Nua'll

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Nua'll Page 34

by S. H. Jucha


  Alex stood and motioned Ude to do the same. The teenager stood, and Alex folded him in his arms. His mind jumped back to the many times he’d done this for Teague, and he wondered where his son was and if he was safe and happy.

  Ude felt the huge man’s arm envelop him. The teachers were always trying to hug him, and he resented the intimate contact. It felt like he was being captured by minders. At this moment, the best he could manage was a quick patting on Alex’s sides, and he was relieved when that action caused Alex to release him, allowing him to step away.

  “Do I return to the other ship for now?” Ude asked.

  “Do you wish to say goodbye to your band?” Alex asked.

  “Yes, I must,” Ude said, some of his spirit returning.

  “After you say goodbye to them, you’ll be returned to this ship,” Alex said. He walked the boy to his door, but before he signaled it open, he said, “This is my first order to you, Ude. Are you ready?”

  Ude braced himself to accept whatever the leader asked. He would do whatever was demanded of him to sail aboard this ship to face Artifice.

  “You will thank each staff member and professor for what they’ve done for you and the other children,” Alex said. “That’s a duty of a leader, which I know you are.”

  Ude waited. He was sure there would be a more demanding request. “That’s it?” he asked when nothing else was said.

  “My requests will get tougher, in the future, but we’ll start easy for now,” Alex replied, with a grin.

  Ude smiled shyly. It was the first smile Alex had seen on the boy.

  When the door opened, Alex didn’t have to request someone escort Ude. Renée and Julien were waiting.

  Renée extended her hand and said, “Welcome aboard.”

  Ude politely shook it. Then Julien repeated the greeting, offering his hand.

  “I will return young Ude to the Our People and then escort him back here,” Julien announced.

  Alex narrowed an eye at Julien. Obviously, the SADE, with his keen hearing, had listened at the door and shared what he heard with Renée.

  “We have to do something about these cabin doors,” Julien quipped. “I hadn’t realized they were so thin. Come, master Ude,” Julien said, waving his hand down the corridor. A jaunty cap appeared on his hand, and he began whistling.

  Renée circled her arms around Alex’s waist. “Did I tell you that I love you?” she said, her voice muffled in his chest.

  “Often, and I hold every one of them precious,” Alex replied, gently hugging her in return.

  -34-

  Target Star

  The scout ship SADEs chose to take an ultraconservative approach to the target star. It was Alex’s cautionary statements that convinced them to be extraordinarily apprehensive. The unknown fates of Deter and Verina’s scout ships were never far from their thoughts.

  The SADEs ended their transits high above the system’s ecliptic. They immediately shut down their primary engines, closed the clam-shell doors, and attempted to appear as nothing more than a group of large rocks by adopting a tight, eccentric formation. In that regard, they drifted at a velocity similar to the speed of independent bodies, which were not yet captured by a star’s gravitational pull.

  Bethley noted, when the first telemetry data was collected.

  Linn sent. His suggestion didn’t elicit responses.

  Instead, the other SADEs examined the system’s activity, and algorithms calculated survival rates if they employed Linn’s idea.

  Genoa said.

  Bethley determined that approaching the system anywhere on the ecliptic plane would be extremely hazardous. The constant ship activity, entering and exiting the system from all directions, would ensure they were detected, and she said so.

  Beryl hypothesized and announced that only two approach directions made sense, above and below the ecliptic. he sent.