14

The wise and prudent man will draw a useful lesson even from poison itself.

Lokman

Ethiopian fabulist

Circa 100 B.C.

Aboard the Will of God in Deep Space

The dream was strange in at least two respects: Natalie knew she was asleep for one thing and her mother acted as narrator for another.

She watched the freighter taxi, pause, and vanish within its own cloud of steam. Then, as part of a miracle she had witnessed countless times before, the ship broke free of the water. Sunlight glinted off the hull as it turned slightly, and the drives growled. What made the whole thing so horrible was knowing what would happen next. Knowing and being powerless to stop it. Her mother's voice was calm and reflective. "I made many mistakes during my lifetime. The Braxton deal comes to mind, as does the terraforming project."

"What about me?" Natalie interjected, her voice echoing through time and space. "Was I a mistake?" Her mother couldn't or didn't want to hear, and Natalie watched the ship lift.

"Yes," Mary Voss continued, "I made many mistakes ... not the least of which was ignoring your father more than I should have. Take this trip, for example. He was dead set against it and wanted to sweep the ship for explosives. I should have listened, I should have ..."

The rest of her mother's words were lost as a miniature sun was born, lived for three seconds, and collapsed on itself. Thunder rolled, and windows shattered all around the bay.

Natalie awoke with a start, her heart pounding, sheets soaked with sweat. The compartment was dark, so dark that the clock and the indicators that surrounded it generated the only available light. Speed, course, and drive temps were all as they should be. Checking them, and knowing what they said, was a habit every deck officer had.

Natalie was preparing to get up and make her way to the head when the numbers vanished and reappeared. Something, or someone, had passed in front of them. "Russo? Is that you?"

A weight fell across Natalie's body, and a hand covered her mouth. She struggled, but to no avail. Her attacker had the advantage and knew how to use it. Her cheek encountered something soft, and the odor of cinnamon filled her nostrils. "Please, Citizen Voss, we mean you no harm."

"Then get the hell out of my cabin," Natalie replied, or tried to reply, since the hand kept her from speaking. She kicked and attempted to free herself. The pressure increased. The voice was concerned. "Your struggles are unnecessary. Relax and we will release you."

The voice and the accent were familiar. The Traa had entered her cabin. Why? What did they want? "We wish to speak with you," the voice said urgently, "privately. May I remove my paw?"

Natalie forced herself to relax and nodded. The paw disappeared, but the weight remained. Sa-Lo turned as the lights came on. Ka-Di, who lay across her torso, checked to make sure she was okay, and pushed himself away. "My apologies ... are you all right?"

"Fine, thank you," Natalie replied stiffly. She did a sit-up and swung her legs over the edge of the bunk. The sweatshirt extended halfway down her thighs. The officer knew the XTs weren't interested in her anatomy, but she felt better knowing she was clothed. "So," she said, trying to sound as stern as possible, "what's going on?"

"We are business beings," Sa-Lo said simply, "and you own something we want."

Natalie felt her heart beat just a little bit faster. So the Traa had come aboard because of her. That being the case, there was one thing they could possibly be interested in. "You want the Mescalero Gap."

"Precisely," Sa-Lo said smoothly, "and we're willing to pay more than Citizen Orr offered. Providing that certain agreements can be arrived at."

Natalie's eyebrows shot up. "You know about his offer?"

"Yes," the Traa replied simply, "we do."

Natalie knew there was more here than met the eye. The same doubts that caused her to refuse Orr's proposal surfaced once again. "Well, I'm sorry. The Gap isn't for sale. Not for the moment, anyway."

Ka-Di, silent until now, fought the urge to grab the female by the throat and force her agreement. Cooperation was best, he knew that, and he managed to control himself. Words had power, though ... as did fear. ' 'Captain Jord was correct. . . the pirates want you."

Natalie felt a weight drop into the bottom of her stomach. "Me? Why?"

"Because you refused Orr's offer," Sa-Lo said bluntly, "The sooner you die, the sooner he can buy the Gap from your brother."

Natalie glanced from one alien to the other. Though not a business person herself, she had inherited some of her mother's shrewdness, and she realized the Traa knew more than they should have—unless they had links to the industrialist. Which meant they couldn't be trusted. She tried another tack. "If I die, you die."

