“Sir?”
“I half expected at least the talkative one to threaten the same thing just now. I hope our medical computers have full data on pregnancies. It may be necessary at some point to sedate them, and I should not like to be responsible for harming the child within.”
The exec had less experience with the masses of humanity in their standard forms and found the whole thing more unnerving.
“I don’t know, sir. Sedation might be quite advisable. In their mental state they are as much a threat to themselves as to anyone. I shall be happy to see them leave.”
“I agree. Have them continuously monitored. Put an experienced security person on them, too. I don’t want a computer deciding what is and isn’t aberrant behavior.”
“Aye, sir.”
The captain looked down at his desktop screen. “It says here we’ll be close enough to shuttle them back home in sixteen days. Let us pray that we can hold out that long!”
III: THE WITCHES OF ERIN
The exec was decidedly not amused.
“All right, Murphy. Straight answers now. Are you all lunatics or failed experiments or just what the fucking hell are they doing in there?”
Murphy had been given a full bath, shave, and clean generic clothing and looked just as much an unmade bed as he had before in spite of that. Still, he’d been sound asleep in his “quarters” when he’d suddenly been rudely awakened by two big, burly marines and almost hauled up seventeen levels to the command and control deck.
Now he wiped sleep blearily from his eyes, and, partly resting on the side of a desk, he strained to focus on the viewing screen in front of them. It was the girls, all right, but he didn’t remember there being nine of ’em…
Now the figures began to come together as his eyes more or less focused, and he gaped at what the duty personnel had been watching for who knew how long.
The three Tara Hibernius girls were sitting on the deck in the middle of one of the two cabins assigned to them, stark naked except for the necklaces each of them wore around their necks, designs stained onto their bodies. They were holding hands and chanting, eyes shut, faces partially raised up as if in some kind of trance. Around them they’d drawn a design using chalk or something which they’d completed after sitting in the middle so that the drawing extended all around them.
“Kinda gettin’ more’n your money’s worth of what normal wimminfolks look like, ain’t you?” he commented dryly.
Commander Sittithong was not amused. “If there is one single thing about those three that can be defined as ‘normal’ by anyone, on any world, anywhere, I have never heard of it,” she responded. “Just what in heaven’s name are they doing?”
Murphy shrugged. “Chanting, seems like,” he responded.
The exec reached out and forcefully pulled the old captain around. “I’ve about had it with you, Captain Murphy! And you can stow that old folksy ethnic act, too. That may get you a few more drinks in spaceport dives, but it means nothing here! Now, just what is this all about?”
Murphy squinted at the screen. “Be damned,” he muttered, more to himself than to the naval officer. “First time I ever seen ’em painted up like that. They all got hold of them damned necklaces, though. First time I seen ’em clear. Emerald, ruby, and turquoise. Strange lookin’ things. I don’t like this. Can you turn up the volume a bit and isolate the chant? What’re they sayin’?”
The exec turned and gave a nod to one of the technicians, who pressed a few controls. The chanting grew much clearer, if no more explicable.
“Power of the universe, come to us!
Father of darkness, heed our prayers.
Send your messengers to heed the call of your brides!
“Gather, darkness! Come from where nothing escapes,
Hear our prayers and extend to us your power!
“Give power from the darkness where no light springs!”
It went on like that, some of it in some sort of tongue-twisting language that was unfamiliar to any of them but which fit the chanting, mostly the same words clearly said over and over again, with occasional added lines of supplication to bizarre names or creatures.
“Come send the goat that eats its young.
“Come from the power where no light springs…”
“Those are prayers, Commander,” Murphy said at last, indicating with a gesture that he didn’t have to hear more. “I’m not really well schooled on it, but apparently they’re praying to their lord and master and his minions to spring from the black holes of the universe and give them the ultimate power. To do what, I don’t even want to think, but I kind of hope that it won’t get beyond that silliness.”
“Prayers! To what deity? Nothing of the faiths of ancient Earth nor the cults that sprang from the colonies, surely.”
“Oh, yes. Old as any of ’em. Maybe older than all but one. That design’s a kind of protection, since their deities can’t even be trusted to not kill their own followers—that stuff about the goat eating her young. Some ancient symbol, and more on their bodies. But it was known on Old Earth, for sure. It’s devil worship, Commander! They’re summoning demons.”
The exec stared at him. “You can’t be serious!”
“Oh, but I am. More importantly, they’re serious. They’re witches, Commander. That’s why they was bein’ burned back on Tara Hibernus. Don’t look so shocked. It’s not that odd. The damned society there is so strict, so fundamentalist if you please, that if you don’t blindly accept it, you’re corrupted. It’s the ultimate rebellion for the young in such a place. They only had three alternatives, you see. Blindly follow the incredibly strict and boring theocracy there or be the opposition, as it were. Mostly it does little harm and lets ’em blow off steam, since the third way is to kill yourself, which many do I’m told. I’d sure do it if I was stuck there, I’ll tell you. I’m from the same ancestral stock and traditions as them people, but they’re way beyond what my folks lived. Sooner or later, of course, most of the young ones pair off and wind up bein’ reabsorbed into that society and that’s the end of that. But these girls, their group or coven or whatever, went a bit far in the pleasures of the dark side and they got knocked up on a world where the powers that be think it’s damned near impossible, almost unthinkable. Musta been a hell of an orgy, huh?”
The exec looked over at the chief tech, who was ahead of her. “Orgy, Commander. A frequent rite of ancient cults going back to the early civilizations of Old Earth involving frenzied singing, dancing, drink and drugs, and wanton and uninhibited sexual activity.”
“I always wanted to attend somebody’s orgy but I never could find one,” Murphy sighed.
“I do not understand all that, but I do understand that it is a demonstration of disobedience and rebellion,” Sittithong commented.
“Of course y’don’t, you manufactured martinet! They engineered the sex right out of your society. Probably the drinking, drugs, and all the rest that make life fun now and then, too.”
“We have songs,” the commander responded, almost defensively. “But, never mind. So they truly were under a death sentence? And you rescued them?”