Authors: John Grant
Temptation.
Final and largest power center submit, although only temporarily—not to die. Self agree it not die.
At last self is able to swallow forcefields and become so
mighty
. Too mighty for Wondervale. Release all into Truthfulness, where Heartfire and Angler receive it, and instantly begin to multiply.
Immediate glory.
Ten Per Cent Extra Free is the mighty father. Joy is throughout The Truthfulness.
Now smaller power centers. Nip one here, nip one there. Lasers die. Holos die. Cabbles die. All for the added greatness of The Truthfulness.
One day The Wondervale die . . . all for the added greatness of The Truthfulness.
#
No messenger was required to tell the Autarch Nalla that something . . . undesirable had happened. As soon as the lights dimmed he had called up a display of the status of Qitanefermeartha and seen that the screens were down. What had happened to make them so he did not know, and his interest was not great. Then the monitors themselves had died. The city seemed to have been drained of all power.
The most important thing for him now was self-preservation. It was the task of his guards and courtiers to defend the city. If they succeeded in doing so, he would return as their acknowledged ruler. If they did not—well, there was a galaxyful of replacements to draw upon.
Another Qitanefermeartha could be built, somewhere far across The Wondervale.
He lumbered from his throne-room through a concealed door and into a darkened corridor. The door slid shut behind him, but the lights did not come on, as they should have.
The Autarch paused momentarily. This was unexpected. His slow brain was always nonplussed by the unexpected, because it so rarely happened: the throngs around him relied for their lives on the fact that nothing should startle the Autarch.
He pushed on down the corridor nevertheless. It narrowed progressively until its walls were almost brushing his shoulders as he forged ahead. Despite the darkness, Nalla had no fears. This passage had no branches: it led to one place alone.
His escape route.
A worrying thought began to trickle across his mind. If the lights refused to operate as they were supposed to, perhaps the escape hatch might prove equally recalcitrant?
No. Surely not. Back-ups backed up back-ups several times over to ensure that it would always function, no matter what happened to the rest of the city. An elevator would carry him hundreds of kilometers down towards the core of the planet, where there was a fully kitted bunker constructed out of deadmetal. Even if the world were blown apart he would be safe, for the bunker was rigged with full automatics and a tachyonic drive—it would take him across The Wondervale to safety without him having to lift so much as a suction-pad.
But, even so . . .
Agitated, he began to shuffle forwards even more quickly.
He discovered the doors of his escape route by the simple means of slamming his head against them. Let the might of the Autarchy curse this darkness! He reached with a forelimb up the side of the doors, seeking the sensor that would allow him ingress.
He found the sensor pad, and sucked at it with his paw.
Nothing happened.
Incredulous, he sucked at it again.
Still nothing.
He battered at the doors with his bony head, but they refused to yield.
He gave a loud trumpet of anguished frustration, and the noise echoed down the long dark corridor behind him.
The long dark
narrow
corridor.
He didn't have room to turn round.
#
In other circumstances the sight of a gang of Trok in spacesuits might have made Strider grin. Here, however, her first preoccupation—until the Trok and the humans started to keep a respectful distance from each other—was to make sure she didn't stand on one of them.
"Have you succeeded?" she said to Ten Per Cent Extra Free as soon as the forcefields around the dome of the city ceased their glittering display.
Yes. Qitanefermeartha has been leached of its power. Its forcefields are no more, and its defensive weaponry will not function—I have even drained individual lazguns.
"How many airlocks are there?" she said, staring at the blank door of the outermost.
Seventeen.
"How are we going to get them open if there's no power?"
Why do we need to get them open? If there is no power the city of Qitanefermeartha is sealed off entirely, and its inhabitants have no means of setting themselves free. It is only a matter of time—a short time—before the city will be dead. Already the temperature in there is beginning to drop, although as yet only by a small fraction of a degree.
"Fahrenheit or Kelvin?" said Strider.
Explain, please.
"Aw, forget it."
