“And bring back some green cheese from Triam IV,” Hatcher continued.
“Yes, Sir,” McNeal said automatically, then twitched and jerked both eyes to his superior’s face. Hatcher grinned, and McNeal returned it wryly.
“Sorry, Sir. I guess I was a bit distracted.”
“Don’t apologize, Algys. I should know better than to crowd you at a time like this.” The admiral shrugged. “Guess I’m a bit excited about your new ship, too. And frustrated at being stuck here in Bia.”
“I understand, Sir. And you’re not really crowding me.”
“The hell I’m not!” Hatcher snorted. “Good luck, Captain.”
“Thank you, Sir.” McNeal tried to hide his relief, but Hatcher’s eyes twinkled as he flipped a casual salute. Then he vanished, and McNeal’s astrogator roused from her neural feeds to look up at him.
“Ship ready to proceed, Sir,” she said crisply.
“Very good, Commander. Take us out of here.”
“Aye, aye, Sir,” Commander Yu replied.
Birhat’s emerald and sapphire gem began to shrink in the display as they headed out at a conservative thirty percent of light-speed, and Imperial Terra’s officers were too busy to note a brief fold-space transmission. It came from the planetoid Dahak, and it wasn’t addressed to any of them, anyway. Instead it whispered to Terra’s central computer for just an instant, then terminated as unobtrusively as it had begun.
“Well, they’re off,” Hatcher’s hologram told Colin. “They’ll drop off a dozen passage crews at Urahan, then move out to probe the Thegran System.”
Colin nodded but said nothing, for he was concentrating on the neural feed he’d plugged into Mother’s scanners. Imperial Terra had to be at least twelve light-minutes from Bia to enter hyper, and he sat silent for the full ten minutes she took to reach the hyper threshold. Then she blinked out, with no more fuss than a soap bubble, and he sighed.
“Damn, Gerald. I wish I was going with them.”
“They’ll be fine. And they’ve got to try their wings sometime.”
“Oh, that’s not my problem,” Colin said with a crooked grin. “I’m not worried—I’m envious. To be that young, just starting out, knowing the entire galaxy is your own private oyster…”
“Yeah. I remember how I felt when Jennifer made her middy cruise. She was cute as a puppy—and she’d have killed me on the spot if I’d said so!”
Colin laughed. Hatcher’s older daughter was attached to Geb’s Reconstruction Ministry, with three system surveys already under her belt, and she was about due for promotion to lieutenant senior grade.
“I guess all the good ones start out confident they can beat anything the universe throws at them,” he said. “But you know what scares me most?”
“What?” Hatcher asked curiously.
“The fact that they may just be right.”
The Traffic Police flyer screamed through the Washington State night at Mach twelve. That was pushing the envelope in atmosphere, even for a gravitonic drive, but this one looked bad, and the tense-faced pilot concentrated on his flying while his partner drove his scan systems at max.
An update came in from Flight Control Central, and the electronics officer cursed as he scanned it. Jesus! An entire family—five people, three of them kids! Accidents were rare with Imperial technology, but when they happened they tended to happen with finality, and he prayed this one was an exception.
He turned back to his sensors as the crash site came into range and leaned forward, as if he could force them to tell him what he wanted to see.
He couldn’t, and he slumped back in his couch.
“Might as well slow down, Jacques,” he said sadly.
The pilot looked sideways at him, and he shook his head.
“All we’ve got is a crater. A big one. Looks like they must’ve gone in at better than Mach five … and I don’t see any personnel transponders.”
“Merde,” Sergeant Jacques DuMont said softly, and the screaming flyer slowed its headlong pace.
Underway holo displays had always fascinated Sean, especially because he knew how little they resembled what a human eye would actually have seen.
Under the latest generation Enchanach drive, for example, a ship covered distance at eight hundred and fifty times light-speed, yet it didn’t really “move” at all. It simply flashed out of existence here and reappeared over there. The drive built its actual gravity masses in less than a femtosecond, but the entire cycle took almost a full trillionth of a second in normal space between transpositions. That interval was imperceptible, and there was no Doppler effect to distort vision, since during those tiny periods of time the ship was effectively motionless, but any human eye would have found it impossible to sort out the visual stimuli as its point of observation shifted by two hundred and fifty-four million kilometers every second.
So the computers generated an artificial image, a sort of tachyon’s-eye view of the universe. The glorious display enfolded the bridge in a three-hundred-sixty-degree panorama whose nearer stars moved visibly and gave humanity the comforting illusion of moving through a comprehensible universe.
The imaging computers confronted different parameters at sublight speeds. The Fifth Imperium’s gravitonic drive had a maximum sublight velocity of a smidgen over seventy percent of light-speed (missiles could top .8 c before their drives lost phase lock and Bad Things happened) and countered mass and inertia. That conferred essentially unlimited maneuverability and allowed maximum velocity to be attained very quickly—not instantly; a vessel’s mass determined the efficiency curves of its drive—without turning a crew into anchovy paste. But unlike a ship under Enchanach drive, sublight ships did move relative to the universe, and so had to worry about things like relativity. Time dilation became an important factor aboard them, and so did the Doppler effect. To the unaided eye, stars ahead tended to vanish off the upper end of the visible spectrum, while those astern red-shifted off its bottom.
Sean found the phenomenon eerily beautiful, and he’d loved the moments when his instructors had allowed him to switch the computer imaging out of the display to enjoy the “starbow” on training flights. Unfortunately, it wasn’t very useful, so the computers and FTL fold-space scanners normally were called upon once more to produce an artificially “real” view.
Then there was hyper-space. Imperial Terra, like all Battle Fleet planetoids, had three distinct drive systems: sublight, Enchanach, and hyper, and her top speed in hyper was over thirty-two hundred times that of light. Yet “hyper-space” was more a convenient label for something no human could envision than an accurate description, for it consisted of many “bands”—actually a whole series of entirely different spaces—whose seething tides of energy were lethal to any object outside a drive field. Even with Imperial technology, human eyes found h-space’s gray, crawling nothingness … disturbing. Vertigo was almost instantaneous; longer exposure led to more serious consequences, up to and including madness. Ships in normal space could detect the hyper traces of ships in hyper; ships in hyper were blind. They could “see” neither into normal space nor through hyper-space, and so their displays were blank.
Or, more precisely, they showed other things. Aboard Imperial Terra, Captain McNeal preferred holo projections of his native Galway coast, but the actual choice depended on who had the watch. Commander Yu, for example, liked soothing, abstract light sculptures, while Captain Susulov, the exec, had a weakness for Jerusalem street scenes. The only constant was the holographic numerals suspended above the astrogator’s station: a scarlet countdown showing the time remaining to emergence at the ship’s programmed coordinates.