his
sporadic psi. He depressed an activation key, paused, tripped a
fire switch.
Daggers of flame scarred the deep space night two light seconds
from the Fortress. A swarm of hyper-capable seeker missiles went
looking for Commander Abhoussi’s cruiser.
The vessel had not traveled far.
Alarms screamed aboard the warship. Automatic weapons
responded.
Constellations vanished behind a veil of fire. Abhoussi’s
engineers seized their only chance. They kicked in the damaged
generators. The cruiser twisted away into hyperspace, leaving
fragments of itself behind. The seekers, unaware of the
cruiser’s destination, began cutting lazy search patterns
over half-light-year quadrants.
Homer’s faint and seldom reliable psi touched upon a
remote, short-lived scream. He leaned back and smiled at an aghast
Benjamin. “It’s done.”
“Ah, Homer . . . ” Benjamin
could not think of anything to say. He could not meet the eyes of
the watch-standers.
Their faces were long and grey. Storm was going to cut their
hearts out for not stopping this.
The ravenshrike shuddered as it sensed the psionic scream and
the pure disgust of the Center watch. It wrapped itself in wings
and shadow, closed its eyes, and awaited its master’s
return.
----
----
Fifteen: 3020 AD
Frog’s rescue became high drama. Blake’s crews
reached him only after he had idled down and gone on intravenous
and drugs in an extended, deep sleep free of the distress and pain
of radiation sickness. He had emptied his oxygen tanks.
His rescuers had to tunnel under his crawler to reach his belly
hatch. They found it fouled with splash scale. They stung a heated
hose through his tractor skin into his oxy main. A couple of Blake
hogs chipped the scale off his hatch. Others sprayed the tunnel
walls with a quick-setting epoxy. They scabbed a pumper trunk over
the tunnel mouth and flooded it with breathables.
They had to do it the hard way. Near the end, too pained to
think straight, Frog had shed his hotsuit again. His stupidity came
near costing him his life.
The expenses of the rescue came out of Blake’s PR budget.
The holonetnews snoops were on the scene, their cameras purring.
The head office saw itself picking up a lot of cheap advertising.
The name Blake Mining and Metals would get exposure all over
Confederation.
Old Frog had gotten more than he had bargained for. He had not
impressed just a little girl and the people of his home town. He
was a seven-day news wonder Confederation-wide. His adventure was
being broadcast live from Edgeward. Taping crews braved the
Shadowline to get his rescue recorded for later broadcast.
He would have been amused and disgusted had he known about it.
It was not quite the notoriety he had been seeking.
----
----
Sixteen: 3031 AD
Mouse hovered on the fringes of Pollyanna’s welcome-home
party, attracted by the gaiety, repelled by Benjamin and Homer and
what they had tried to do. Academy was all grey discipline and the
absence of humor. He needed a little singing and dancing. The
younger people were doing both, and building some mighty hangovers
while they were at it.
Their elders frowned around the party’s edges like
thunderheads grumbling on grey horizons. Their faces were marked by
an uneasiness bordering on dread.
They’re standing
there like brooding guardian idols in some Bronze Age temple
, Mouse
thought.
Like the tongueless crows of doom
.
He tried to laugh at his own gloomy perception. His
father’s moods must be catching.
Storm, Cassius, and the other old ones had just come from a
staff meeting. Mouse had not been permitted to attend. He guessed
they had discussed the twins first.
There had been one hell of a traffic load through Instel
Communications. Hawksblood had, apparently, been consulted. He
could not guess what had been decided. Cassius had had only enough
time to whisper the news that the cruiser had survived. Barely.
Then the Vice President for Procurement of Blake Mining and
Metals,