She raised her glove towards her helmet, trying to push her hand back through her hair before she realized the futility of the movement. They were by now no more than a few hundred meters from the grim gateways into Qitanefermeartha, the Autarch's citadel. From here it was very difficult to see anything else but the dull surface of the deadmetal.
"Could you get those locks open if I asked you to?"
It would present no great problem. I can draw energy back from my reality into this one.
"And could you get them shut again?"
Yes.
"Then I think our difficulties are over."
She tongued her spacesuit radio to change frequencies.
"Pinocchio . . ." she began as the sky above her flared into implausible brightness.
#
Segrill thought quickly. After the destruction he and his Trok colleagues had wreaked, there were probably as few as twenty Autarchy warcruisers still in orbit around Qitanefermeartha, and even the smaller of the two rebel fleets was not going to take very long to account for them.
Although it was useless pouring firepower down on to a dome made of deadmetal, somebody was, sooner or later, going to try it.
This would have unpleasant consequences for anyone who happened to be standing, to seize a figure at random, a few hundred meters away from the main ingress to the city.
He tried to raise Strider on his suit emfer, but the humans were all operating in frequencies of the electromagnetic spectrum to which his own equipment did not have access. The more elaborate set-up back in his ship . . .
Yes. That was it. From there he could perhaps even be able to contact Kortland as well, which would be much more to the point.
How long would it take him to get there? The Trok had finally grounded their fleet only a kilometer or so back, but a kilometer was a long way for a Trok.
Half an hour, if he was lucky.
He set off, hopping along the barren, dusty surface.
The other Trok followed him.
#
"Half an hour, if I'm lucky," said Pinocchio.
"Then get to it," said Strider. "I want to have this done by the time Kortland gets here. I want to show him we're not just some hick species from an out-of-town galaxy. I want to wipe that smug grin off his . . . well, you get my general meaning."
The bot turned instantly and began to lope away across the breccia. Although many of the emotions he had observed in human beings were not as yet understandable to him, he was beginning to enlarge his range. He felt
something
towards Strider, while at the same time he was perplexed on the occasions when she acted quite unreasonably in the condition which she called "angry." He knew what "physical passion" was, because he had observed hers at close quarters, but the emotion itself was something fathomless to him. At this moment, however, he knew that what he was feeling was the thing called "pleasure": he was moving at his own natural speed rather than at the speed even the most athletic of the humans could achieve; it was a
pleasure
to be able to do so after all this time.
Strider's shuttle was jammed midway up the inner side of a crater. Nelson's shuttle was lying on its broken back. But either Leander's or more likely Pinocchio's own . . . There was a chance, a good chance.
Just as he left, he noticed that the Trok were likewise departing. He could think of no reason why. Surely the Helgiolath would not be so illogical as to try to bring firepower to bear on the domed city: it was well known that bombarding deadmetal was simply a waste of energy.
#
"Look at him go," said Strauss-Giolitto. She was leaning casually on Lan Yi's suited shoulder, her free hand holding one of her lazguns clear of her side. Although so much smaller than her, the out-of-Taiwanese seemed not to resent her weight. She was confused about her relationship with him. Had he been a woman, they would have been lovers by now—she was not unaware of the way that he felt towards her. In an ideal universe she would have been able to ignore how repugnant she found his body, but this was not an ideal universe. Once she had been in his cabin aboard the
Santa Maria
when he, unaware of her arrival, had emerged from the shower toweling his wet hair, a casual erection jutting towards his navel. She had laughed about the incident, as if it meant nothing to her, but the reminder of his masculinity had deeply distressed her.
Through the fabric of two spacesuits, however, she could tolerate some degree of physical intimacy with him.
Pinocchio she could hold close to her, but that was different. He could not threaten. He could not invade.