"True," Ka-Di replied easily. "Or it would be if we stayed aboard this ship. Come, and we will protect you."

"Yes," Sa-Lo put in. "Why not?"

Natalie wasn't sure why not, except that it had something to do with her parents' legacy, and her brother's trust. That, plus the fact that she was the Willie's third officer, which meant that she had a sworn duty to the crew, the ship, and her cargo. The academy's instructors had gone to great lengths to pound that idea into her head, and, like most of the lessons they taught, it stuck.

Natalie braced herself, raised her right foot, and kicked Sa-Lo in the midriff. The alien made a satisfying whoosh and bent over.

Ka-Di saw the preparatory move, anticipated what the human would do next, and triggered the knife. It jumped into his paw and hummed as he touched the switch. The backhanded slash should have cut Natalie's throat but sliced through air instead. It seemed the female had martial arts training. A possibility that Ka-Di had failed to allow for.

Natalie came off the bunk, grabbed Sa-Lo, and used him as a shield. The force blade stopped, but just barely. Ka-Di growled and prepared to attack. But Sa-Lo made that unnecessary by triggering the sleep bomb. He carried five of them for use during their escape. A strange odor caught Natalie's attention, caused her nasal passages to constrict, and was gone before she could think about it. She hit the deck with a thump.

Ka-Di watched saw the human fall, gave thanks for nostril filters, and checked her pulse. It was slow but steady.

Sa-Lo, still short of breath, leaned on the bulkhead. "Humans are annoying."

Ka-Di signaled agreement. "Shall I cut her throat?"

Sa-Lo held up a paw. "No, the pirates will take care of it for us. Besides, you know how emotional the humans are. What if Jord gave chase? Our escape has priority."

The warrior signaled his understanding, restored the weapon to its sheath, and wondered what La-Ma would do. She'd spare the human, he felt sure of that, but what of the rest? How would she judge their plans to secure the wormhole with military force if necessary? Would she approve? There was no way to tell.

"Come," Sa-Lo said, "it's time to leave the ship."

Tor Sanko, comfortably ensconced in his wraparound command chair, placed a grape on his tongue, popped the tight green skin, and savored the juice that flooded his mouth. "Pilot... time to contact, please."

The pilot, a cyborg who was literally one with his ship, knew Sanko would be unhappy and kept his voice neutral. "Four hours ... fifteen minutes."

Sanko glanced at the heads-up displays, tapped numbers into a keypad, and frowned. "The Will of God will enter the planet's atmosphere in four hours, five minutes according to my calculations."

The cyborg held his nonexistent breath. "Yes, sir."

Sanko's voice was dangerously calm. "Please explain. You indicated that we had more than enough time two hours ago."

The pilot wished he had legs, wished he could run, but knew he couldn't. "It would seem that the ship picked up speed, sir, not much, but enough to open a small gap."

"Then increase our speed, you fool," Sanko snapped, "or I'll cut your sensors."

The cyborg, whose only contact with the external world was through the ship's electronics, started to gibber. There was nothing he feared more than the deathlike darkness of sensory deprivation. "We're going full out, sir... ask engineering."

Sanko called the chief engineer, confirmed the pilot's data, and swore out loud. Assuming nothing happened to the other ship's drives, and she made planetfall as projected, the jacker would have a decision to make. He could follow the Will of God down and destroy her on the ground, or wait in orbit and attack when she lifted. The first was the more direct, and therefore more satisfying, possibility, but the second made better sense.

The Place of Wandering Waters carried a PTL rating of 16, which suggested a primitive, largely undeveloped planet having some advanced technology. So, given the fact that backwater planets had an unsettling tendency to acquire missile launchers prior to microwave ovens, the locals could have all sorts of nasty little toys stashed in the trees. The thought made Sanko angry. Very angry. "The pilot needs a rest. Cut his feeds."

The second officer didn't like the cyborg. She caressed a row of buttons, gloried in the knowledge that the pilot could feel her touch, and smiled as she cut his sensors. The com link went last, so the crew could hear the cyborg scream, and reflect on what it meant.

