Ship Who Searched (34 page)

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Authors: Mercedes Lackey,Anne McCaffrey

Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Space Opera, #Adventure, #Fiction

BOOK: Ship Who Searched
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Before she had a chance to make up her mind, he was at the airlock, suited up and tethered, and waiting for her to close the inner lock for him.

She berated herself for wool-gathering and cycled the lock, keeping an anxious eye on him while she scanned the rest of the area for unexpected—and probably unwelcome—visitors.

It would be just our luck for the looters to show up right about now.

He jetted over to the access-hatch of the satellite and popped it without difficulty.

Wait a moment—shouldn’t he have had to unlock it?

“Tia, the access hatch was jimmied,” he said, his breath rasping in the suit-mike as he worked, heaving the massive door over and locking it down. “You were right, green all the way. The satellite’s been sabotaged. Pretty crude work; they just disconnected the solar-cells from the instrument pack. It’ll still make orbital corrections, but that’s all. Don’t know why they didn’t just knock it out of the sky, unless they figured Survey has some kind of telltale on it, and they’d show up if it went down.”

“What should we do?” she asked, uncertainly. “I know you can repair it, but should you? We need some of the information it can give us, but if you repair it, wouldn’t they figure that Survey had been through? Or would they just not notice?”

“I don’t want to reconnect the warn-off until we’re ready to leave, or they’ll definitely know someone’s been eating their porridge,” he replied slowly, as he floated half-in, half-out of the hatch. “If the satellite’s telling them to take a hike as soon as they enter orbit, there won’t be much doubt that someone from the authorities has been here. But you’re right, and I not only want to know if someone shows up in orbit while we’re down on the ground, I want the near-space scans it took before they shut it down, and I want it to keep scanning and recording. The question is, am I smart enough to make it do all that?”

“I want the planetary records,” she told him. “With luck, the ruins may show up on the scans. We might even see signs of activity where the looters have been digging. As for, are you smart enough—if you can get the solar arrays reconnected, I can reprogram every function it has. I’m CS, remember? We do work for Survey sometimes, so I have the access codes for Survey satellites. Trust me, they’re going to work; Survey never seems to think someone might actually want to sabotage one of their satellites, so they never change the codes.”

“Good point.” He writhed for a moment, upside-down, the huge blue-white globe behind him making an impressive backdrop. “Okay, give me a minute or two to splice some cable.” Silence for a moment, except for grunts and fast breathing. “Good; it wasn’t as awful as I thought. There. Solar array plugged back in. Ah, I have the link to the memory established. And—yes, everything is powering up, or at least that’s what it looks like in here.”

She triggered memory-dump, and everything came over in compressed mode, loud and clear. All the near-space scans and all the geophysical records that had been made before the satellite was disabled. Surface-scans in all weathers, made on many passes across the face of the planet.

But then—nothing. Whoever had disabled the satellite had known what he was doing—the memory that should have contained records of visitors was empty. She tried a number of ways of accessing it, only to conclude that the data storage device had been completely reformatted, nonsense had been written over all the memory, and it had been reformatted again. Not even an expert would have been able to get anything out of it now.

“Can you hook in the proximity-alert with our com-system?” she asked.

“I think so.” He braced himself against the hatch and shoved himself a little farther inside. “Yes, it’s all modular. I can leave just that up and powered, and if they aren’t listening on this band, they won’t know that there’s been anyone up here diddling with it.”

A few moments more, and she caught a live signal on one of the high-range insystem comlinks, showing a nearby presence in the same orbit as the satellite. She felt her heart jump and started to panic—

—then she scolded herself for being so jumpy. It was the satellite, registering
her
presence, of course.

Alex closed the hatch and wedged it shut as it had been before, reeling himself back in on the tether. A moment later, her lock cycled, and he came back into the main cabin, pulling off his helmet and peeling off his suit.

Tia spent some time reprogramming the satellite, killing the warn-off broadcast, turning all the near-space scanners on and recording. Then she turned her attention to the recordings it had already made.

