was a stock of terrestrial seeds, with a small sample of which their new furry friends were already experimenting, but there could be no food from that source for months. Helmut carefully rewrapped the remains of an energy bar on which he had been picking. Any appetite he had had vanished at the thought of being here long enough to help with the harvest.
“You look glum.”
He looked up. Corinne floated in the corridor. “You don’t. Quit it.”
She snagged a ceiling rack to stop herself. “Hey, you’re the spaceship captain. If you could navigate worth spit, you’d be far away from here.” By net she added, “And although I wish you were, I can’t thank you enough for coming.”
He thrust his half-eaten energy bar at her. “Don’t forget the fine dining. All part of the full service you have come to expect from Schiller Space Lines.” And privately, “So what brings you here, shipmate?”
“Hallway gossip. If my eavesdropping skills are any good, there’s a strategy meeting coming up.” She nabbed and carefully ate her drifting crumbs as she snacked and spoke. It was from hunger, he guessed, not adult-onset neatness.
“True. Feel free to tag along. Don’t be surprised if you’re invited to leave.” To the unasked question that was plain on her face—why are you welcome?—he offered only: “New job.”
Corinne followed him up two decks to the summit meeting. The usual suspects were mostly present: Carlos and Art; Maj. Kudrin and a few of his senior people; K’choi Gwu ka and T’choi Swee qwo, looking comical in their borrowed human helmets. Ambassador Chung was conspicuously absent, probably lost still in depression. The judgmental presumption made Helmut stop and think. He gave himself a hard stare through a nearby sensor, and did not much care for the weary, defeated-looking guy who looked back. Shape up, he lectured himself. Screw up here, and you’ll have altogether too much time to rest.
One by one, Art distributed network keys for a secure meeting. When Helmut got his, he found human and Centaur AIs already linked in to translate. Corinne, as he had expected, did not get a key. She accepted defeat graciously, departing with a wry smile.
“Thanks, everyone, for coming,” Art said. Helmut felt he had gotten pretty good at reading Art, but his friend’s present mood was elusive. Helmut’s best guess was a trace of the defeatism he was battling. It wasn’t a good sign. “Here’s our status.”
A graphic materialized in the consensual view. It projected a kaleidoscopically complex amalgam of damage and repairs, known and suspected hazards, force dispositions of friend and foe, distributions of Centaur/photonic-c
ontrolled vs. Snake/biocomp-controlled ship’s subsystems. For the asking, one could access any non-Snake sensor for more detail in true or pseudo-colored representations.
“It’s all here for your review, but little of it is immediately pressing.” With a magician’s flourish, Art’s avatar dimmed all but a few details. “We’re stuck in the middle of Plan D. The drive remains stopped. We remain unable to send a ‘go’ signal to the fleet.”
Cyber-Kudrin wore a clean-and-pressed uniform real-Kudrin could probably scarcely recognize. “‘We remain unable’ doesn’t do the situation justice. Blowing up antennae to keep the Snakes from phoning home may have been a great idea, but now we’re in the same fix. These guys are quick-thinking—soon after we stopped the fusion drive, they went outside onto the hull and dismantled the rest. With the ka’s support, we began building an interplanetary-capable antenna array from supplies. A Snake raid destroyed it before it could be completed. If you want to call what we have a ceasefire, that was the biggest violation, with plenty of casualties on both sides. So we tried it again, in an area swept clear of all sensors. They raided soon after their last sensor went down. It’s clear they’ve figured out our plan, and that they can mount a fairly decent-sized attack with only implant-to-implant pre-coordination. We had no warning.”