"For you the war is over, my friend," Sobroskin informed him. "In fact, everything is over. It’s a shame that you did not find Bruno up to your standards. It’s quite luxurious compared to where you will be going." Sverenssen’s face writhed with anger, but he still seemed too dazed to make any reply.
A sergeant crossed the room, saluted, and reported to Shearer. "No casualties, sir. Just some cuts and bruises, mainly on the other side. None of them got away. The whole house is secured."
Shearer nodded. "Start getting them out right away. Let’s get those landers away before they’re spotted by the surveillance. Where are Verikoff and the CIA people?" Even as he spoke, another group of figures pushed into the room. Sverenssen’s head jerked around, and his jaw dropped as he heard the name. Verikoff halted a few feet away from him and stood eying him defiantly.
"So, it’s you . . ." Sverenssen hissed. "You . . . traitor! " He lunged forward instinctively and was promptly doubled over by a sharp blow delivered to the solar plexus by a rifle butt. As he sagged two of the troopers caught him and held him.
"He carries the key to the facility on him at all times," Verikoff said. "It should be on a chain around his neck." Shearer ripped open the front of Sverenssen’s shirt, found the key, removed it, and passed it to Verikoff.
"You’ll pay for these atrocities, Colonel," Sverenssen wheezed weakly. "Mark my words. I’ve ruined bigger men than you."
"Atrocities?" Shearer turned his head aside quizzically. "Do you know what he’s talking about, Sergeant?"
"I’ve no idea, sir."
"Did you see anything?"
"Didn’t see a thing, sir."
"Why do you think this man is holding his stomach?"
"Probably indigestion, sir."
As Sverenssen was hustled away to join his staff, Shearer turned to Clifford Benson. "I’m pulling my men out right away, apart from ten that I’ll leave as guards for the house. I guess it’s ready for you to take over."
"You did a fine job, Colonel," Benson acknowledged. He turned to the others. "Well, time’s precious. Let’s get on with it."
They stood aside while Verikoff led the way into the passage toward the office wing, and followed a few paces behind. At the end of the passage he came to a large, solid-looking, wooden door. "I am not sure how far JEVEX’s visual field extends," he called to them. "It would be better if you kept well back." The others fell back into a small dense huddle with Hunt, Sobroskin, Lyn, Benson, and Pacey together at the front. "I need a minute to compose myself," Verikoff told them. They waited while he brushed a few specks of soot from his clothes, smoothed his hair, and wiped his face with a handkerchief. "Do I look as if all is normal?" he asked them.
"Fine," Hunt called back.
Verikoff nodded, turned to face the door, and unlocked it. Then he drew a deep breath, grasped the handle, and pushed the door open. The others caught a glimpse of elaborate instrumentation panels and banks of gleaming equipment, and then Verikoff stepped inside.
Chapter Thirty-Four
The strain on the Command Deck of the Shapieron had been hovering around breaking point for days. Eesyan was standing in the center of the floor gazing up at the main display screen, where an enormous web of interconnected shapes and boxes annotated with symbols showed the road map into JEVEX that ZORAC had laboriously pieced together from statistical analyses and pattern correlations of the responses it had obtained to its probe signals. But ZORAC was not getting through to the nucleus of the system, which it would have to penetrate if it was going to disrupt JEVEX’s h-jamming capability. Its attempts had been repeatedly detected by JEVEX’s constantly running self-checking routines and thwarted by automatically initiated correction procedures. The big problem now was trying to decide how much longer they could allow ZORAC to try before the tables of fault-diagnostic data accumulating inside JEVEX alerted its supervisory functions that something very abnormal was happening. Opinions were more or less evenly divided between Eesyan’s scientists from Thurien, who already wanted to call the whole thing off, and Garuth and his crew, who seemed willing to risk almost anything to pursue what was beginning to look, the more Eesyan saw of it, like some kind of death wish.
"Probe Three’s function directive has been queried for the third time," one of the scientists announced from a nearby station. "Header response analysis indicates we’ve triggered a veto override again." He looked across at Eesyan and shook his head. "It’s too dangerous. We’ll have to suspend probing on this channel and resume regular traffic only."
"Activity pattern correlates with a new set of executive diagnostic indexes," another scientist called. "We’ve initiated a high-level malfunction check."
"We have to shut down on Three," another, standing by Eesyan, pleaded. "We’re too exposed as it is."
Eesyan stared grimly up at the main screen as a set of mnemonics unrolled down one side to confirm the warning.
"What’s your verdict, ZORAC?" he asked.
"I’ve reduced interrogation priority, but the fault flags are still set. It’s tight, but it’s the nearest we’ve come so far. I can try it one more time and risk it, or back off and let the chance go. It’s up to you."
Eesyan glanced across to where Garuth was watching tensely with Monchar and Shilohin. Garuth clamped his mouth tight and gave an almost imperceptible nod. Eesyan drew a long breath. "Give it a try, ZORAC," he instructed. A hush fell across the Command Deck, and all eyes turned upward toward the large screen.
In the next second or two a billion bits of information flew back and forth between ZORAC and a Jevlenese communications relay hanging distantly in space. Then, suddenly, a new set of boxes appeared in the array. The symbols inside them were etched against bright red backgrounds that flashed rapidly. One of the scientists groaned in dismay.
"Alarm condition," ZORAC reported. "General supervisor alert triggered. I think we just blew it." It meant that JEVEX knew they were there.
Eesyan looked down at the floor. There was nothing to say. Garuth was shaking his head dazedly in mute protest as if refusing to accept that this could be happening. Shilohin moved a step nearer and rested a hand on his shoulder. "You tried," she said quietly. "You had to try. It was the only chance."
Garuth was staring around him as if he had just awakened from a dream. "What was I thinking?" he whispered. "I had no right to do this."
"It had to be done," Shilohin told him firmly.
"Two objects a hundred thousand miles out, coming this way fast," ZORAC reported. "Probably defensive weapons coming to check out this area." It was serious. The screen hiding the Shapieron would never stand up to probing at close range.
"How long before we register on their instruments?" Eesyan asked hoarsely.
"A couple of minutes at most," ZORAC replied.
In the Jevlenese War Room, Imares Broghuilio stood gazing at a display showing the deployment of his task force in the vicinity of Thurien. Although the ships were in VISAR-controlled space, VISAR had not jammed their communications beams to Jevlen. No doubt the Thuriens had guessed that the force had standing orders to commence offensive action automatically if it was interfered with in any way. At least, they hadn’t risked it, which was precisely the kind of reaction he had expected from a timid and overcautious race like the Ganymeans. Again his instincts had proved infallible. Exposed at last for what they were, the Thuriens had shown again that they had nothing with which to oppose the combination of nerve, strength, and willpower that he had forged. A deep sense of satisfaction and fulfillment swept through him with the realization that the issue was already as good as decided.