“Dickhead!”
“Wanker!” Mark tossed the empty wrapper at Ozzie. “Oh, and traitor, too.”
“I am not a fucking Starflyer agent. Man, why will no one ever pay attention to me?”
“Was that another rhetorical question from the giddy heights of your intellect?”
“I am not a violent person, but if you don’t stop that right now I swear I am going to kick your ass through the cabin wall.”
“Would that be the insults or the shouting I’m to stop?”
Ozzie clenched his fists. Ready to—Just about going to—“Jeez! How did you ever get through our personnel screening program? Nobody in this galaxy could stand working next to you. You are the most goddamn irritating person I have ever met.”
“Was it your charm which impressed Giselle? Or did she just feel sorry for you because of your hairstyle?”
Ozzie’s hand automatically went up to pat at his hair that was floating around like an agitated jellyfish in the cabin’s freefall environment. “This is fashionable, man,” he said in an icy voice.
“Where?”
Mark sounded so genuinely curious it threw Ozzie’s thought processes, preventing him from coming out with a reply. Besides…“Look, we’re getting off track here, man. I’ve apologized like thirty billion times for what happened back there in the dock. I never meant for you to be dragged along.”
“How do you think my kids will cope without me? They’re both under ten, for Christ’s sake. You’ve taken me from them to die alone in interstellar space, and now the Commonwealth is going to lose the war because of your treachery. They’ll have to take flight on the lifeboats. Chased across the galaxy by an alien fiend never knowing if they’ve truly escaped while the rest of their species is systematically hunted down and wiped out. Don’t you have children? Try to remember your feelings for them from before it took over your mind.”
“I am not a fucking Starflyer agent!” Ozzie screamed. He took a moment to calm down. When he glanced over at Mark, he saw a smug grin on the man’s face. “All right, put your superior logical IQ to work on this: What’s the point in me stealing the Charybdis?”
“Is that a Starflyer joke?”
“I’m serious. We’re going to get to Dyson Alpha, what? Six hours before Nigel arrives and turns their star nova. So what exactly is this Starflyer agent going to achieve with that? Is six hours enough time for MorningLightMountain to build a fleet of frigates like this? Tell me, come on, you’re the frigging expert on assembling these babies. Can it be done in six hours?”
“I’m not playing this game.”
“Scared I’m right?”
“You’re such a child.”
The kind of willpower that could only arise from living for three hundred sixty years managed to keep Ozzie’s voice calm and clear. “I am Ozzie Fernandez Isaac; I built the first wormhole generator and I was a midwife to the Commonwealth society that you and your children enjoy. Even if you really believe that part of me is buried under Starflyer conditioning it is still entitled to some respect. And Ozzie Fernandez Isaac is pretty fucking sure that you cannot duplicate this frigate in six hours.”
Mark sighed with reluctance. “No, you can’t.”
“Thank you. And if you can’t do that, you can’t figure out a nova bomb either.”
“You might get a handle on the principles.”
“You might indeed. Good point. The physics is all derivative of existing theories, so yes. You understand how the theory works, like knowing e-equals-m-c-squared is what makes an atom bomb work, not that it tells you how to build one. But you have the notion, and then half an hour later you get to see one in action as good old Nigel turns your star into an expanding sphere of ultra-hard radiation and plasma. So I repeat: What’s the point?”
“MorningLightMountain has other outposts.”
“Which are currently being targeted by the remaining frigates in the firewall operation.” Ozzie took a breath. He was almost in pain from the way Mark was slowly mellowing. “Nigel is going to commit genocide on behalf of our species, and the terrible thing is most of us are going to be cheering him on. We’ll still be alive; well, whoopee-do on that front, but the human race will no longer have a soul. That dies along with MorningLightMountain. Mark, this flight is the only chance we have to retain our humanity. It is hugely risky. Crazy even: I admit that. I’m gambling my life on it because I have that right, and once again I apologize for making you personally part of that gamble. The thing is this is such a gamble that Nigel is totally opposed to it, and I even respect him for that. These are very frightening times, Mark. But I cannot let this tiny little chance slip away from us. I have to try and get the barrier generator up and running again.”
“I see that, sure, but…”
“If I’m a traitor, it doesn’t matter because the human race will survive thanks to Nigel and the ships following us. But, man, think on this: if I’m not a traitor and we reestablish the barrier, then we win, too, and win the right way. Isn’t that worth something to you? Anything?”
The answer was a long time coming; and when Mark did finally speak the words sounded like they were being ripped out painfully. “I dunno. This restarting the generator idea, it sounds like a long shot.”
“Longest in human history. That’s why I’m the one doing it. Come on, dude, you don’t think anybody with a grain of sense is gonna be busting his balls like this, do you?”
“Guess not.” There was the faintest grin on Mark’s face.
“My man.” Ozzie put his hand out for a high-five. Mark stared at it mystified. “Okay,” Ozzie said. “So, like please tell me how I get the quantumbuster launch mechanism to work? Goddamn, it’s been killing me.”
“You mean you couldn’t launch the missile anyway?”
“No,” Ozzie admitted.
There was another long pause, then Mark gave a confident chuckle. “Well well. That makes me captain, doesn’t it?”
“What?”
“Okay, maybe not captain. We split the duty. You keep control of the drive. Give me control of the missiles.”
“What?”
“I can fix the launch mechanism, but if you want me to do it, you first have to give me fire authority.”
“Why would I want to do that?”
“If you take us to the Dark Fortress and find a target inside it, I’ll launch a quantumbuster at it, and I’ll even cheer it on. If you try to deliver this ship and its technology to MorningLightMountain I blow us up. That’s the deal. You trust me, don’t you?”
“Son of a bitch. How close are you to Nigel, a genetic doppelgänger?”
“Do you want your chance at the barrier generator or not?”
Ozzie couldn’t see a way out. “Have you found a solution to the launch system problem?” he asked the SIsubroutine.
“No. According to my analysis routines the system should function. It does not. This is a paradox beyond available processing power to resolve.”
“All right, Mark, you can have access to the weapons systems.”
“You mean control of the weapons systems.”
“Whatever, yeah.” Ozzie’s virtual hands moved across symbols, granting Mark access to the weapons. He watched Mark establish connections into the network, then encrypt the whole weapons section.
“Can you break that?” he asked the SIsubroutine.
“No. It would require more processing power than the ship possesses.”
“Figures,” Ozzie muttered. Data was flowing out of the magazine mechanism control arrays to Mark’s insert.
“What’s that?” Mark queried.
“Just figuring out how you’re going to fix the launcher.”
“It was at an angle.”
“Excuse me?” Ozzie’s virtual vision followed a few small files Mark was now downloading into the array governing the electromuscle arms.