Gracias’ plot stayed on the main screen; but the display in front of her gave her visual again, and she saw the alien ship approaching like a bright metal projectile the galaxy had flung to knock Aster’s Hope out of the heavens. Suddenly frantic, as if she believed the other ship were actually going to crush her, she started firing.
Beams of light shot at the alien from every laser port the comp could bring to bear.
Though the ship was huge, the beams focused on a single section: Temple was trying to maximize their impact. When they hit the force disruption field, light suddenly blared all across the spectrum, sending up a rainbow of coruscation.
“Negative,” Gracias reported as Aster’s Hope wrenched into her first evasion shift. “No effect.”
Her weight rammed against the restraints, the skin of her cheeks pulling, Temple punched the weapons com into continuous fire, then concentrated on holding up her head so that she could watch the visual.
As her lasers turned the alien’s shields into a fireworks display, another bright red shaft of force came as straight as a spear at Aster’s Hope.
Again, the screen lost visual.
But this time Gracias was ready. He got scanner plots onto the screen while visual was out of use. Temple could see her laser fire like an equation on a graph connecting Aster’s Hope and the unliving ship. Every few seconds, a line came back the other way—an ion beam as accurate as if Aster’s Hope were stationary. “Any effect yet?” she gasped at Gracias as another evasion kicked her to the other side of her seat. “We’re hitting them hard. It’s got to have an effect.”
“Negative,” he repeated. “That shield disperses force almost as fast as it comes in. Doesn’t weaken.”
Then the attacker went past. In seconds, it would be out of reach of Temple’s laser cannon.
“Cancel evasion,” she snapped, keying her com out of continuous fire. “Go after them. As fast as we can. Give me a chance to aim a torpedo.”
“Right,” he responded. And a second later g-stress slammed at her as all the ship’s thrusters went on full power, roaring for acceleration.
Aster’s Hope steadied on the alien’s course and did her best to match its speed.
“Now,” Temple muttered. “Now. Before they start to turn.” Her hands quick on the weapons board, she primed a whole barrage of hydrogen torpedoes. Then she pulled in course coordinates from the comp. “Go.” With the flat of her hand on all the launch buttons at once, she fired.
The comp automatically blinked the c-vector shield to let the torpedoes out. Fired from a source moving as fast as Aster’s Hope was, they attained attack velocity almost immediately and went after the other ship.
Gracias didn’t wait for Temple’s instructions. He reversed thrust, decelerating Aster’s Hope again to stay as far as possible from the blast when the torpedoes hit.
If they hit. The scanner plot on the main screen showed that the alien was starting to turn.
“Come on,” she breathed. Unconsciously, she pounded her fists on the arms of her seat. “Come on. Hit that bastard. Hit.”
“Impact,” he said as all the blips on the scanner came together.
At that instant, visual cleared. They saw a hot white ball explode like a balloon of energy rupturing in all directions at once.
Then both visual and scan went haywire for a few long seconds. The detonation of that many hydrogen torpedoes filled all the space around Aster’s Hope with chaos: energy emissions on every frequency; supercharged particles phasing in and out of tardyon existence as they screamed away from the point of explosion.
“Hit him,” Gracias murmured.
Temple gripped the arms of her seat, stared at the garbage on the screens. “What do you think? Can they stand up to that?”
He didn’t shrug. He looked like he didn’t have that much energy left. “Wouldn’t hurt us.”
“Can’t you clear the screens? We’ve got to see.”
“The comp’s doing it.” Then, a second later: “Here it comes.”
The screens wiped themselves clear, and a new scanner plot mapped the phosphors in front of him. It showed the alien turning hard, coming back toward Aster’s Hope.
The readout was negative. No damage.
“Oh, God,” she sighed. “I don’t believe it.” All the strength seemed to run out of her body. She sagged against her restraints. “Now what do we do?”
He went on staring at the screens for a long moment while the attacking ship completed its turn. Then he said, “Don’t know. Try for collision again?”