Rollo was bored, irritable, and given to unexpected barrel rolls, all of which made him poor company, and a rather unstable platform on which to work, play, or snooze. That being the case, Torx did what any self-respecting Treeth would do under similar circumstances, and sought the company of other more reasonable beings.

Like his distant ancestors before him, Torx was well equipped for travel through the trees, and took pleasure in the long series of leaps that carried him from a platform near the pool of contemplation, deep into the sun-dappled woods. Despite the fact that his route carried him through the forest's upper canopy, the path had been used thousands of times before, and was clearly marked. Smaller branches had been broken off, while the stronger, more mature limbs had developed thick layers of protective bark and were worn from constant use.

There were breaks too, places where ancient giants had succumbed to the ravages of wind, water, and time. Torx could imagine roots breaking free from the wet, swampy soil, branches crackling as the disaster began, and a long, drawn-out groan as younger, still viable trees surrendered to the giant's weight and were carried to their deaths.

The result was a gap in the foliage, a place where the sun could coax new growth from the ground, and the forest could strengthen itself. When they encountered gaps such as those, the ancient Treeth had been forced to turn aside, or, if determined to proceed, face the carnivores on the ground, a situation that had led to the development of clubs, bows, and, after a sufficient amount of time had passed, firearms.

Those days were gone, of course, the gaps having been bridged by pulley-mounted T-handles on monofilament line. As if to emphasize that fact, an elder passed Torx traveling in the opposite direction. Her motor-driven pulley whirred loudly as it pulled her upward. Torx signed his respect and marveled at her dignity. To be dragged through the trees like a side of meat! So much for the benefits of old age.

The glen was huge, more than five hundred feet across, and ringed with trees. Most were old, dating to prehistorical times, but some were little more than hand-planted saplings, the giants of the future. Torx dropped through layer after layer of Treeth, all eating, playing, and gossiping, fingers flying as they signed back and forth.

The cradle tree, so called because of the way its branches had cradled his race, was thousands of years old, and so dominated the center of the clearing that nothing could grow in its shadow. It was said that the great Folar, companion to King Halory, had held court in the lower branches of the tree, arguing for the alliance that still bound the races together, and swilling endless tankards of dra.

Just being there made Torx feel good, and it wasn't long before he encountered beings that he knew. The first hour passed pleasantly enough, as he flirted with an administrator from the Department of Rivers, Lakes, and Dams, but the real payoff came as the result of chance.

Lorno, a rather tiresome Treeth who hailed from the northern swamps, and actually bragged of the fact, was busy complaining about his boss, a mid-level functionary in the Department of Defense, when he dropped what amounted to a juicy nugget. It seemed that a vessel named the Will of God had entered their system and requested emergency inbound clearance. A human called Tord... or was it Ford? ... insisted that jackers were after them. Never mind the fact that the second vessel denied the charge and seemed peaceful enough. Could his audience imagine anything so absurd?

Torx could, and, having made some hurried excuses, raced to tell Rollo. Yes, the fact that Will of God had apparently been targeted by a pirate could be unrelated to their case, but Torx, like most law enforcement beings, had little faith in coincidence. No, there were other possibilities, all of them bad. The Treeth cursed his friend's unwillingness to wear a vibcom, picked his way up through the maze of crisscrossed branches, and felt the sun hit his face. He missed the initial jump, hoped no one had seen him, and grabbed a branch. The rest was easy.

Sa-Lo left the cabin, followed by Ka-Di. A quick glance confirmed that the corridor was empty. The Traa strolled toward the ship's stern. If discovered, they'd pretend to be lost. As with most vessels of her size, the Willie carried a number of auxiliary craft, including two shuttles that doubled as lifeboats, a pair of maintenance sleds, and four ten-person life pods, none of which had a propulsion system of its own. Which was why Ka-Di had chosen the shuttles as their escape vehicles of choice, and more specifically the starboard unit, since it was newer than its counterpart, and theoretically more reliable. He had checked the controls and discovered that they were well within his training parameters. Though long, and somewhat boring, the journey would be safe.

A hatch opened, a human emerged, and Sa-Lo felt a sudden stab of apprehension. They were a long way from the shuttle bays and clearly off limits. Light glinted off the man's face. His voice was gruff. "Sorry, but this section of the ship is restricted to crew. The lounge is this way."

