…then it all went silent. A deep deep quiet. And I felt myself shift under the straps that bound me to my chair, as if my own weight no longer held me down.
"Artificial gravity’s gone," Uclod said in a whisper. "We just passed the edge of the field."
I opened my eyes. Through the clear membrane, I saw we were not quite separate from Starbiter. we poised half-in, half-out of a great rupture in her side, as if we were an egg she was trying to lay. In one direction was the blackness of space, with stars smearily visible through vacuum-dried smudges of Zarett blood. In the other direction was noble Starbiter herself, her damaged body straining for one last push to shove us free. I could see muscles bunch and contract… then with a great heave, we were hurled tumbling away.
My friend Starbiter vanished is a heartbeat — an FTL cannonball shooting through the night. Seeing with my naked eyes rather than long-range scanners, I could barely make out the stick-ship… but there was no way to miss the flash of blazing light that reached us thirty seconds later. For a moment, I feared the Shaddill had fired their unconsciousness ray again; then I realized I had just seen Starbiter’s death as she bravely struck our enemies.
Whatever she had hit, it made a fine explosion.
Grief And New Burdens
The stick-ship was not obliterated, but it did not come any closer — it simply remained hanging in space, an image no bigger than my thumbnail.[6] From this range, there was no way to guess the extent of the damage… but I had faith Starbiter would have aimed for the most vulnerable spot she could find.
[6] — For examining distant objects, it is very convenient to be able to see through your thumb, nail and all. The curve of my nail gives a slight magnification; if I line up my thumbs at the right distance in front of my eye, I can get a telescope effect.
She was an excellent Zarett.
Beside me, Uclod snuffled into his hands. Lajoolie did not weep; but she rested her fingers on her husband’s shoulder and stared at him with sympathy. At last, the little man took a shuddering breath. "She died alone."
"She did it for us," Lajoolie told him. "She did it gladly."
"But she died alone!" He pounded one hand on his chair, then turned around sharply to glare at Nimbus. "She was your mate, for God’s sake. Why didn’t you go with her?"
A ripple passed through the cloud man’s body. "I offered to," Nimbus replied, "but she wouldn’t permit it. She said I had a higher responsibility."
All this time, the cloud man had been clotted around the chair beside me. Now he oozed away from it, revealing what he had shielded with his body during our bouncing passage through Starbiter’s guts.
Nestled on the seat was a tiny ball half the size of my fist. Its exterior had the same stringy gray texture as Starbiter herself… but very delicate, the strings as thin as hairs and the gray more fragile than frost.
"She’s very young to be separated from her mother," Nimbus said. "But Starbiter insisted; and I swear I will take good care of our daughter."
The fog of his body billowed back around the chair, swaddling the baby Zarett like a protective blanket.
11: WHEREIN I MAKE FIRST CONTACT WTTH THE HUMAN RACE
Snared
One second, there was only darkness in front of us; then there was the slim white baton of aTechnocracy vessel stretched across the stars, its FTL field wagged oat behind it in a long milky tail, like a well-fed eel drifting lazily in a starry river’s currents.
"We should speak greetings to the humans, I said, "we should assure them we are sentient citizens."
"Can’t," Uclod answered, wiping his nose with his bare wrist.
"Without Starbiter," Lajoolie told me, "we have no communication system. We can transmit or receive."
Uclod gave a snort that threatened to degenerate once again into weeping… so I said nothing more.
Slowly, the navy ship came about — the knobby ball on its nose swung away from us, until all we could see was the round cross-section of the ship’s hind end. The FTL field swished its tail in our faces like an ill-mannered cat. Then a bright red beam shot toward us, shining pinkish light through the clear membranes that served as our windows."
"That’s it then," Uclod said in a hoarse voice. "They’ve grabbed us."
"Better them than the Shaddill," I told him — hoping my words were true.
"Yeah, well… I won’t be the first Unorr sent to a prison planet."
"We can survive it," Lajoolie said. "And thanks to Admiral York, your family knows all the places the High Council hides political prisoners. Your cousins will rescue as eventually."
Uclod’s tips tilted up in the ghost of a smile. "There is that." Then he turned his gaze back to the ship outside.
Coming Aboard
The red beam worked like a rope, reeling us toward the navy ship. I wondered if we would feel anything as we passed through the edge of the milky FTL field… but there was only the softest jerk forward, and a tiny bit of dizziness wherein my toes felt momentarily tingly.
Ahead of us, a great round door opened in the rear of the ship — almost big enough to have swallowed Starbiter whole, so our single section of lung slipped inside easily. The instant we crossed the threshold, gravity returned; we slammed down hard onto a metal floor, bounced once, and juddered forward until we jolted to a stop against the far wall. Hmmph, I thought, these navy humans are clumsy. Either that, or they are intentionally treating us coarsely because they are great arrogant bullies.
Uclod let out his breath. "Okay… okay… okay…" He was talking to himself more than the rest of us. "Okay, we’re here." He glanced at me. "And we’re going to mind our P’s and Q’s, right, missy?"
"I am always most courteous. Except to fools and crazed people."
"Damn it, toots, you aren’t filling me with confidence."
He reached behind himself and did something to the back of his chair. The straps holding him went slack, but did not withdraw into the chair as they had done before; I suppose the retraction mechanisms would not work now that we had been disconnected from Starbiter. With straps sagging around him, Uclod leaned toward my seat and loosened my bonds too. He said, "You’re on your own, sweet-knees," then turned to untie Lajoolie.
While I worked to free myself, the navy ship closed its hatch behind us, sealing us in completely. My view through the membrane walls was smudged with pinkish Zarett blood; but I could see we had been deposited in a large chamber with multicolored trees painted on the walls. The walls themselves appeared to be white plastic with a glossy sheen… all except a section high up on the back, which was rose-tinted glass. I assumed there were important navy people on the other side of that window, staring down and discussing our fates. From my current angle, however, I could see nothing up there but a bank of metal machines.
Lights on the navy ship’s ceiling suddenly grew brighter, and the membrane walls around us made ominous crinkling sounds. "Our hosts are pressurizing the transport bay," Uclod said. "Any second now, the place’ll be swarming with Security mooks."
Apparently, a mook was a humorless person wearing olive body armor and brandishing a truncheon or stun-pistol with great officiousness. A troop of such persons clattered into the chamber with bustling self-importance, racing to take up positions around our little chunk of Starbiter and training their weapons upon us in a most aggressive manner.