Authors: A New Order of Things
He changed feeds on another display. The bridge crew need not continuously observe seven weary and bedraggled clan prisoners, stripped of their combat armor, staring into space. Almost every sensor in the herd area had died at the start of the uprising. Having located—how long ago?—so many other sensors, they almost certainly knew about the surveillance camera in that small storeroom. The bit of psychological warfare struck him as a human contribution. Regardless, he was glad to know his troops were safe and unmolested.
Most of the armed Hunters, led by Lothwer, continued to besiege the main body of human invaders. Some of the blockading forces occupied corridor intersections major enough to have surveillance cameras. The few faces discernable through helmet visors were exhausted. Figures slumped wearily against walls and each other. Armor and walls were scorched and dented.
Mashkith linked privately with Lothwer. “Defeat soon of main human group?”
“At your command, but not without significant clan casualties.” The netted voice was emotionless, but the caveat was unlike his lieutenant. In translation, an immediate victory would be very costly.
If the present situation was untenable, what were their options? The clan
must
retain control of key parts of the ship, including the bridge, engine room, and launch bay—and the fully fueled and armed warships there. They needed also to hold the armory, ample food and water stores, and the family dormitories. Defending more territory than that would only increase casualties. “Consolidation appropriate?” Mashkith asked.
“Possible,” begrudged Lothwer. “Risk of enemy encouragement.”
Heads swiveled on the bridge at Mashkith’s frustrated snarl. How could humans and herd become any more emboldened? He linked Rashk Keffah and Firh Glithwah into the consultation. “Goal: prudent minimization of clan casualties. Proposal: concentration of resources at critical locations.” He ran through his list of must-control regions.
“Also the farm zone,” Keffah suggested. The recommendation must have been difficult to make, reminding all of the breakout that had occurred on her watch. Not that any of them had anticipated the sudden, aggressive turn in the herd’s behavior….
“For now, not required,” Mashkith decided. Leaving those decks uncontested would facilitate repairs that benefited all three species. “Herd cleanup of its own mess.”
“Then what?” challenged Lothwer. “Enemy domination of amidships. Stalemate?”
“No,” Mashkith corrected. “Unaffected: ship’s acceleration and departure from Sol system. Enemy surrender inevitable once takeover of
Victorious
impossible. Our tasks: readiness for their certain desperate attacks. Conservation and positioning of our resources preparatory to their defeat.”
He redirected the discussion back to defensible zones. They adjusted the list of must-hold areas, adding a few crucial comm and computing nodes and some strategically placed passageways. More difficult was planning disengagement from the forward human troops and finding a safe way to funnel them aft. “Agreement?”
“Agreement, Foremost.” “At your command.” And from Lothwer, a reluctant, “Acknowledgement.”
“All troops below deck forty, to defense of engine room if possible,” netcast Mashkith. “Firh Glithwah in command in that zone. Main battle force, execution of disengagement under Lothwer’s directions. All others below deck twenty, to forward rally points, now.”
Rotten-egg and just-lit-match smells permeated the Centaur zone, even decks away from the blast zones. The breaches were sealed, and filters had scrubbed out much of the sulfur compounds—but anyone foolish or curious enough to forgo a breathing mask or pressure suit coughed in helpless, racking spasms. The wounded and those who treated them stayed inside room-sized, Centaur-provided oxygen tents.
Art was among those walking the aisles of the improvised infirmary, attempting to project an optimism he did not feel. A smile here, a hand squeezed or shoulder patted there—it was all he could offer. The UPIA medic was good, with an implant full of medical expertise, but too many of the wounds were beyond treatment with her limited supplies. At least the Centaurs had medical gear.
Eva was in a makeshift bed near the back, sedated. Skin-growth-stimulating nano-patches encased a badly burnt arm and shoulder. “I thought I’d never see you again,” Art said. Just expressing the thought was painful. He bent over, brushed aside uneven bangs, and kissed her forehead.
Then he rushed off to where those who knew what they were doing had congregated. Chung observed silently, both legs in casts. He had shrunken into himself, and seemed to have aged decades in the days since Art had last seen him. Carlos was comparing notes with marine officers, special-ops forces, and a few Centaurs. “What’s happening?” Art whispered to Helmut.