When she didn’t say anything, he gave the problem to the comp, told it to wait until the last possible instant—considering Aster’s Hope’s poor maneuverability—and then thrust the ship into the alien’s path. After that, he keyed his board onto automatic and leaned back in his restraints. To her surprise, he yawned hugely.
“Need sleep,” he mumbled thickly. “Be glad when this shift’s over.”
Surprise and fear made her acid. “You’re not thinking very clearly, Gracias.” She needed him, but he seemed to be getting farther and farther away. “Do you think the mission can continue after this? What do you think the chances are that ship’s going to give up and let us go on our way? My God, there isn’t even anybody alive over there! The whole thing is just a machine. It can stay here and pound at us for centuries, and it won’t even get bored. Or it can calculate the odds on Aster building a c-vector shield big enough to cover the whole planet—and it can just forget about us, leave us here, and go attack our homeworld because there won’t be anything we can do to stop it and Aster is unprotected. We don’t even know what it wants. We—”
She might have gone on; but the comp chose that moment to heave Aster’s Hope in front of the alien. Every thruster screaming, the ship pulled her mass into a terrible acceleration, fighting for a collision her attacker couldn’t avoid. Temple felt like she was being cut to pieces by the straps holding her in her seat. She tried to cry out, but she couldn’t get any air into her lungs. Her damage readouts and lights began to put on a show.
But the alien ship skipped aside and went past without being touched.
For a second, Aster’s Hope pulled around, trying to follow her opponent. Then Gracias forced himself forward and canceled the comp’s collision instructions. Instantly, the g-stress eased. The ship settled onto a new heading chosen by her inertia, the alien already turning again to come after her.
“Damn,” he said softly. “Damn it.”
Temple let herself rest against her restraints. We can’t—she thought dully. Can’t even run into that thing. It can’t hurt us. But we can’t hurt it. Aster’s Hope wasn’t built to be a warship. She wasn’t supposed to protect her homeworld by fighting: she was supposed to protect it by being diplomatic and cunning and distant. If the worst came to the very worst, she was supposed to protect Aster by not coming back. But this was a mission of peace, the mission of Aster’s dream: the ship was never intended to fight for anything except her own survival.
“For some reason,” Temple murmured into the silence of the auxcompcom, “I don’t think this is what I had in mind when I joined the Service.”
Gracias started to say something. The sound of frying circuitry from the speakers cut him off. It got her attention like a splash of hot oil.
This time, it wasn’t a jammer. She saw that in the readouts jumping across the screens. It was another scanner probe, like the one that had tried to break into the comp earlier. But now it was tearing into the ship’s unprotected communication hardware—the intraship speakers.
After the initial burst of static, the sounds began to change. Frying became whistles and grunts, growls and moans. For a minute, she had the impression she was listening to some inconceivable alien language. But before she could call up the comp’s translation program—or ask Gracias to do it—the interference on the speakers modulated until it became a voice and words.
A voice from every speaker in the auxcompcom at once.
/> Words Temple and Gracias understood.
The voice sounded like a poorly calibrated vodor, metallic and insensitive. But the words were distinct.
“Surrender, badlife. You will be destroyed.”
The scanner probe had turned up the gain on all the speakers. The voice was so loud it seemed to rattle the auxcompcom door on its mounts.
Involuntarily, Temple gasped, “Good God. What in hell is that?”
Gracias replied unnecessarily, “The other ship. Talking to us.” He sounded dull, defeated, almost uninterested.
“I know that,” she snapped. “For God’s sake, wake up!” Abruptly, she slapped a hand at her board, opened a radio channel. “Who are you?” she demanded into her mike. “What do you want? We’re no threat to you. Our mission is peaceful. Why are you attacking us?”
The scanner plot on the main screen showed that the alien ship had already completed its turn and caught up with Aster’s Hope. Now it was matching her course and speed, shadowing her at a distance of less than ten kilometers.
“Surrender,” the speakers blared again. “You are badlife. You will be destroyed. You must surrender.”
