A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows by Poul Anderson. Chapter 17, 18, 19, 20

asked anxiously. “You’ve gone pale.”

“No, nothing,” he said. “I’m recovering fast, thanks to your kindness.”

“You should rest. I’ve noticed you hour after hour poring over that

report–” She saw his expression and stopped her speech.

In a second he eased his lips, undamped his fists, and raised memory of

what he had come from today up against that other memory. “I’d no

choice,” he said. To her husband: “Bodin, I’m ready to work again. With

you. You see, I’ve found your target.”

The Gospodar peered around. “What? Wait,” he cautioned.

“True, we can’t discuss it here,” Flandry agreed. “Especially, I

suppose, on holy ground … though she might not have minded.”

She’d never have been vindictive. But she’d have understood how much

this matters to her whole world: that in those broken mutterings of my

son’s I found what I thought I might find, the coordinates of Chereion,

Aycharaych’s planet.

XIX

The raiders from Dennitza met the guardians of the red sun, and

lightning awoke.

Within the command bridge of the Vatre Zvezda, Bodin Miyatovich stared

at a display tank. Color-coded motes moved around a stellar globe to

show where each vessel of his fleet was–and, as well as scouts and

instruments could learn, each of the enemy’s–and what it did and when

it died. But their firefly dance, of some use to a lifelong

professional, bewildered an unskilled eye; and it was merely a sideshow

put on by computers whose real language was numbers. He swore and looked

away in search of reality.

The nearest surrounded him in metal, meters, intricate consoles,

flashing signal bulbs, dark-uniformed men who stood to their duties, sat

as if wired in place, walked back and forth on rubbery-shod feet.

Beneath a hum of engines, ventilators, a thousand systems throughout the

great hull, their curt exchanges chopped. To stimulate them, it was cool

here, with a thunderstorm tang of ozone.

The Gospodar’s gaze traveled on, among the view-screens which studded

bulkheads, overhead, deck–again, scarcely more than a means for keeping

crew who did not have their ship’s esoteric senses from feeling trapped.

Glory brimmed the dark, stars in glittering flocks and Milky Way shoals,

faerie-remote glimmer of nebulae and a few sister galaxies. Here in the

outer reaches of its system, the target sun was barely the brightest, a

coal-glow under Bellatrix. At chance moments a spark would flare and

vanish, a nuclear burst close enough to see. But most were too distant;

and never another vessel showed, companion or foe. Such was the scale of

the battle.

And yet it was not large as space combats went. Springing from

hyperdrive to normal state, the Dennitzan force–strong, but hardly an

armada–encountered Merseian craft which sought to bar it from

accelerating inward. As more and more of the latter drew nigh and

matched courses with invaders, action spread across multimillions of

kilometers. Hours passed before two or three fighters came so near, at

such low relative speeds, that they could hope for a kill; and often

their encounter was the briefest spasm, followed by hours more of

maneuver. Those gave time to make repairs, care for the wounded, pray

for the dead.

“They’ve certainly got protection,” Miyatovich growled. “Who’d have

expected this much?”

Scouts had not been able to warn him. The stroke depended altogether on

swiftness. Merseian observers in the neighborhood of Zoria had surely

detected the fleet’s setting out. Some would have gone to tell their

masters, others would have dogged the force, trying to learn where it

was bound. (A few of those had been spotted and destroyed, but not

likely all.) No matter how carefully plotted its course, and no matter

that its destination was a thinly trafficked part of space, during the

three-week journey its hyperwake must have been picked up by several

travelers who passed within range. So many strange hulls together,

driving so hard through Merseian domains, was cause to bring in the

Navy.

If Miyatovich was to do anything to Chereion, he must get there, finish

his work, and be gone before reinforcements could arrive. Scouts of his,

prowling far in advance near a sun whose location seemed to be the

Roidhunate’s most tightly gripped secret, would have carried too big a

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *