The silent war by Ben Bova. Part four

“It would appear so.”

Pancho huffed. “All right. Stay on this. I want him found, and right away, too.”

“We’ll do our best, Ms. Lane.”

She cut the connection and Karstein’s image winked out. Dumb blond, Pancho groused to herself.

“Privateers?” Jake Wanamaker asked, his rasping voice croaking out the word. “You mean, like pirates?”

Pancho had invited him to a breakfast meeting in her suite. They sat in the tight little alcove off the kitchen, but the holowalls made it seem as if they were outdoors, beneath a graceful elm tree, with softly rolling grassy hills in the distance and the morning sun brightening a clear sky. She could hear birds chirping happily and almost felt a cool breeze ruffling their table linen.

Pancho took a sip of grapefruit juice, then replied, “Yep. Yo-ho-ho and all that stuff. Cut off Humphries’s ships as they’re bringing their payloads here to the Moon. Or to Earth.”

Wanamaker took a considerable bite out of the sticky bun he was holding in one big hand, chewed thoughtfully for a few moments, then swallowed. “They’ve beaten the crap out of us in the Belt, sure enough. It’ll be some time before we can build up enough forces to challenge them again.”

“But a few ships operating closer to home, outside the Belt…” Pancho let the suggestion hang in the air between them.

Wanamaker muttered, “Cut HSS’s pipeline to the market. Hit Humphries in the pocketbook.”

“That’s where it’d hurt him the most.”

After washing down his cake with a gulp of black coffee, Wanamaker said, “Set up a blockade.”

“Right.”

Absently wiping his sticky fingers with his napkin, Wanamaker broke into a wicked grin. “We wouldn’t even need crewed ships for that. Just automate some small birds and park them in wide orbits around the Earth/Moon system.”

“You can do that?”

He nodded. “They’d be close enough to be remotely operated from here at Selene. It’d be cheaper than using crewed ships.”

Pancho had only one further question. “How soon can we get this going?”

Wanamaker pushed his chair back from the table and got to his feet. “Real soon,” he said. “Very damned real soon.”

Pancho watched him hurry away, thinking, So I won’t need Lars after all. Doesn’t matter where he’s hiding. I won’t need him now.

Later that morning, with some reluctance, Pancho slipped on the soft-suit and sealed the opening that ran the length of the torso’s front. Doug Stavenger was already in his suit. To Pancho he looked as if he’d been packed into a plastic-wrap food container, except for the fishbowl helmet he held cradled in his arms.

“This thing really works?” she asked, picking up her helmet from the shelf in the locker.

Stavenger nodded, smiling at her. “It’s been tested for months now, Pancho. I’ve worn it outside myself several times. You’re going to love it.”

She felt totally unconvinced. Never fly in a new airplane, she remembered from her first days as a pilot. Never eat in a new restaurant on its opening day.

Plucking at the transparent nanomachined fabric with gloved fingers, she said, “Kinda flimsy.”

“But it works like a charm.”

“That mean you gotta say prayers over it?”

Stavenger laughed. “Come on, Pancho. Once we’re outside you’ll wonder how you were ever able to stand those clunky cermet suits.”

“Uh-huh.” She could see the enthusiasm in his eyes, his smile, his whole demeanor. He’s like a kid with a new toy, she thought.

But he was right. It took roughly ten minutes to walk from the airlock at Selene to Factory Number Eleven, out on the floor of the giant crater Alphonsus. Before even five minutes were up, Pancho had fallen in love with the softsuit.

“It’s terrific,” she said to Stavenger, shuffling along beside her, his boots kicking up gentle clouds of dust. “It’s like being without a suit, almost.”

“I told you, didn’t I?”

Pancho held both hands before her and flexed her fingers. “Hot spit! Even the gloves are easy to work. This is like magic!”

“Not magic. Just nanotechnology.”

“And the radiation protection?”

“About the same as a hard-shell suit,” Stavenger said. “We could add electromagnetic shielding, but that would probably attract a lot of dust from the ground.”

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

Leave a Reply 0

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