Ka-Di nodded as if in agreement, allowed the human to pass, and slapped him on the back. The injector squirted liquid sedative through the engineer's clothes and the pores of his skin. A human would have folded, but O'Tool was a cyborg. He swayed and tried to communicate. "O'Tool to bridge ... watch out for..."

Desperate now, and on the verge of a more permanent solution, Ka-Di tore the headset off. The engineer frowned, clawed at his back, and fell over backwards.

The Traa ran. Down the corridor, past the heat exchangers, and through an altar. A trio of plastic goddesses fell and rolled away. Voices yelled, and feet started to pound. The corridor curved away from the heavily shielded drives, along the ship's hull, and past the emergency control room.

Ka-Di started to lag. His breath came in gasps. Sa-Lo put an arm around his companion's waist, lifted him off the deck, and ran for the shuttle. It loomed ahead, its lock eternally open, ready for launch. Sa-Lo pushed Ka-Di through the hatch, hit the "launch" button, and pulled a hand weapon. He didn't want to shoot anyone, but was determined to escape. The hatch whirred, a computer droned instructions at them, and a face appeared. It was still there, shouting orders, when the hatch closed.

The Willie sealed herself against hard vacuum, a klaxon sounded, and the shuttle pushed itself off. Artificial gravity disappeared as the shuttle accelerated away from the larger and presumably dangerous freighter. The Traa lost contact with the deck. They flailed about, found handholds, and hoped for the best.

Captain Jord, who had been on the bridge during the entire episode, brought his fist down on the console with such force that a hand comp jumped and fell. "I want information... and I want it now!"

"I found Voss in her cabin, sir," a voice reported. "She's unconscious."

"O'Tool's coming around," another voice chimed in. "They hit him with a slap shot."

"It was the Traa," a third crew person volunteered. "I saw them board the shuttle."

"Shall I give chase?" Russo inquired eagerly. "We could nail them in fifteen minutes or so."

Jord rubbed his chin and scanned the readouts that hung in midair. The idea was tempting, damned tempting, but he had other things to think about as well. "The pirates? How are they doing?"

"Gaining ... but slowly."

"Will we beat them into the atmosphere?"

"Yes, assuming both speeds remain constant." 

Jord sighed. "Then let the pirates have them. There's no profit in a fight, especially if we lose. Keep me informed."

Having thrown their weight around, and successfully exaggerated their authority, Rollo and Torx gained entrance to the Defense Command's control grotto, an underground lake accessed by elevator. It was there, beneath the latticework of catwalks used by the Treeth staff, and hip-deep in the thermally warmed water, that Rollo, with Torx standing on his back, watched the drama unfold. Floating video screens, each shaped like a cube, told the story.

First, for reasons that weren't clear, a shuttle parted company with ship number one. That raised the possibility that the second, and allegedly hostile, vessel would snap it up, but no, they seemed uninterested. A rather boring period ensued during which the first ship, broadcasting all manner of emergency signals, headed for the atmosphere, while the second vessel, still protesting its innocence, followed.

Still, it wasn't too long before the Will of God entered the atmosphere and the situation became crystal clear. The second vessel, ominously silent at this juncture, ignored all orders from orbital control and followed the freighter down. Threats, which the locals were powerless to carry out, proved equally ineffective. The co-marshals, well aware that the woman who could be their most important witness was very much at risk, held their collective breath.

"They're heading for the surface," Cowles said disapprovingly.

"I have eyes," Sanko replied irritably, drumming his fingers on the console that adjoined his command chair. "Tell me something useful." Sanko was worried that the shuttle, long gone by now, carried the very people Orr wanted him to kill. Still, given the choice between chasing the shuttle, which might turn out to be a high-priced decoy, and pursuing the ship, which was worth a great deal of money, the answer seemed obvious. The shuttle thing was annoying, though—and the jacker wished he could have snatched it up.