“So, what have we got?” he asked, wriggling to get the suit down over his hips. “Had any luck?”

“There’s quite a few of those ruins,” she said carefully, noting with a bit of jealousy that the survey satellite array was actually capable of producing sharper and more detailed images than her own. Then again, what it produced was rather limited.

“Well, that’s actually kind of promising.” He slid out of the suit and into the chair, leaving the pressure-suit in a crumpled heap on the floor. She waited a moment until he was engrossed in the screen, then discreetly sent a servo to pick it and the abandoned helmet up.

“I’d say here or here,” he said at last, pointing out two of the ruins in or near one of the mountain ranges. “That would give us the rain-snow pattern the first victim raved about. Look, even in the same day you’d get snow in the morning, rain in the afternoon, and snow after dark during some seasons.”

She highlighted those—but spotted three more possibilities, all three in areas where the tilt would have had the same effect on the climate. She marked them as well, and was rewarded by his nod of agreement.

“All right. This
has
to be the planet. There’s no reason for anyone to have disabled the satellite otherwise. Even if Survey or the Institute were sending someone here for a more detailed look, they’d simply have changed the warn-off message; they wouldn’t have taken the satellite off-line.” He took a deep breath and some of the tension went out of his shoulders. “Now it’s just going to be finding the right place.”

This was work the computers could do while Tia slept, comparing their marked areas and looking for changes that were not due to the seasons or the presence or absence of snow. Highest on the priority list was to look for changes that indicated disturbance while there was snow on the ground. Digging and tramping about in the snow would darken it, no matter how carefully the looters tried to hide the signs of their presence. That was a sign that
only
the work of sentients or herd-beasts would produce, and herd-beasts were not likely to search ruins for food.

Within the hour, they had their site—there was no doubt whatsoever that it was being visited and disturbed regularly. Some of the buildings had even been meddled with.

“Now why would they do that?” Tia wondered out loud, as she increased the magnification to show that one of the larger buildings had mysteriously grown a repaired roof. “They can’t need that much space—and how did they fix the roof within twenty-four hours?”

“They didn’t,” Alex said flatly. “That’s plastic stretched over the hole. As to
why—
the hole is just about big enough to let a twenty-man ship land inside. Hangar and hiding place all in one.”

They changed their position to put them in geosynchronous orbit over their prize—and detailed scans of the spot seemed to indicate that no one had visited it very recently. The snow was still pristine and white, and the building she had noted had a major portion of its roof missing again.

“That’s it,” Alex said with finality.

Tia groaned. “We know—and we can’t prove it. We know for a fact that someone is meddling with the site, but we can’t prove the site is the one with the plague. Not without going down.”

“Oh, come on, Tia, where’s your sense of adventure?” Alex asked, feebly. “We knew we were probably going to have to go down on the surface. All we have to do is go down and get some holos of the area just like the ones Hank took. Then we have our proof.”

“My sense of adventure got left back when I was nearly hijacked,” she replied firmly. “I can do without adventure, thank you.”

And she couldn’t help herself; she kept figuratively glancing over her shoulder, watching for a ship—

Would it be armed? She couldn’t help but think of Pol, bristling with weaponry, and picturing those weapons aimed at her.

Unarmed. Unarmored. Not even particularly fast.

On the other hand, she was a
brainship
, wasn’t she? The product of extensive training. Surely if she couldn’t outrun or outshoot these people, she could out-think them—

Surely.

Well, if she was going to out-think them, the first thing she should do would be to find a way to keep them from spotting her. So it was time to use those enhanced systems on the satellite to their advantage.

“What are you doing?” Alex asked, when she remained silent for several minutes, sending the manual-override signal to the satellite so that she could use the scanners.

“I’m looking for a place to hide,” she told him. “Two can play that game. And I’m smaller than their ship; I shouldn’t need a building to hide me. I’ll warn you, though, I may have to park a fair hike away from the cache sites.”

