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“Anybody work with you on it? Maybe before you came to us?”

I had some help, yes. But nobody who could have gone on and finished the project on his own.

“You’re sure?”

Yes. Absolutely.

“All right. That leaves us with the technicians who installed it.”

They wouldn’t be able to figure out the settings. Anyway, you’re forgetting how big everything is out here, Hutch. Even if somebody else had the drive, if they had twenty ships, the chance of any two of them running into each other in this area is just about nil.

“Then how do you explain it? The guy speaks English.”

I can’t explain it. But if you want my advice

“Yes?”

Leave it and let’s go home.

She would have liked to assure the creature she’d be back, but she could think of no quick way to do it.

When they pulled away, minutes later, the eyes were still trained on her.

THE SHIP LAY just outside the wall, its navigation lamps still on. It had remained silent after the original transmission.

It looked like a vehicle humans might have put together. Yet, as they approached, they saw that the hull, armored as it was, possessed a suppleness that placed it ahead of any designs currently in use. It had to be one of ours, had to be. But it was different in a way she couldn’t quite pin down.

And, all that aside, what was it doing here?

“So,” asked Antonio, as Phyl brought them alongside the other ship, “what do we do now?”

The shielding on the Preston covered the main and cargo hatches, but it was designed to open up when needed. Someone standing outside the ship would have no trouble seeing the seams where the armor lifted away. The arrangement on the intruder vessel looked identical.

“I’m not sure. We can’t really go over there and knock on the door.”

“I don’t think I’d want to do that in any case.” Antonio took a long deep breath and shook his head. “I don’t like any part of this.”

Range one hundred meters,” said Phyl. “Still no reaction. Do we want to go closer?

“No. Not for the moment.” She looked past the ship, into the wall, half-expecting to see another eye. But there was only dust and gas, darkening until it became lost in itself. “Matt?”

Go ahead.

“Has anything changed back there?”

Negative.

“It’s still there? The creature?”

Yes, ma’am. Eyes are still open. It probably misses you.

Actually, she thought, it might. Probably been a long time since it had anyone to talk to.

“What do we do now, Hutch?”

“Wish I knew. It would help if we didn’t have to deal with the armor. If we could see into the bridge, we could get a better idea what we’re dealing with.”

“Yeah, well, me, I wish for world peace.” Antonio made an annoyed sound deep in his throat. “If they don’t answer up, I don’t see what we can do.”

I’m getting increased electromagnetic activity,” said Phyl.

“Where? from the ship?”

No. From the cloud.

“Let me see.”

Phyl put the numbers on-screen.

They were going up fast. Hell, they were spiking. “Heads up, Antonio,” she said. She took control of the ship and fired the mains. The ship jerked forward, and they were thrown back into their chairs.

“What’s going on?” asked Antonio.

She heard Matt’s voice, too, but she was preoccupied at the moment.

The cloud was lighting up.

Hutch turned hard to port, went lower, and ran it to full throttle. But a starship is a lumbering thing.

The sky behind them lit up.

Lightning,” said Phyl. “I think it was directed at us.

“Keep the wall on-screen,” she said.

I can’t. Not from this angle. The aft telescopes are sealed.

“Unseal them, Phyl. Come on.”

Working.

She watched the screens. Saw clouds and stars dead ahead. “Matt.”

Listening.

“It attacked us. Stay clear. We are okay.”

The cloud wall appeared on-screen. Glowing. Getting brighter.

She cut to starboard.

Come on.

The sky behind lit up and the ship shuddered. The displays failed, and the lights went off and blinked back on.

Lightning bolt aft,” said Phyl.

One by one, the screens came back.

It’s starting again,” said Phyl. “Energy levels rising.

“Phyl, how much time was there between bolts?”

Thirty-seven seconds, Hutch.

She could hardly move under the pressure of acceleration.

Antonio was clinging to his chair. “Can we outrun it?” he asked.

“A lightning bolt? No.” She was watching the time. Counting the seconds. At thirty-five, she lifted the nose and again moved hard to starboard.

The screens lit up.

That one missed, Hutch. May I congratulate you on your maneuver?

She turned back to port. Headed straight out from the wall, trying to put it as far behind as she could. And she had half a minute again. But the Preston was moving along now at a pretty good clip.

“Can we get clear?” demanded Antonio.

“Sit tight, and I’ll let you know. Give me a countdown, Phyl.

Eleven.

She swerved again. Superluminals weren’t really built for this sort of thing.

Three.

Cut back. Dived.

Held steady, past the end of the countdown. “It did not fire.

Swerved. And as she came out of it, something massive struck the ship. The engines died. The lights went out. Fans stopped running, and the screens went off. She rose slightly against the harness. They’d lost artificial gravity.

It came off the pattern,” said Antonio.

“I know.”

The emergency lights came on. The fans restarted, and the flow of air began again. “I guess it doesn’t play by the rules.” She threw her head back in the chair. Nothing she could have done. It had come down to pure guesswork. “Phyl, what is our status?”

The lights flickered, but stayed on.

“Phyl?”

There was no response.

“She’s down,” said Antonio.

They were drifting in a straight line, an easy target for a second shot. No way the damned thing could miss. Frank, you are a son of a bitch. “Matt, do you read me? We’ve been hit. Stay away from the cloud. Do not try to retrieve us.”

“You really think Frank did this?” asked Antonio. “He’s thousands of kilometers away.”

“Maybe there’s another one here. I don’t know—”

There was no answer from Matt. Damn, she didn’t have enough power to transmit over a distance of four thousand klicks. What was she thinking?

She was suddenly aware of being pushed against her harness.

“What’s going on?” said Antonio.

“We’re slowing down.”

“How’s that happening?” His voice was a notch or two higher than normal.

“I don’t know,” she said. “Maybe we didn’t really get clear of the cloud.” The only thing she could imagine was that something had grabbed them. Was pulling them back. She looked again at the blank screens.

LIBRARY ENTRY

It’s ended, then.

And that cool summer night when you and I

Might have walked together beneath the stars

Will never come.

Sigma Hotel Book