Cowles, who had grown increasingly weary of Sanko's arrogance, considered the energy weapon taped below the panel in front of him. He could remove the device, turn, and shoot Sanko through the head. But what of the crew? Would they back his play? Only if it was in their interest to do so. He wished they had the imagination to see how dangerous the situation was. Especially if Sanko followed the merchant ship down into the atmosphere. Neither vessel had been designed for combat under those conditions. And what of the locals? Would they stay neutral? Or side with the Will of Goal There was no sign of military ships in the vicinity—but there very well might be surface-to-air missiles. The weapon beckoned, and the tension grew.

That part of the planet's surface not obscured by cloud cover was greenish blue. Sanko struggled with the decision. Should he follow the Will of God down? Or wait till she attempted to lift? The second was the more conservative choice, and therefore the safest. But what if a third ship arrived? The balance of power could shift in his opponent's favor and force him to run. Where to? Orr would find him, that was certain, and notify the Hidalgo Crime Syndicate. They'd do the rest. No, messy though it might be, it was best to take the ship now, or, failing that, destroy her in the atmosphere. The jacker leaned back, took some eye drops, and addressed the crew. "Secure the ship for battle. Arm all weapons systems. Take her down."

Natalie was strapped into the backup control slot. She'd been conscious for a couple of hours now, but had a headache, and wished the already subdued lighting was even dimmer. O'Tool, similarly recovered from the slap shot, reclined next to her. The encounter with the Traa had left Natalie angry and shaken.

Still, the crew interpreted the run-in as proof of her innocence, and that, plus the attack on O'Tool, had restored her credibility. So much so that Natalie had been asked to assume her previous duties, including the normally innocuous position of weapons officer, and the title that went with it. The pirates had followed the Willie down into the planet's atmosphere, and Jord was understandably worried. "Bridge to weapons control... how's it look, Guns?"

Natalie saw O'Tool out of the corner of her eye. Like the rest of the crew, he wore space armor in case they were holed. She couldn't tell where his body began and the pressure suit ended. He was watching and waiting to see if she'd make a mistake. Well, screw him. And the horse he rode in on. She scanned the board. The Willie mounted four missile launchers and an equal number of energy cannon. Light armament for a warship, but respectable for a merchant vessel. "All systems green, sir... standing by."

"Good," Jord replied, eyeing the information before him. "Okay, everybody, here's the plan. The pirate packs more throw weight than we do, that's a given, but isn't free to use it. Not without blowing the ship to dust. That being the case, I plan to turn and let 'em have it. Guns, you're the expert, what do you think?"

Natalie mustered some saliva and pushed it around her mouth. Having never fired a shot in anger, she felt anything but expert. The discussion of strategy would have been unthinkable on a cruiser but was typical of merchant vessels. The officer tried to sound confident. "Good strategy, sir. I suggest a diversion. Something to draw their missiles and give us a crack at them."

Jord had invited Natalie's input but hadn't expected to receive any. Damn the woman anyway! Time was passing, and she was about to waste some of it. "Yes? Go ahead."

The Will of God shuddered as she passed through a high-altitude jet stream. Natalie felt the seconds ticking away. The words poured out and nearly ran together. "Let's rig the life pods to run hot. .. and eject them as we turn. We wait, they fire, and blam! We take 'em." Every spacer knew it took at least five seconds to ready and fire a flight of ship-to-ship missiles, so Jord had no difficulty appreciating the value of Natalie's suggestion. He was surprised and struggled not to show it. "Excellent! We'll fire the cannon too. O'Tool, you heard number three. Rig the pods."

The cyborg winced at the extravagant use of valuable equipment and reached for one of his many keyboards. It swung into place and rippled with light. "Yes, sir. I need ten minutes."

"You have five," Jord said, watching the distance between the two ships narrow. "Make them count."

Cowles was afraid. He knew that for sure. What he didn't know was which option scared him the most: killing Sanko and dealing with the consequences of his treachery, or not killing Sanko and dealing with the consequences of that.

It should be a no-brainer. Wait in orbit, pot the Will of God as she lifted, and reel her in. Just like fishing with dear old good-for-nothing Dad. Except that Sanko chose to chase the merchant vessel and place his own ship at risk.

