Authors: Anne McCaffrey,Jody Lynn Nye
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Adventure, #Space Opera, #Science Fiction, #Interplanetary voyages, #Space ships, #Life on other planets, #Interplanetary voyages - Fiction, #Fantasy fiction, #People with disabilities, #Women, #Space ships - Fiction, #Women - Fiction
"And to seek out new worlds, to boldly go ..."
"Oh, shush," Carialle said severely. "You just want to be
the first to leave your footprints in the sand."
"You've got twelve seconds to company," Simeon said.
"Don't tell me where you're going. What I don't know I
can't he about. Go with my blessings, and come back
safely. Soon."
"Will do," Keff said, strapping in. 'Thanks for everything, Simeon. Cari, ready to-"
The words were hardly out of his mouth before the
CK-963 unlatched the docking ring and lit portside
thrusters.
a CHAPTER TWO
The Inspector Generals angry voice pounded out of the
audio pickup on Simeon's private frequency.
"CK-963, respond!"
"Discovered!" Keff cried, slapping the arm of his couch.
The next burst of harsh sound made him yelp with mock
alarm. "Catch us if you can, you cockatrice!"
"Hush!" Carialle answered the hail in an innocent voice,
purposely made audible for her brawns sake. "S... S-nine ...
dred. H... ving trou-" Keff was helpless with laughter. Tl
... s repeat mes... g?"
"I said get back here! You have an appointment with me as
often hundred hours prime meridian time, and it is now ten
fifteen." Carialle could almost picture his plump,
mustachioed face turning red with apoplexy. "How dare you
blast out of here without my permission? I want to see you!"
"Sorr ..." Carialle said, "br... king up. Will send back
mission reports. General."
'That was clear as a bell, Carialle!" the angry voice hammered at the speaker diaphragm. "There is no static
interference on your transmission. You make a one-eighty
and get back here. I expect to see you in ninety minutes.
Maxwell-Corey out."
"Oops," said Keff, cheerfully. He tilted his head out of
his impact couch toward her pillar and winked. His deep-set blue eyes twinkled. "M-C won't believe that last phrase
was a fluke of clear space, will he?"
"He'll have to," Carialle said firmly. "I'm not going back
to have my cerebellum cased, not a chance. Bureaucratic
time-waster! I know I'm fine. You know you're fine. Why
do we always have to go bend over and cough every time
we make planetfall and explore a new world? I landed, got
steam-cleaned and decontaminated, made our report with
words and pictures to Xeno and Exploration. I refuse to
have another mental going-over just because of my past
experiences."
"Good of Simeon to tip us off," Keff said, running down
the ship status report on his personal screen. "I hope he
won't catch too much flak for it. But look at this! Thirty
percent food and fuel?"
"I know," Carialle said contritely, "but what else could I
do?"
"Not a blessed, or unblessed thing," Keff agreed.
"Frankly, I prefer the odds as opposed to what we'd have
to go through to wait for Simeons next shipments. Full
tanks and complete commissary do not, in my book,
equate with peace of mind if M-C's about. Eventually we
will have to go back, you know."
"Yes, if only to make certain Simeon's coped with the man.
Before we do though, I'll just send Simeon a microsquirt to
be sure Maxwell-Corey's left for D sector...."
"Or someplace else equally distant from us. It isn't as if
we can't hang out in space for a while on iron rations until
Sime sends you an all-clear burst," Keff offered bravely,
although Carialle could see he didn't look forward to the
notion.
"If the IG is sneaky enough ..."
"... And he is if anyone deserves that adjective...."
"... to scan message files he'll know when Simeon
knows where we are, and he could put a tag on us so no
station will supply the 963."
"We shall not come to that sorry pass, my lady fair," Keff
said, lapsing into his Sir Galahad pose. "In the meantime,
let us fly on toward R sector and whatever may await us
there." He made an enthusiastic and elaborate flourish and
ended up pointing toward me bow.