Frantic with fear and urgency, and not able to control it, Temple pounded off her mike and swung her seat. “Can’t you turn that down?” she raged at Gracias. “It’s splitting my eardrums!”
Slowly, as if he were half-asleep, he tapped a few buttons on his console. Blinking at the readouts, he murmured, “Hardware problem. Scanner probe’s stronger than the comp’s line voltage. Have to reduce gain manually.” Then he widened his eyes at something that managed to surprise him even in his stunned state. “Only speakers affected are in here. This room. Bastard knows exactly where we are. And every circuit around us.”
That didn’t make sense. It made so little sense that it caught her attention, focused her in spite of her panic. “Wait a minute,” she said. “They’re only using these speakers? The ones in this room? How do they know we’re in here? Gracias, there are three hundred ninety-two people aboard. How can they possibly know you and I are the only ones awake?”
“You must surrender,” the speakers squalled again. “You cannot flee. You have no speed. You cannot fight. Your weapons are puny. When your shields are broken, you will be helpless. Your secrets will be lost. Only surrender can save your lives.”
She keyed her mike again. “No. You’re making a mistake. We’re no threat to you. Who are you? What do you want?”
“Death,” the speakers replied. “Death for all life. Death for all worlds. You must surrender.”
Gracias closed his eyes. Without looking at what he was doing, he moved his hands on his board, got visual back up on the main screen. The screen showed the alien ship sailing like a skyborne fort an exact distance from Aster’s Hope. It held its position so precisely that it looked motionless. It seemed so close Temple thought she could have hit it with a rock.
“Maybe,” he sighed, “don’t know we’re the only ones awake.”
She didn’t understand what he was thinking; but she caught at it as if it were a lifeline. “What do you mean?”
He didn’t open his eyes. “Cryogenically frozen,” he said. “Vital signs so low the monitors can hardly read them. Capsules are just equipment. And the comp’s encrypted. Maybe that scanner probe thinks we’re the only life-forms here.”
She caught her breath. “If that’s true—” Ideas reeled through her head. “They probably want us to surrender because they can’t figure out our shields. And because they want to know what we’re doing, just the two of us in this big ship. It might be suicide for them to go on to Aster without knowing the answers to questions like that. And while they’re trying to find out how to break down our shields, they’ll probably stay right there.
“Gracias,” her heart pounding with unreasonable hope, “how long would it take you to repro the comp to project a c-vector field at that ship? We’re stationary in relation to each other. We can use our field generator as a weapon.”
That got his eyes open. When he rolled his head to the side to face her, he looked sick. “How long will it take you,” he asked, “to rebuild the generator for that kind of projection? And what will we use for shields while you’re working?”
He was right: she knew it as soon as he said it. But there had to be something they could do, had to be. They couldn’t just sail across the galactic void for the next few thousand years while their homeworld was destroyed behind them.
There had to be something they could do.
The speakers started trumpeting again. “Badlife, you have been warned. The destruction of your ship will now begin. You must surrender to save your lives.”
Badlife, she wondered crazily to herself. What does that mean, badlife? Is that ship some kind of automatic weapon gone berserk, shooting around the galaxy exterminating what it calls badlife?
How is it going to destroy Aster’s Hope?
She didn’t have to wait long to find out. Almost immediately, she felt a heavy metallic thunk vibrate through the seals that held her seat to the floor. A fraction of an instant later, a small flash of light from somewhere amidships on the attacking vessel showed that a projectile weapon had been fired.
Then alarms began to howl, and the damage readouts on Temple’s board began to spit intimations of disaster.
Training took over through her panic. Her hands danced on the console, gleaning data. “We’ve been hit.” Through the shield. “Some kind of projectile.” Through the c-vector shield. “It’s breached the hull.” All three layers of the ship’s metal skin. “I don’t know what it was, but it’s punched a hole all the way to the outer-shell wall.”
Gracias interrupted her. “How big’s the hole?”
