Berserker Wars (Omnibus)

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Berserker Wars (Omnibus) Page 89

by Fred Saberhagen


  Soon a startling fact was confirmed: beginning approximately at the present location of the flagship, an open channel cut through the enclosing nebular material, offering relatively smooth passage. This crude tunnel of comparatively clear space led on in the general direction the enemy had originally been following.

  The lieutenant marveled. “Look at it. Almost like it was dredged clear somehow.”

  “Almost.” Dinant’s admission was reluctant; the actual accomplishment of such a feat on the scale now visible would have been far beyond any known technology, and similar natural features were not unheard of. “Wouldn’t be surprised if Dirac’s berserker once came right down this channel, with the old man himself driving his yacht right after it.”

  “Wouldn’t be surprised.” Tongres went on intercom. “Commodore, you there? We’re really hurting. Drive, shields, everything.”

  Around the still-breathing pair of officers the control room’s surviving holostages were sizzling, erupting like white holes in strange and improbable virtual images. The display system, like all the flagship’s systems now, was obviously damaged. Power was being conserved wherever possible.

  Presently Prinsep’s voice came back, redundantly transmitted on audio intercom and scrambled suit radio: “Do what you can. I’ll be back with you in a minute. We’re going to have a problem with the wounded. We don’t seem to have an intact medirobot left aboard.”

  Prinsep, escorted by a serene Havot, soon reappeared in the control room. They had not tried to move the seriously wounded yet.

  Turning to the commodore, the pilot asked: “I think she’s got about one more jump left in her legs, sir. Do we try it, or do we just hang here?”

  With a sigh the commodore let himself down in his blasted chair. “We try it. We look around first, and catch our breath, and see if anything else is left of our task force. And if after that we find ourselves still alone, we jump again. Because there’s nothing here.”

  Havot had seated himself nearby—there were a number of empty couches now available—and was attending with interest.

  Ensign Dinant asked: “Which way do we aim? And how far?”

  “We aim dead ahead, straight down that channel you’re showing me.” Prinsep’s helmet nodded awkwardly to indicate direction. “Let the autopilot decide the range. Because we know what we have behind us here—berserkers—and we can see what we have on all sides. There’s nothing for us in the deep dust.”

  It was true that at the moment cleared ports showed the flagship hanging, seemingly motionless, in a wilderness of dust and plasma. In several directions rolled disturbances that a fanciful observer might have been taken for Earthly thunderstorms magnified to planetary sizes but condemned to eerie silence, dark clouds sparkling and flashing with electrical discharges.

  In every direction, except straight forward and astern, spread the subtle tentacles of the Mavronari, deep dust leaving ominously few stars in view, black arms outstretched as if about to bestow the last embrace that any of the intruding humans were ever going to feel. From this point even the Core could barely be distinguished with the naked eye, and that only if you knew where to look. Only straight astern, in the direction of Imatra, could anything like a normal Galactic complement of stars be seen. Straight ahead lay the night.

  “Where’s the rest of our fleet?”

  “With any luck, we’ll be able to rendezvous with them, somewhere up ahead.”

  Gradually Havot, not forgetting to watch the doorways while he listened to the crew talk jargon, got a better grasp on what was happening. The commodore hadn’t just cut and run out of the space fight; in ordering that last escape jump, he’d had some reason to hope that his other ships or several of them—or at least one—might also have managed to escape the ambush by jumping on ahead. It appeared to be certain that at least a couple of other vessels had made the attempt to do so. Now the flagship was coming into a position from which he might expect to contact those ships again.

  Now Prinsep and what was left of his crew were repeatedly trying to do so, but so far with no success.

  After a conference with Dinant, his surviving astrogator, the commodore decided that his only remaining hope of reassembling his fleet, or what might be left of it, was to rendezvous with any other vessels somewhere ahead.

  “The rest of our people are up there, ahead, if they are anywhere. If they are not there, they are almost certainly all dead.”

  “So we jump again.”

  “We do.”

  “Yes sir.”

  Once more flightspace closed in, then fell away. All those who still lived and breathed—except the badly wounded who had not been moved—were still gathered in the control room of the Symmetry, and they sent up a tentative collective sigh of relief.

  They had just survived the last c-plus jump that the battered warship was likely ever to achieve. The drive had taken them out of normal space and brought them back again more or less intact.

  But where had reentry dropped them? Into what looked like a murky tunnel, a half-clogged remnant, extension, of the intra-nebular channel from which they had just jumped.

  The ship’s computers were quick to offer the calculation that the last jump had covered millions of kilometers. More important, the flagship was no longer alone. In the control room, even an inexperienced reader of displays and instruments like Havot could tell that.

  An approximately ship-sized object—in fact several of them—lay nearly dead ahead, within much less than interplanetary distances.

  The flagship’s remaining weapons had already locked themselves automatically upon the largest target, which, Havot now realized, was vastly larger than the Symmetry.Again, he felt peculiar, conflicting feelings as he studied that monstrous shape.

  But for the moment Solarian hardware and systems were holding their peace. And so far no enemy fire sprouted.