Carialle had to laugh.
"Oh, yes," she said. "Now, where were we?" The Wizard was back on the wall, and he spoke in the creaking
tenor of an old, old man. "Good sir knight, thou hast fairly
won this scroll. Hast anything thou wish to ask me?"
Grinning, Keff buckled on his epee and went to face
him.
While Keff chased men-at-arms all over her main cabin,
Carialle devoted most of her attention to eluding the
Inspector General s attempts to follow her vector.
As soon as she cut off Maxwell-Corey's angry message,
she detected the launch of a message drone from the SSS-900, undoubtedly containing an official summons. As
plenty of traffic was always flying into the stations space, it
took no great skill to divert the heat-seeking flyer onto the
trail of another outgoing vessel. Nothing, and certainly not
an unbrained droid, could outmaneuver a brainship. By
the time the mistake was discovered, she'd be out of this
sector entirely, and on her way to an unknown quadrant of
the galaxy.
Later, when she felt less threatened by him, she'd compose a message complaining of what was really becoming
harassing behavior to SPRIM. She'd had that old nuisance
on her tail long enough. Running free, in full control other
engines and her faculties, was one of the most important
things in her life. Every time that right was threatened,
Carialle reacted in a way that probably justified the IGs
claim of dangerous excitability.
In the distance, she picked up indications of two small
ships following her initial vector. All right, score one up for
the IG: he'd known she'd resist his orders and had ordered
a couple of scouts to chase her down. That could also mean
that he might have even put out an alarm that she was a
danger to herself and her brawn, and must be brought
back willingly or unwillingly. Would the small scouts have
picked up her power emissions? She ought to have been
one jump ahead of old Sennet and expected this sort of
antic. She ought to have lain quiescent. Oh well. She really
couldn't contest the fact that proximity to the IG did put
her in a state of confusion. She adjusted her adrenals.
Calm down, girl. Calm down. Think!
Quick perusal of her starchart showed the migration of
an ion storm only a couple of thousand klicks away.
Carialle made for it. She skimmed the storm's margin.
Then, letting her computers plot the greatest possible
radiation her shields could take without buckling, she slid
nimbly over the surface, a surfer riding dangerous waters.
The sensation was glorious! Ordinary pilots, unable to feel
the pressures on their ships' skins as she did, would
hesitate to follow. Nor could their scopes detect her in the
wash of ion static. Shortly, Carialle was certain she had
shaken off her tails. She turned a sharp perpendicular
from the ion storm, and watched its opalescent halos
recede behind her as she kicked her engines up to full
speed.
Returning to the game, she found Keff studying the
floating map holograph over a cold one at the "village
pub." He glanced up at her pillar when she hailed him.
"I take it we're free of unwanted company?"
"With a sprinkling of luck and the invincibility of our
radiation proof panels," Carialle said, "we've evaded the
minions of the evil wizard. Now its time for a brew." She
tested herself for adrenaline fatigue, and allowed herself a
brief feed of protein and vitamin B-complex.
Keff tipped his glass up to her. Quick analysis told her
that though the golden beverage looked like beer, it was
the non-alcoholic electrolyte-replenisher Keff used after
workouts. "Here's to your swift feet and clever ways, my
lovely, and confusion to our enemies. Er, did my coffee
come aboard?"
"Yes, sir," she replied, flashing the image of a saluting
marine on the wall. 'The storesmaster just had time to
break out a little of the good stuff when Simeon passed the
word down. I even got you a small quantity of chocolate.
Best Demubian." Keff beamed.
"Ah, Cari, now I know the ways you love me. Did you
have time to load any of my special orders?" he asked, with
a quirk of his head.
"Now that you mention it, there were two boxes in the
cargo hold with your name on them," Carialle said.
Clang. BUMP! Clang. BUMP!
