Giacomo curled asleep in a rear corner, hand reflexively grasping a net.
“Martin’s back,” Joe announced. Hans shivered and looked around.
“Good,” he said.
The projections showed planetary cinders, wreaths of fading plasma, oblong chunks of moons, seed structures scored and headless and broken like sticks.
Hans kept his shrewd and weary eyes on Martin, evaluating, smiling faintly. “How are you feeling?”
“Okay,” Martin said. He had never imagined they would ever summon such destruction.
“Kind of stirring, isn’t it?” Hans said, nodding at the projections.
Martin shook his head.
“Hard to take it all in, sometimes,” Hans said. “I’ve spent hours up here just… assessing damage, looking for something we haven’t destroyed. It’s complete. Last two days, even Sleep has broken up.” He pointed to a large image of scattered masses, some dark, some flickering with light, floating in a gray, hazy void. Within the debris, a piece of what must have been crust, thousands of miles wide, rippled like fabric, its edges crumbling away. “No more staircase gods.”
Martin forced himself to breathe again. The intake of breath sounded like a groan. Hans chuckled. “Glad to see you’re impressed.”
Martin shook his head. Tides of conflicting emotion pulled him one way, then another. We’ve done the Job. How do we know? We’ve done it. It’s over.
“Whenever you’re ready to lend a hand, there’s a lot of scut work to get done,” Hans said. “We’re taking a break now. Ship is on relaxed alert. You should have seen us at the peak. Every Wendy and Lost Boy had their hands on some weapon or another. Giacomo and the ships’ minds… the ships’ minds, mostly, once the evidence was in… really went to town on new weapons. Long-range noach conversions, quark matter pitfalls, spin shattering, they made a whole new arsenal.”
Did they? Or had the ships’ minds kept them hidden, waiting for necessity?
“We sent out fifteen craft, mostly for reconnaissance. We got twelve of them back.”
Martin nodded, eyes still fixed on the abstract complexity of Sleep’s corpse, muted colors horribly beautiful. He could not connect the debris with what he had seen on the two journeys to Sleep’s surface. Somewhere in the dust, scattered atoms of Salamander and Frog, the babar, the red joint-tentacle creature that had crawled up onto their disk ferry for a look.
Trillions.
Hans motioned for Martin to come closer. “I’ve got my suspicions,” he said as Martin laddered forward and hung beside him. “I think the moms held back on us at first. Maybe we’ve been lied to all along. But frankly I don’t give a shit. In the end, they gave us the tools, and that’s what counts.”
Giacomo stirred, opened his eyes, and saw Martin. “Hakim didn’t make it. Erin. Cham.” Giacomo nodded and set his lips, then shook his head.
“I know,” Martin said. Resentful that he could be expected to react. He could not feel grief yet. None of this seemed real. He expected to wake back on Dawn Treader and know they still had the Job ahead of them.
Giacomo blinked slowly. “We saved Jennifer,” he said. His eyes seemed darker, deeper, wrapped in exhausted, bruised flesh. “She’ll be all right.”
Martin shouldered Hans to peer into Hans’ display. Hans made space for him without complaint.
“It’s done,” Giacomo said. He shook his head in disbelief. “It was a shell. Sixty percent of what we saw was fake matter. We think there were only four real planets. Sleep was one of the real ones.”
“Don’t cheapen our victory,” Hans said.
“It was just a shell,” Giacomo repeated. “We found the projectors, we figured out how to make them echo our energy, subvert the system from within… we found a few points where we could start chain reactions… We couldn’t have done it before. It wasn’t nothing and it wasn’t easy. We used up nearly all our fuel.”
“Real fireworks,” Hans said. “Did you see it?”
“Is there enough real mass, are there enough volatiles for us to refuel?” Martin asked.
“Plenty,” Hans said. Martin looked to Giacomo for a second opinion.
“We’ll have enough,” Giacomo said.
Hans reached out and grabbed Martin’s shoulder, fingers hard and painful. He shook Martin lightly. “You going to fault me for this?”
Martin looked aggrieved, or perhaps simply confused.
Hans smiled. “We can go marry a planet now.”
“We can’t leave yet, actually,” Giacomo said. “We have to finish the examination—”
“Autopsy,” Joe said from the rear.
“Make sure it’s dead. Do some research,” Giacomo continued. “The moms need a death certificate. We still haven’t talked about being released. We don’t know where we’re going—”
“Shit,” Hans said. “Let’s savor the moment. We’ll have time enough for the bureaucratic stuff later.”
Giacomo seemed not to hear him. “We’ve got to transfer Greyhound’s Brothers to Shrike.”
“Shrike stayed out of it,” Hans said. “Can you believe it? They didn’t do a thing.”
“I didn’t do a thing,” Martin said.
“You opened the door, Martin.”
Giacomo agreed. “You put yourselves in much more danger than we did. You lost many more…” He saw Martin’s expression and lifted his eyebrows, cocked his head. “Sorry.”
“We should hold a service. Honor the dead,” Martin said.
Hans did not answer; calling up projections, baring his teeth in a grimacing smile, shaking his head in victorious wonder. “Look at that,” he murmured. “Look… at… THAT.”
Eye on Sky, Double Twist, Rough Tail, Strong Cord, and Green Cord had all agreed to Martin’s request for a meeting in the Brothers’ recovery quarters.
He visited Paola Birdsong in her quarters to ask that she interpret for him again.
Paola had spent less time in space than Martin and Ariel, fewer than eighteen days, but she had been with Strong Cord and Green Cord, and Joe told Martin that the time had been very hard for her. None of the braids had held together; she had been alone for eighteen days with twenty-eight hungry, confused cords.
“At least they didn’t chew on me,” she said, her voice weak and rough. She had thinned considerably, but her color was good and she moved without apparent pain. “I’m fit enough to work. I never do eat much.”
Martin smiled admiringly. “You’re a tough one. My joints still ache.”
“Have you visited Ariel?” Paola asked.
He shook his head. “I asked, but she’s in seclusion. We spent a lot of time together. I’m not sure she wants to see me again.”
“She’s been sweet on you for months,” Paola said.
“We’ve been lovers,” Martin admitted.
Paola raised her eyebrows. “Better than having cords squirm all around you,” she said. “I’m glad it was me. Anybody else might have come unglued. Is Ariel going to join Rosa’s people and go with Shrike?”
Martin shook his head. “I don’t know.”
“I’m thinking about it,” Paola said. “You?”
“Hans got it done,” Martin said.
Paola sucked in her lips dubiously, decided against arguing the point, and took his arm. “Let’s go,” she said.
Eye on Sky and the other Brothers resembled bundles of dry sticks. Recovery was harder for the Brothers; the cords had to heal themselves, which meant frequent disassembly and individual care for each cord.