It took a while; several hours of intense searching, while Alex did what he could to get himself prepared for the trip below. That amounted mostly to readying his pressure-suit for a long stay; stocking it with condensed food and water, making certain the suit systems were up to a week-long tour, if it came to that. Recharging the power-cells, triple-checking the seals—putting tape on places that tended to rub and a bit of padding on places that didn’t quite fit—everything that could be done to his suit, Alex was doing. They both knew that from the time he left her airlock to the time he returned and she could purge him and the lock with hard vacuum, he was going to have to stay in it.

Finally, in mid-afternoon by the “local” time at the site below them, she found what she was looking for.

“I found my hiding place,” she said into the silence, startling him into jumping. “Are you ready?”

“As ready as I’ll ever be,” he said, a little too jauntily. Was it her imagination, or did he turn a little pale? Well, if she had been capable of it, she’d have done the same. As it was, she was so jittery that she finally had to alter her blood-chemistry a little to deal with it.

“Then strap down,” she told him soberly. “We’re heading right into a major weather system and there’s no getting around it. This is going to be tricky, and the ride is likely to be pretty rough.”

Alex took the time to strap down more than himself; he made a circuit of the interior, ensuring that anything loose had been properly stowed before he took his place in the comchair. Only then, when he was double-strapped in, did Tia make the burn that began their descent.

Their entry was fairly smooth until they were on final approach and hit thick atmosphere and the weather that rode the mid-levels. The wild storm winds of a blizzard buffeted her with heavy blows; gusts that came out of nowhere and flung her up, down, in any direction but the one she wanted. She fought her way through them with grim determination, wondering how on earth the looters had gotten this far. Surely with winds like this, the controls would be torn right out of the grip of a softperson’s hands!

Of course, they could be coming down under the control of an AI. Once the course had been programmed in, the AI would hold to it. And within limits, it would deal with unexpected conditions all the way to the surface.

Within limits: that was the catch. Throw it too far off the programmed course, and it wouldn’t know what to do.

Never mind, she told herself. You need to get down there yourself!

A little lower, and it wasn’t just wind she was dealing with, it was snow. A howling blizzard, to be precise—one that chilled her skin and caked snow on every surface, throwing off her balance by tiny increments, forcing her to recalculate her descent all the way to the ground. A strange irony—she who had never seen weather as a child was now having to deal with weather at its wildest. . . .

Then suddenly, as she approached the valley she had chosen, the wind died to a mere zephyr. Snow drifted down in picture perfect curtains—totally obscuring visuals, of course, but that was why she was on instruments anyway. She killed forward thrusters and went into null-grav; terribly draining of power, but the only way she could have the control she needed at this point. She inched her way into her chosen valley, using the utmost of care. The spot where she wanted to set down was just big enough to hold her—and right above it, if the readings she’d gotten from above were holding true, there was a big buildup of snow. Just enough to avalanche down and cover her, if she was very careful not to set it off prematurely.

She eased her way into place with the walls of the valley less than a hand-span away from her skin; a brief look at Alex showed him clenching teeth and holding armrests with hands that were white-knuckled. He could read the instruments as well as she could. Well, she’d never set down into a place that was quite this narrow before. And certainly she had never set down under conditions that might change in the next moment. . . .

If that blizzard behind them came howling up this valley, it could catch her and send her right into the valley wall.

There.
She tucked herself into the bottom of the valley and felt her “feet” sink through the snow to the rock beneath. Nice, solid rock. Snow-covered rocks on either side.

And above—the snowcrest. Waiting.
Here goes—

She activated an external speaker and blasted the landscape with shatter-rock, bass turned to max.

And the world fell in.

“Are you going to be able to blast free of this?” Alex asked for the tenth time, as another servo came in from the airlock to recharge.

“It’s not that bad,” she said confidently. She was
much
happier with four meters of snow between her and the naked sky. Avalanches happened all the time; there was nothing about this valley to signal to the looters that they’d been discovered, and that a ship was hiding here. Not only that, but the looters could prance around
on top of her
and never guess she was there unless they found the tunnel her servos were cutting to the surface. And she didn’t think any of them would have the temerity to crawl down what
might
be the den-tunnel of a large predator.

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