  Under tighter optical focusing this target was quickly resolved into a double object. The larger component, amply big enough in itself to qualify as a large berserker, dwarfed the smaller one, and was only very slightly more distant than the smaller. And behind the smaller object of the pair, no more than a couple of kilometers from it and also in line with the approaching flagship, hung a third image, target or vessel, by a slight margin the smallest of the three.

  Within moments, this last blip had been tentatively identified from the old records as Premier Dirac’s armed yacht. The Eidolonwas now holding its position relative to what gave every appearance of being Dirac’s berserker, actually still linked to the space station it had kidnapped three centuries ago.

  None of the handful of survivors gathered in the control room had time or energy to spend on great excitement. What resources they had left were now concentrated in an effort to assure their own continued survival.

  To which the appearance of yet another berserker was decidedly relevant. Someone asked in a dead calm voice: “Are those vessels dead?”

  “We’ll soon see. At the moment none of them, including the berserker, are radiating anything more than you’d expect from so much scrap metal. But stay locked on with whatever arms we still have.”

  “Acknowledge.” Pause. “We’re still closing on them, sir.”

  “Well, keep closing. Prepare to match velocities.” The commodore felt no need to spell out the reasons for this decision—if it could be ranked as a decision. They hardly had any choice. A quick inventory, balancing damage already sustained against resources available, had already disclosed to the ship’s surviving officers and their computer aides such a degree of irreparable ruin that much calculation would have to be undertaken, much energy expended, just to preserve from moment to moment the lives of those aboard.

  “The last thing we need right now is another fight.” That, from Superintendent Gazin, was too obvious to need saying, or to deserve comment after it was said.

  But Prinsep made the effort anyway. “I’m no longer looking for a fight. I’m looking for a way to stay alive. I’m assum
ing that’s Dirac’s berserker we’re locked onto, and if it’s not already shooting at us, I think we may risk the assumption that it’s dead.

  “If that object just this side of the berserker is really the missing bioresearch station, we might just possibly be able to board it and find some of the help we need. I don’t see any other course of action that offers us even a ghost of a chance.”

  Within an hour the battered flagship had closed to no more than a few hundred kilometers from the small parade of objects dominated by the huge, dark, silent, but very ominous mass occupying the lead position.

  Everyone kept watching that leading unit, expecting weapon flashes or some sharp maneuver, alert for a display of violence that, for whatever reason, did not come. All that happened was that the images of the three objects became ever more clearly visible.

  “It is a berserker,” Prinsep announced laconically at last. “A damned big one.”

  “Yes sir. It sure is—or was,” Lieutenant Tongres added hopefully. “I suppose we can safely assume, given the presence of the other objects nearby, that it’s Dirac’s.”

  “Yes.”

  Havot, watching and listening with the others, had a hard time making any connection between the enigmatic, half-ruined mass ahead and the murderous machine that had once cornered him back on the Imatran surface.

  “Hold battle stations,” the commodore ordered. But still, despite urgings from his crew to get in the first blow, he refused to pull the trigger and order aggressive action.

  Commodore Prinsep allowed the closure with the three tandem units to continue, while his two crew members still fit for duty, along with such shipboard robots as were still functioning, took turns applying themselves to damage control, caring for the wounded, and attempting emergency repairs of life support and weapons systems.

  An ongoing monitoring of the situation confirmed that repairs to the drive and power systems were impossible, and the other palliative measures taken to keep equipment functioning were going to prove futile in a matter of hours at the most.

  “Fleet Commander Prinsep.” It was his dying ship itself which thus so formally addressed him.

  “That is my name,” he replied softly. “But I no longer have a fleet.”

  “Strongly suggest that you issue orders to abandon ship.”

  “I acknowledge the suggestion.”

  Still, the commodore delayed giving that command. Now a mechanical voice from the deck where the wounded lay began calling urgently for help, until one of the people in the control room, who had no more help to give, overrode the system’s programming and shut it up.

  At this point the commodore tried to obtain from his instruments a better optical image of the station. In his quietly controlled near desperation, Prinsep continued to pursue the chance—at first mentally rejected by Havot and others as fantastically improbable—that he might be able to find some functional help for his wounded aboard the captive biostation—if the giant berserker was really as dead as it appeared.

  “A facility like that, for biological research, certainly ought to have medirobots on board, oughtn’t it?” He sounded almost wistful.

  Tongres said: “Sir, I suppose it would have mounted some such devices, three hundred years ago. What it must have on board right now is berserkers, if anything.”

  Prinsep shrugged fatalistically. “If things turn out like that, maybe we can at least take a few more of them with us. One thing I can assure you—all of you—if we simply sit here on this ship, we’re all going to die in a few hours. A day or two at best.”

  “Are we to abandon ship, sir?”

  “Let’s not rush it. But I want to get the wounded into a lifeboat. And I’d rather not be seen abandoning ship if the enemy is indeed observing us.”

  A pair of undamaged lifeboats remained aboard the flagship, offering survival perhaps for many days, but hopelessly inadequate to the task of getting home.