Cowles touched the weapon with his knee and turned so that Sanko appeared in his peripheral vision. It seemed as if the jacker was staring at him, eyes open wide, lips straight and narrow. Could the captain see his first officer thoughts? Ice water leached into Cowles's veins, trickled through his body, and froze his extremities.

Jord watched real honest-to-god video of the planet's surface as the freighter dropped through thick clouds and leveled out above an endless maze of lakes, ponds, pools, rivers, streams, and channels. It was a place of wandering waters indeed, and not where he hoped to end his life. His gods ruled Earth and extended their influence to New Delhi after that. Did the deities live everywhere? Or were they linked to the soil from which they had sprung? And how far did their influence extend? Far enough to find his soul? Most said yes. Were they correct? He pushed the question away. The ship slowed, reached equilibrium, and hovered in place. The combat clock continued to run. He waited for a row of zeros to appear and uttered a prayer. Echoes were heard in every part of the ship.

Sanko followed his quarry down through the clouds, grinned wolfishly, and watched the distance narrow. There were no signs of opposition. This was going to be easier than he'd thought. They'd catch up, force her down, and waste the crew. Orr would be pleased, he'd pocket half a mil, and the syndicate could kiss his ass. All he needed was a quiet planet, not too isolated, but away from ... Cowles interrupted. "The merchant ship has slowed, sir."

Sanko nodded agreeably. "She's probably going to surrender. But keep an eye on her."

Cowles acknowledged the order, saw the Will of God turn, and knew Sanko was wrong.

In her capacity as gunnery officer, Natalie had temporary command of the ship. She moved the joystick to the right, swore at the cumbersome way that the vessel responded, and waited for the moment when she'd be bow-on to her pursuer. It seemed to take forever. Each passing moment exposed more and more of the Willie's hull, until midpoint was passed, and their profile grew steadily smaller.

Sanko, confident that his vessel could take anything the freighter had to dish out, and eager to get the whole thing over with, spent the intervening time shedding all the speed he could. The strategy worked too, except that by the time the ships made visual contact the Willie was three-quarters of the way through her turn, and presented a much smaller target. However, due to the fact that Sanko wanted to capture the trader, not destroy her, the question was more academic than practical.

Natalie, her eyes locked on the screen, watched the other ship approach, willed the bow to come around, and breathed a sigh of relief when it did. She looked at O'Tool, received his nod, and launched the life pods. Three seconds later their specially rigged life-support systems went critical and their heat signatures started to bloom.

The weapons tech could still feel the pain in his testicles, not to mention his forehead. There was nothing wrong with his eyesight or reaction time, however. He saw pods bloom, blew chaff, and warned the bridge. "I have missile launch ... repeat, missile launch ... four and tracking."

Sanko had received the news direct from the ship's onboard computer. His eyebrows shot toward his carefully groomed hair. The sheep had teeth. "Destroy incoming missiles."

Lights glowed on the technician's board. He played them like a piano, felt the ship shudder, and watched telemetry. All systems green ... missiles running true.

Energy cannon began to fire. The tech watched their heat sinks with one eye and the monitors with the other. Then the impossible happened. Never mind the fact that no merchant ship he'd ever heard of carried more than four launchers, and never mind the fact that it took a minimum of five seconds to reload, the Will of God fired a second salvo. Since she was a helluva lot closer this time, her ordnance struck before he could warn anyone.

The ship staggered under the force of three separate explosions; a cacophony of shouts, alarms, and klaxons was heard; and the bow started to drop. Smoke drifted, and voices babbled in Sanko's ears. He hit the override. "Get the bow up, damn it! Bring her around!"

The second officer did her best, but she wasn't half as good as the cyborg, and the response was painfully slow. Sanko began to scream at her, and Cowles realized what scared him most. His energy weapon bored a hole through Sanko's brain. His eyes were wide open when he died.

Rollo and Torx, along with most of the planet's senior defense staff, watched the pirate ship crash via airborne remotes, and turned to each other in amazement. Nothing like this had ever happened before. Not on their planet, anyway. Ground forces, medical teams, and an ecological contamination unit were dispatched to the crash site. Rollo and Torx assumed overall command. The Dromo was ebullient as he churned toward the elevator. "Time to get a move on, old friend. Our guests have arrived, and it would be rude to keep them waiting."