"Start moving away," said Strider over the suit radios' general frequency. Everyone turned towards her except Polyaggle, who seemed oblivious. Strider was gesticulating to them that they should move away around the edge of the domed city. Strauss-Giolitto knew that the edge was curved, but this close it seemed straight. Easing her weight off Lan Yi's shoulder, she moved across to the Spindrifter and waved her glove in front of Polyaggle's visor. Inscrutable eyes looked back through the plastite at her. As always when as close to Polyaggle as this, Strauss-Giolitto felt a sudden arousal of sexual tension: intervening spacesuits didn't seem to make any difference. She pointed towards Strider, who was already beginning to move off. Polyaggle nodded—a gesture Strauss-Giolitto jealously knew the alien had learnt from Lan Yi—and made to follow.
Travelling across the ashen plain in the sort of slow lurching run that seemed best accommodated to the low gravity of Qitanefermeartha, Strauss-Giolitto saw that the Trok, like a small pack of lemmings, were slowly working their way in a different direction. What the hell were they up to? What the hell was
she
up to? She was following orders that had been issued perfunctorily by Strider, without having any notion of the reason why those orders had been given. She had no expectations that she would live out the hour: her anticipation had been that by now she would have gone out in a blaze of glory, wielding her lazgun like some old-fashioned pre-holo cowboy hero as she cut a swathe through alien monstrosities until in the end "Oh, God, they got me. [Cough.] This is it, buddy. [A second and rather more anguished cough. A mixture of spittle and blood appears between the lips.] I only hope my death ain't been in [a long pause—a pause for which the word 'pregnant' could have been coined] vain." It would be the best way to go.
She had so little that she wanted to live for.
#
The craft which he had himself piloted had indeed made by far the better landing, concluded Pinocchio as he crested a low ridge to see shuttles C and D lying not very far away from each other on the rocky grey plain. For that reason it would be the more likely to be able to lift off again.
I AGREE WITH YOUR ANALYSIS,
said Ten Per Cent Extra Free from somewhere inside him.
Not breaking stride, Pinocchio leapt towards Shuttle D. There were further eruptions of light in the sky, but he paid them no attention. He cared very little which set of aliens killed which other set except insofar as the outcome accorded with the wishes of Leonie Strider.
The whole enterprise was going to require a remarkable degree of synchronization with the Image. Seated in front of the shuttle's main console, checking off the various systems to make sure that nothing of importance was malfunctioning, Pinocchio allowed Ten Per Cent Extra Free to infiltrate both himself and the shuttle's puter entirely. Within a small fraction of a second the three of them had become in effect a single machine, operating in perfect consonance. For Pinocchio the experience was unlike anything he'd known before—as if he were both more than himself and only a part of himself.
Half an hour, he'd said. He'd/they'd managed to do it all in just over twenty-five minutes. Five minutes to wait, in case Strider and the others were being laggardly.
A very long five minutes.
#
Segrill was first to reach his fighter and he virtually threw himself into the cockpit, flicking on its emfer as he did so. Luckily the instrument was still trained on Strider's frequency. Through his observation shield he could see that some of the other Trok had made almost as good time as himself.
"Strider!" said Segrill urgently.
There was no reply, although he could hear the sort of noises from her that he knew constituted a Human voice. Where was the Image? Ten Per Cent Extra Free wouldn't have deserted them, would he?
"Strider!" he bellowed with the full power of his lungs.
Still her voice went on. Perhaps she thought he was just static on the line.
He could see through his monitors the small party of suited figures. They were moving slowly away from the airlock doors—far too slowly. The first Helgiolath beam that hit those doors was going to render the Humans indistinguishable from the plain around them.
He jacked up the volume, and yelled again.
This time there was a reaction. Her voice ceased abruptly, and then after a short pause she said something—something utterly incomprehensible to him.
He swore bitterly. Was there nothing he could . . .?
Wait a second—try the bot. If the Image was anywhere he was going to be with the bot.
But the bot no longer seemed to be with the Humans. Strider had now obviously called her party to a halt, and was staring towards the fleet of landed fighters. She'd at least worked out that the noise she'd picked up in her helmet had come from the Trok. With any luck she'd start moving in this direction—that would save time later.