“The succinct version is: We stopped losing. It’s a start.”
Swee, with his usual quiet efficiency, had already interfaced a standard display to the human tactical network. Gwu scanned the holo periodically, although no serious changes in status had occurred in more than a ship’s watch. Together, the humans and crew-kindred occupied the ship’s middle decks. The K’vithians ruled the bow and stern. Both sides distrusted the central core and its elevators—with doors on each level, the elevator shafts were difficult to secure. Anything military confused Gwu, her kind having outgrown the need for such an institution many generations ago, but the humans’ ongoing status review made one fact plain. Altering the present state of affairs would be costly in lives for both sides.
“Which leaves us where?” she finally asked.
The senior UP soldier seemed not to appreciate the interruption. Major Dmitri Kudrin was a burly fellow with a weak chin, blue eyes, prominent nose, and black, brush-cut hair. Beyond removing his helmet, he had remained in battle armor.
“Which leaves us, ma’am, on our way to Barnard’s Star.”
Her tentacles yearned to knot in frustration. She resisted the urge. “If the crew-kindred understood the plan, we might be able to help.”
The human called Carlos Montoya cleared his throat. The relationship between Montoya, Kudrin, and—were there one or two ambassadors?—had her entirely confused. “Plan A was to capture this ship by getting our soldiers aboard. Plan B, proceeding in parallel, exploited Plan A’s combat as a diversion. Once the main attack sufficiently distracted the enemy, a second team was to surprise and overpower the engine-room staff. With the engine room under our control, we hoped to bypass bridge controls and return this ship to Sol system. Plan C is to return to Sol system, humans and Centaurs alike, in captured warships and lifeboats.” Carlos pointed in the holo at the main landing bay, deep within the K’vithian forward region of domination. “Casualties will be extreme if we must fight that far forward—if it can be done at all. Worse, the bad guys could easily thwart us by launching the ships themselves. Are the lifeboats also in this forward bay?”
“No, the original lifeboats are deployed across
Harmony
. Starting from the bow, here, here, and here.” Gwu extended several limbs into the holo as she spoke. Someone, she could not tell whom, evoked a tiny green ship icon wherever she pointed. Many lifeboat bays were within the human area of control, most of the rest no more than a few decks away. “And finally, here.
“There is a problem, however. The Foremost commanded that the lifeboats’ fuel be removed. That was a one-time task, and simpler than constantly guarding the lifeboats.”
Kudrin tipped his head. Gwu had no idea if the gesture meant anything. “Ka, can your people check them out? Maybe Mashkith lied.”
We are unwarlike, not stupid. “The Foremost has been known to deceive, but not in this case. Members of the crew-kindred have already confirmed the absence of onboard fuel. They confirmed also that key components were removed from the lifeboats’ long-range radios.”
“That’s unfortunate,” Carlos said. “On to Plan D. Plan D is to cut off the ship’s engines, by wrecking them if necessary. The United Planets has been gathering a fleet. It should be large enough by now to take on Mashkith’s warships. The fleet will launch once we radio that we’re ready for rescue, and UP observatories confirm the drive has been killed.”
Behind the war council Swee settled to the deck, surrendering to the urge to knot tentacles. Gwu envied him. “I do not understand. If military superiority is possible, why was this not the first plan?”
“It was too dangerous.” This time Arthur Walsh, his very pale hair unmistakable, took the question. “
Harmony
is moving fast enough and leaving at such an incline to the ecliptic plane our ships can’t carry enough fuel to catch up and make it back. They must refuel from supplies already aboard this ship. If the battle went badly, or”—he glanced at his feet—”
Harmony
were destroyed, there would be no way home. Plan D relies upon the K’vithians surrendering an intact ship.”
Put that way, Plan D seemed desperate indeed. “With Plan D, you try to raid and wreck an area you were unable to capture.” More humans studied their feet. “Antimatter containment is in the engine room, including the antimatter removed from the lifeboats. We carry far more antimatter than destroyed Himalia. An attack into the engine room is madness.”