“About a meter square.” She went back to the discipline of her report. “The comp is closing pressure doors, isolating the breach. Damage is minor—we’ve lost one heat exchanger for the climate control. But if they do that again, they might hit something more vital.” Trusting the c-vector shields, Aster’s Hope’s builders hadn’t tried to make her particularly hard to damage in other ways.
The alien ship did it again. Another tearing thud as the projectile hit. Another small flash of light from the attacker. More alarms. Temple’s board began to look like it was monitoring a madhouse.
“The same place,” she said, fighting a rising desire to scream. “It’s pierced outer-shell. Atmosphere loss is trivial. The comp is closing more pressure doors.” She tapped commands into the console. “Extrapolating the path of those shots, I’m closing all the doors along the way.” Then she called up a damage estimate on the destructive force of the projectiles. “Two more like that will breach one of the mid-shell cryogenic chambers. We’re going to start losing people.”
And if the projectiles went on pounding the same place, deeper and deeper into the ship, they would eventually reach the c-vector generator.
It was true: Aster’s Hope was going to be destroyed.
“Gracias, what is it? This is supposed to be impossible. How are they doing it to us?”
“Happening too fast to scan.” In spite of his torpor, he already had all the answers he needed up on his screen. “Faster-than-light projectile. Flash shows after impact. Vaporize us if we didn’t have the shields. C-vector brings it down to space-normal speed. But then it’s inside the field. She wasn’t built for this.”
A faster— For a moment, her brain refused to understand the words. A faster-than-light projectile. And when it hit the shield, just enough of its energy went off at right angles to the speed of light to slow it down. Not enough to stop it.
As if in mockery, the speakers began to blast again. “Your ship is desired intact. Surrender. Your lives will be spared. You will be granted opportunity to serve as goodlife.”
So exasperated she hardly knew what she was doing, she slapped open a radio channel. “Shut up!” she shouted across the black space between Aster’s Hope and the alien. “Stop shooting! Give us a chance to think
! How can we surrender if you don’t give us a chance to think?”
Gulping air, she looked at Gracias. She felt wild and didn’t know what to do about it. His eyes were dull, low-lidded: he might’ve been going to sleep. Sick with fear, she panted at him, “Do something! You’re the ship’s puter. You’re supposed to take care of her. You’re supposed to have ideas. They can’t do this to my ship!”
Slowly—too slowly—he turned toward her. His neck hardly seemed strong enough to hold his head up. “Do what? Shield’s all we’ve got. Now it isn’t any good. That”—he grimaced—“that thing has everything. Nothing we can do.”
Furiously, she ripped off her restraints, heaved out of her seat so that she could go to him and shake him. “There has to be something we can do!” she shouted into his face. “We’re human! That thing’s nothing but a pile of microchips and demented programming. We’re more than it is! Don’t surrender! Think!”
For a moment, he stared at her. Then he let out an empty laugh. “What good’s being human? Doesn’t help. Only intelligence and power count. Those machines have intelligence. Maybe more than we do. More advanced than we are. And a lot more powerful.” Dully, he repeated, “Nothing we can do.”
In response, she wanted to rage at him, We can refuse to give up! We can keep fighting! We’re not beaten as long as we’re stubborn enough to keep fighting! But as soon as she thought that she knew she was wrong. There was nothing in life as stubborn as a machine doing what it was told.
“Intelligence and power aren’t all that count,” she protested, trying urgently to find what she wanted, something she could believe in, something that would pull Gracias out of his defeat. “What about emotion? That ship can’t care about anything. What about love?”
When she said that, his expression crumpled. Roughly, he put his hands over his face. His shoulders knotted as he struggled with himself.
“Well, then,” she went on, too desperate to hold back, “we can use the self-destruct. Kill Aster’s Hope”—the bare idea choked her, but she forced it out—“to keep them from finding out how the shield generator works. Altruism. That’s something they don’t have.”
Reave the Just and Other Tales Page 34