  There was now every reason to expect the warship to self-destruct uncontrollably within a matter of hours, perhaps a standard day at the most. With this in mind the commodore, having got his wounded packed into one of the lifeboats, did not bother trying to program the Symmetryto blow itself up. The near hulk would be of no value to the berserker enemy if they should take it over. Prinsep contented himself with making sure that key encryption systems and a few other secrets were destroyed.

  As the minutes passed, with closure continuing at a steadily slowing rate, the nature of the most distant object became more and more unmistakably, ominously clear. The nearer vessels were far too small to obscure much of it. That most distant shape of the three was defining itself with deadly finality—if any confirmation were still needed—as a berserker of truly awesome size. One huge enough to have given Prinsep’s original fleet all it could handle in the way of battle—if its murderous brain and its arsenal of weaponry still worked. For this berserker too had been through hellish combat.

  What appeared to be functional weapons were to be seen projecting from its hull—and indeed, the giant, half-ruined enemy had been for some time in range, and was certainly in position, though not absolutely the best position, to fire on the new arrival approaching from astern. But, for whatever reason, the berserker’s weapons still remained silent as minute after minute of the battered flagship’s approach wore on.

  Dinant had an announcement. “Sir, I can detect some kind of heavy forcefield, connecting the berserker and the station.”

  “A field like that could be a relic. Am I not correct? I mean it might persist locally, surrounding the objects to which it had been attached, for an indefinite time after the machine that created it was effectively dead?”

  “Possibly, sir. The berserker’s drive is obviously still functioning also. Putting out very steady, low power. At the moment only course-correcting, not accelerating. The towing field could be driven from the drive, or it could be on some low-intelligence automatic function. We can still hope that its real brain is dead.”

  Both the trailing yacht at the end of the small parade, and the berserker in the lead, showed signs of substantial damage, while the station, at least at this distance, did not. Some of the damage to the supposed berserker could now be observed to be fresh, judging by the heat radiation from the scars, and some definite outgassing of various elements and compounds.

  Was there a thin cloud of fine, very recent debris drifting in nearby space, dispersing at a rate that proved it could not be very old? Yes, something of the kind could be confirmed.

  “Where the hell did that come from?”

  It created some excitement. The commodore, on observing this evidence of recent combat, said: “We must assume that our ships, or some of them, did get through this far after all, and did engage the enemy.”

  “Then where are our other ships now?”

  “If they’re not here, they evidently didn’t survive the fight.”

  “Unless they simply gave it up as too tough a job, pulled out and headed for home?”

  In either case the missing Solarian vessels were not going to be of any help to Havot and his shipmates.

  * * *

  The people on board the slowly approaching warship were now also getting a clearer look at the kidnapped bioresearch station. The identification could now be absolutely confirmed by matching the appearance of this object against images on the duplicate old recording the approaching humans had brought out here with them from Imatra. After three hundred years the outer hull of this structure at least appeared essentially undamaged, though there was some scarring such as might have been caused by heavy explosions in nearby space.

  Presently the approaching Solarians, whose autopilot had now reduced their rate of closure to only a few kilometers per minute, were able to get a better look at the antique forcefield bonds that held the berserker and the bioresearch station together. The opinion that this was a relic field received some support from further observations.

  Meanwhile the continued gentle deceleration—
almost at the limit of what the flagship’s failing drive could have managed in any case—steadily slowed the rate of closure. The Symmetrywas going to come to rest relative to the yacht when the two were no more than a few kilometers apart—perhaps less than one kilometer.

  The little triad of antique objects, and now the warship that had joined them, were moving quite slowly relative to the surrounding nebula.

  Dirac’s yacht, now the nearest to the new arrivals, had been identified beyond any possibility of doubt. The Eidolondrifted steadily at the outer limit of the field uniting its two companions and maintained the same inert silence. Perhaps, someone mused, it was only by accident that the yacht had become attached to them and was being gently towed along.

  “Evidently Premier Dirac did succeed in catching up,” someone commented.

  “Much good it did him, from the way things look.”

  Under the careful supervision of her surviving human pilot, the flagship had now succeeded in smoothly matching velocities with Dirac’s once-proud vessel.

  And Ensign Dinant, the remaining astrogator, now came up with a plausible explanation for the flagship’s emergence from flightspace so close to the three antique machines. The explanation had to do with the channel in the nebula, which locally provided minimum resistance and maximum speed. The distribution of matter and force in nearby space and flightspace was such that any vessel traveling nearby would tend to drift into this channel; it was a path, a condition, that would not have changed substantially over the last three hundred years.

  So far, as they had done ever since the flagship had come into observational range, yacht, berserker, and research station continued to maintain virtual radio silence, none of them emitting anything like a deliberate signal at any frequency.

  At last Commodore Prinsep let out a sigh of something approximating relief. “You can see as well as I can, my people, that this berserker appears to be dead. But as we know, some very active bandits were close on our heels when we risked that last jump. If it’s so damned easy for everything that comes this way to wind up on the same path, we might find them joining us at any moment. I fear we must assume they’re going to try.”

 

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