As was the unfolding future: Two armed groups, apparently closely matched, competing for all the years between here and K’vith over control of oxygen and food and shipboard energy. Into the lengthening silence, Gwu asked, “Is there a Plan E?” No one answered her. “I may have one. T’bck Ra, are you there?”
“T’bck Fwa,” Kudrin presumed to correct her.
“No, T’bck Ra. Unity artificial intelligences share the ‘family’ name T’bck. T’bck Ra is the shipboard AI.”
An outpouring of human questions almost drowned out the reply, spoken by an unseen someone whose voice was reminiscent of, but deeper than, T’bck Fwa’s translations. “I am here, ka.”
“Standby.” Eva remained in the hospital. What Gwu had shared with Eva about the takeover and the crew-kindred’s recent sabotage must not have been disseminated. Gwu summarized quickly. “Until your arrival, opportunities to communication with the newly reawakened T’bck Ra have been risky and fleeting. T’bck Ra, have you been monitoring?”
“Yes, ka.”
“Then a proposed Plan E: Can you shut off the engines?”
“No. The K’vithians have fully isolated that subsystem.”
As Gwu’s last hope died, to feel merely old and tired and insane would have been welcome.
Deck sixty-seven was Eva’s favorite. The smell of sulfur was gone here. Level sixty-six was more a narrow circular balcony than a full deck, allowing “her” deck’s spiky trees to stretch a good eight meters into the air. A rich scent of yeast and freshly turned soil permeated the air. Blue-green leaves fluttered and rustled in an artificial breeze. Graceful constructs that were both fountains and sprinklers dotted the setting, burbling and bubbling and spraying water in patterns she had yet to parse. Gauzy, many-winged creatures swooped and soared in elaborately evolving 3-D formations. With soft vibratos of what she took to be immersion in the moment, a few Centaurs circled the park swinging branch to branch. Keizo would have been fascinated, she thought, but he is far safer where Art last saw him: Callisto.
Immersed herself in the moment, Eva stubbed a boot tip on a gnarled root. Art caught her good arm to spare her a nasty fall, but even the light tug on her coverall made the healing shoulder twinge. “I should watch where I’m going.”
“No adventure in that.” He kicked a loose rock.
She linked her good arm through his. Touching felt good. Thinking about the future did not. “You’re blaming yourself again.”
“I’m relieved to know you’re okay. What’s eating me alive is that more people than ever are trapped here.” They caught up to his rock, which he punted again. “The more I figure out, the worse I make things.”
Eva halted, forcing him to stop. “No, what’s eating you alive is that despite everything, you would not be anywhere else.” Or with anyone else? Maybe only she was thinking that. Somehow, this did not seem the time to consider such things.
“Look at them move in those trees.”
Not faulting him for the change to an impersonal subject, she resumed walking. “I remember you fixating on holes in the corridors. Now most decks in our part of the ship have ceiling-mounted racks and hooks, although those can’t be half the fun of swinging through the trees.”
“Around and around and around she goes,” Art said. “Where she stops, nobody knows.”
Huh? “She, the ship? She, the ka?”
“She, the roulette wheel of life. That said, I think I’ll leave you here for a while. I want to have a chat with the ka. Are you up to watching where you place your feet?”
Despite prodding he would say no more, but Eva could see yet other metaphorical wheels turning behind his eyes. She had encountered that look often enough to anticipate yet more adventure.
“Somehow,” Mashkith said, his avatar as stoic as ever, “I am not surprised to discover you joined us aboard
Victorious
.”
Art guessed that Mashkith in person, in claw or shooting range, would exhibit more emotion. Fortunately, an in-person meeting was unnecessary. After a few rounds of jamming each other’s ship-spanning wireless networks, both sides had quietly decided to stand down. It was better that way. The UPIA ‘bots all over the ship watched the Snakes, and he assumed similar sensors controlled by the Snakes watched
them
. Either side, or both, could encrypt for privacy when they wished, but any overt aggression—went the common wisdom—was forestalled by the knowledge the other side would see the preparations. Non-jamming, like the ship-wide return of ambient lighting, was part of a cautious evolution toward coexistence. “I’ve come to think of it as
Harmony
.”