The remaining fragments of Alpha, and the net, floated away into the dark.
Because time was pressing, no immediate attempt was made to return the captains to their respective ships. Miles, in fact, was retained as acting captain on Wendy. Hutch, of course, was in no condition to be sent back to Wildside. Guided from the bridge of the Star, the shuttles were taken into whichever bays were convenient, and, with little more than a day remaining before the collision, the fleet began to withdraw.
By then conditions on the planetary surface had become so turbulent that the orbiting vehicles were themselves at hazard. Marcel guessed that much of the data coming in from the probes had been lost after Wendy's communications went down. This assumption was confirmed by Miles. "They are not a happy group over here," he said.
Beekman sympathized. "You can't really blame them. Some of them have been preparing twenty years for this mission, and they lost a substantial piece of it." He gazed steadily at the banks of screens, which displayed views of the impending collision, taken from an array of satellites.
Marcel really didn't give a damn. He'd been through too much over the two weeks. He was tired and irritable, but they'd gotten Kel-lie and the others back, and that was all he cared about. Chiang Har-mon had died down there. One of Hutch's people had died, one of Nicholson's passengers, and one of his crew. One of Nicholson's pilots had died during the rescue. In the face of that, it was hard to work up too much regret that they had lost some details on the formation of high-pressure fronts during a planetary traffic accident. "We'll do better next time."
Beekman pursed his lips and looked thoughtful. "There'll be no next time. Probably not in the life span of the species."
Too bad, thought Marcel. But he didn't say anything.
It seemed as if the entire atmosphere of Deepsix had become one massive electrical storm. Blizzards swept the equatorial area, and giant hurricanes roared across the Coraggio and the Nirvana. A mountainous tide soared thousands of meters above nominal sea level. The range along the northern coast of Transitoria, which had held back the tides so long, vanished beneath the waters.
The worlds moved inexorably toward each other. But it was a mismatch, thought Hutch, a pebble falling into a pond.
She watched from her bed in the Star's dispensary. She'd required minor surgery for a torn muscle and a broken rib, and they didn't want her moving around for a bit. With his hands wrapped Randy sat off to one side, wearing a shoulder brace. Mac was off somewhere giving an interview; and Kellie was down getting some goodies at the snack bar.
Hutch's link chimed. Canyon's voice: "Hutch, I'll be down to see you later. Meantime, I thought you'd like to know we're a big hit back home. They're a couple days behind, of course. Last we heard, the whole world was listening while the tide broke through and got the whatchamacallits. They think you don't have a chance now. Wait till they see the finish. You guys will be celebrities when you get back."
"Nice to hear," grumbled Nightingale.
"Anyhow, our numbers are through the roof."
"Sounds as if you'll do pretty well yourself, Augie," said Hutch.
"Well, I can't see that it'll hurt my career any." His eyes literally Hashed. "Wait until they get to the lander!"
"Yeah," said Nightingale. "That sure was a hoot."
Canyon kept going: "Incidentally, you folks have acquired a sobriquet back home."
"I'm not sure I want to hear what it is," Hutch said.
"The Maleiva Four."
"By God," said Nightingale, "who thought that up? Magnificent, August. My compliments to the cliche unit."
When he was gone, she looked at Nightingale severely. "You were awfully hard on him. He means well."
"Yep. But he'd have been happier if we'd fallen off the goddam thing."
"Why do you think that?"
"Better story."
Mac came into the room, carrying flowers, which had been grown in the Star nurseries. He beamed down at Hutch and held them out to her. "You look good enough to have for lunch," he said.
She accepted a kiss and smelled the bouquet. They were yellow roses. "Gorgeous. Thanks, Mac."
"For the Golden Girl." He gazed at her. "What are they saying? The medical people?"
"They'll let me up tomorrow." She turned her attention back to Nightingale. "You," she said, "should ease up. Let people do their jobs and don't be such a.crank."
"I enjoy being a crank."
Roiling clouds of immense proportions billowed out of Maleiva Ill's atmosphere. Fireballs erupted and fell back. And erupted again. The entire black atmosphere seemed to be expanding, fountaining into the sky, a burning river beginning to flow toward the placid disk of the gas giant.
"Here it comes," said Mac.
Nightingale nodded. "Everything that's loose anywhere on Deep-six is being ripped out now and sent elsewhere." His voice was quiet. Resigned.
Mac shifted in his chair. "There's no point getting sentimental over a piece of real estate," he said.
Nightingale stared straight ahead. "I was thinking about the lights."
"The lights?" Hutch's brow furrowed.
"I don't think we told you. Forgot in all the rushing around. At Bad News Bay. We saw something out in the water. Signaled back and forth."
"A boat?"
"Don't know what it was."
Steam was pouring off Deepsix. Fire and lightning swirled across the vast expanse of its clouds.
Kellie came back with donuts and coffee.
MacAllister was still there a half hour later when Marcel, Nichol-son, and Beekman came by to see how she was doing. Hutch thought all three looked tired, happy, relieved. They shook hands all around. "We're glad to have you back," Marcel said. "Things looked a little doubtful there for a while."
"Did they really?" asked Mac. "I thought we had it under control all the way."
Nicholson beamed at him. "We're planning a little celebration tomorrow," he said. Hutch caught the flavor of the remark, that dinner with the two captains was an Event, and that they should all feel appropriately honored. But he was trying to do the right thing. And what the hell, it was a small enough failing.
"I'd be delighted to attend," said Mac.
"As would I." Hutch gave him a warm smile.
Marcel introduced Beekman as the manager of the rescue operation. "Saved your life," he added.
Hutch wasn't sure what he meant. "You mean all our lives."
"Yours, specifically. Gunther came up with the zero-gee maneuver."
Tom Scolari called, and his image formed at the foot of her bed. He was wearing dark slacks and a white shirt open to his navel. Sending somebody a message, looked like. "Glad you came through it okay," he said. "We were worried."
"Where are you now, Tom?"
"On Zwick."
"Good. Did you get interviewed?"
"I don't think there's anybody out here who hasn't had a chance to talk on UNN. Listen"-his eyes found hers, and glanced over at Mac-"you guys put on one hell of a show."
"Thanks. We had a lot of help. Not to mention your own. I understand you're a pretty good welder."
"I'll never be without work again."
"Next time you tell me not to do something," she added, "I'll try to take you more seriously."
He grinned and blew her a kiss. "I doubt it."
She woke up in the middle of the night and noticed they were no longer accelerating. It was, finally, over.
EPILOGUE
Cataclysms too vast to be defined as quakes threw forests and mountain ranges skyward, as much as twenty thousand meters, where they were caught between competing gravity wells, and eventually swept off. Tidal effects literally ripped Maleiva III apart. The swirl of gas and debris surrounding the world had become so thick that it blinded the opticals. The placid snow-covered plains around the tower, the baroque temple that had seemed almost Parisian, the lights at Bad News Bay, the memorial and the hexagon, all disintegrated in the general ruin.