“Is this a joke?” I asked. It was a stupid question. She wasn’t given to joking. She shook her head.
“If I’m reading this right,” I said, “I’m a Star-Captain.”
“As of this moment,” she confirmed. “That’s the fastest rise through the ranks any member of the Star Force ever had. Faster than any battlefield commission. When I drafted you before, you were just some slob in the wrong place at the wrong time. Now, you’re an expert, and the Star Force intends to look after you—after its fashion.”
There’d be time to ask what kind of an expert I was at a later time. For the moment, there were more appealing aspects of the situation.
“It means,” I said, with a little grin, “that you don’t outrank me.”
She shook her head again, and waved the flimsy that she’d kept. “As of now,” she said, “I’m a lieutenant-colonel. I’m having our new uniforms sent out from the ship, so we can be properly dressed for dinner.”
I shook my head helplessly. “Why?” I demanded.
“Mother Earth needs us,” she said. “Very badly, it seems. I’ve been told that the political future of the human race may depend on us. Even allowing for military hyperbole, it signifies that our political masters are anxious for us to play ball. We aren’t pawns any more, Star-Captain Rousseau—we’ve been promoted to pieces.”
I could tell that she wasn’t trying to be infuriating. She didn’t have John Finn’s personality defects, though she had a fine collection of her own. I didn’t want to stand there repeating the word “why?” like a parrot, so I just waited for her to get around to giving me the news. She obviously approved of my sense of discipline, because she got straight to the point.
“A matter of days after you left Asgard,” she told me, “Skychain City was invaded. The battle, such as it was, lasted a few days—the Tetrax peace officers weren’t equipped to cope with a massive incursion of hostile troops. The skychain was smashed. The satellite was badly damaged, and it went into a decaying orbit. Everything that could fly picked up survivors, and a fleet of small ships crammed with people dispersed as quickly as possible. The Tetrax have asked for help—they want everyone who has experience down in the levels. Most of all, they want you. Mother Earth wants to make sure they get you. Relations with the Tetrax have been strained because of the war, and the UN men are paranoid about the reduction of our moral credit to zero within the galactic community. They probably see this as a key opportunity to get into the good books of the galactic big boys. There’s even been talk of the UN hiring out the Star Force to retake Asgard’s surface for them. Where else in the galaxy can they find experienced fighters kitted out with so much heavy metal?”
“They don’t like doing their own dirty work,” I murmured, recalling Finn’s uncharitable observations. “But somehow I can’t quite see them going for a deal like that. They have too much pride to want to be seen accepting help from barbarians. How the hell did they get taken by surprise? The Tetrax know everything that’s going on in the whole galactic arm. And who could possibly raise a fleet to take Asgard away from them . . . ah!” Inspiration dawned before I made a fool of myself by having to wait for an answer. “They came from inside! We finally pricked the bubble, and we tapped into a hornet’s nest. Oh, Jesus!”
“It’s rumoured,” she said, carefully, “that some of the Tetrax think it’s our fault. Yours and mine. They think that our little expedition into the lower levels was a trifle reckless, and may have given the people we contacted an unfavourable impression of galactics in general.”
That sounded ominous. I was quick to tell myself that it hadn’t been my fault. Not mine at all. Maybe Susarma Lear’s, but not mine.
“How many people were killed?” I asked her, my throat a little dry.
“No way to know,” she said. “No communication with the invaders at all. We can only assume that they took over the existing political and manufacturing apparatus of the city without undue difficulty and without the need for excessive bloodshed—they can’t have met much real resistance, and the Tetrax ordered their own people to surrender as soon as they saw what the score was. The Tetrax will presumably tell us the latest news when we get back to Asgard. Leopard Shark’s the fastest ship we have.”
“It really could be our fault, you know,” I said, unhappily.
“I know,” she replied calmly. She didn’t seem quite as arrogant and unrepentant as I remembered her. The success of her mission—or what she thought was success—had taken the edge off her temper and allowed her to wind down.
“Are you sure the Tetrax want to enlist us? They might just want to string us up.”
“What do you think?” she retorted.
I thought that the Tetrax would be very, very worried. As far as I could judge, the last thing they’d want would be to go to war against Asgard. Not just because it wouldn’t be the civilized thing to do, but because they’d be scared of losing. If the builders of Asgard were behind this invasion, then the Tetrax had every reason to believe that they were facing a race whose science was very advanced indeed. Even if it wasn’t the builders—because the people Myrlin had fallen in with weren’t the builders, if what he’d told me was true—they could still be far in advance of any galactic culture. I figured that the Tetrax would want to tread extremely carefully, and that they might well feel that someone like me, with expertise in the levels, could be very useful to them.
To Susarma Lear, I said: “I suppose they’ll want to send us back to Asgard. It’s my guess they need spies, and they need people who know their way around down there. They’ll want to drop us somewhere on the surface, away from the city, so that we can go underground, and make our way back toward the city in level two or three. Then they’ll want us to learn everything we can about who, what, where, and why.”
“That’s the way my superiors have it figured, too,” she said. “They think we’re fortunate to get the job. I suppose there aren’t many men with your experience who weren’t on Asgard at the time of the attack. Lucky you left Asgard when you did.”
I wasn’t so sure that “lucky” was the right word. In any case, I may have left, but I certainly hadn’t got away.
“I don’t like it,” I said. “I don’t like it at all.”
“They guessed that you wouldn’t,” she pointed out. “That’s why they put the word out that you were to be arrested as soon as you made any kind of landfall. They knew you were already rich. They felt they had to make you an offer you couldn’t refuse.”
She had the grace not to look too pleased about it. She wasn’t about to issue an official apology on behalf of the Star Force, but she’d made it pretty clear that she didn’t agree with her superiors. I wondered whether that was just a bit of diplomatic chicanery—Sorry, Rousseau, the big men have it in for you but I’m your pal!—but her expression and her manner implied that she meant what she said.
“Suppose,” I said, speculatively, “that I say no.”
“Do you have any idea what the penalty is for disobeying orders—given that the state of emergency is still in force?”
I hazarded a guess that I might get shot.
She passed a hardened hand through her stiff, pale hair, and opined that indeed I might.
She pursed her lips, and stared me full in the face with her big blue eyes. I could imagine any number of ways she could have used that stare while building her career—she had a very powerful personality.
“We’re in this together,” she told me.
A more impressionable man than me might have been quite won over by a remark like that. Some men go for domineering women, and even those who don’t can get a certain satisfaction out of having to be around someone as strikingly handsome as Susarma Lear. Personally, I’d been on my own far too long to be suckered by that kind of attraction. I thought.