The shining contraption of steel that was the Rotoflex
had taken little time to put together, still less to watch the
instructional video on how to use it. Keff sat on the leath-erette-covered, modified saddle with a stirrup-shaped,
metal pulley in each outstretched hand. His broad face red
from the effort, Keff slowly brought one fist around until it
touched his collarbone, then let it out again. The heavy
cables sang as they strained against the resistance coils, and
relaxed with a heavy thump when Keff reached full extension. Squeezing his eyes shut, he dragged in the other fist.
The tendons on his neck stood out cordlike under his
sweat-glistening skin.
'Two hundred and three," he grunted. "Uhhh! Two
hundred and four. Two ..."
"Look at me," Carialle said, dropping into the bass
octave and adopting the spiel technique of so many tri-vid
commercials. "Before I started the muscle-up exercise
program I was a forty-four-kilogram weakling. Now look at
me. You, too, can..."
"All right," Keff said, letting go of the hand-weights.
They swung in noisy counterpoint until the metal cables
retracted into their arms. He arose from the exerciser seat
and toweled off with the cloth slung over the end of his
weight bench. T can acknowledge a hint when its delivered with a sledgehammer. I just wanted to see how much
this machine can take."
"Don't you mean how much you can take? One day
you're going to rupture something," Carialle warned. She
noted Keffs respiration at over two hundred pulses per
minute, but it was dropping rapidly.
"Most accidents happen in the home," Keff said, with a
grin.
"I really was sorry I had to interrupt your tryst with
Susa," Carialle said for the twentieth time that shift.
"No problem," Keff said, and Carialle could tell that this
time he meant it. "It would have been a more pleasant way
to get my heart rate up, but this did nicely, thank you." He
yawned and rolled his shoulders to ease them, shooting
one arm forward, then the other. "I'm for a shower and
bed, lady dear."
"Sleep well, knight in shining muscles."
Shortly, the interior was quiet but for the muted sounds
of machinery humming and gurgling. The SSS-900 technicians had done their work well, for all they'd been rushed
by circumstances to finish. Carialle ran over the systems
one at a time, logging in repair or replacement against the
appropriate component. That sort of accounting took up
litde time. Carialle found herself longing for company. A
perverse notion since she knew it would be hours now
before Keffwoke up.
Carialle was not yet so far away from some of the miners' routes that she couldn't have exchanged gossip with
other ships in the sector, but she didn't dare open up channels for fear of tipping off Maxwell-Corey to their
whereabouts. The enforced isolation of silent running left
her plenty of time for her thoughts.
Keff groaned softly in his sleep. Carialle activated the
camera just inside his closed door for a brief look, then
dimmed the lights and left him alone. The brawn was
faceup on his bunk with one arm across his forehead and
right eye. The thin thermal cover had been pushed down
and was draped modestly across his groin and one leg,
which twitched now and again. One of his precious collection of real-books lay open facedown on the nightstand.
The tableau was worthy of a painting by the Old Masters of
Earth-Hercules resting from his labors. Frustrated from
missing his close encounter of the female kind, Keff had
exercised himself into a stiff mass of sinews. His muscles
were paying him back for the abuse by making his rest
uneasy. He'd rise for his next shift aching in every joint,
until he worked the stiffhess out again. As the years went
by it took longer for Keff to limber up, but he kept at it,
taking pride in his excellent physical condition.
Softshells were, in Carialles opinion, funny people.
They'd go to such lengths to build up their bodies which
then had to be maintained with a significant effort, dispro-portionate to the long-term effect. They were so
unprotected. Even the stress of exercise, which they considered healthy, was damaging to some of them. They
strove to accomplish goals which would have perished in a
few generations, leaving no trace of their passing. Yet they
cheerfully continued to "do" their mite, hoping something
would survive to be admired by another generation or
species.
Carialle was very fond of Keff. She didn't want him
anguished or disabled. He had been instrumental in
restoring her to a useful existence and while he wasn't