V
Immediately after the needle recovery, the Amaterasu withdrew and began the maneuvers to move into position for the second attack.
Ghenji had appreciated Rokujo’s company the evening after the first attack… but he did not see her again until the evening meal the following ship-day. She was looking for him, though, as she entered the wardroom.
“How is Kashiwagi?” he asked.
“He’s under suspension. There’s no way to tell now, not until they bring him out when we return. How are you?”
“Concerned. Now that I’ve thought about it, there should have been more defenders at the last installation.”
They settled near the end of the second table.
“You think there’ll be more at the next?”
“Maybe they thought we’d attack it first.” He shook his head. “Enough of that. Do you prefer the art of calligraphy, representation, or actuality?” That should spark some discussion, since it had been more than a little controversial on Kunitsu just before they had left, in part because one of the “art-monks” had used a molecular shredder to destroy an entire actuality exhibit at the national museum at Oharano, claiming that the actuality school did not practice art, but merely plagiarized reality.
“I tend toward representation.” She smiled. “Especially when embellished by calligraphy…”
As she talked, occasionally gesturing, turning her hand, in the indirect light of the mess, Ghenji thought he saw the faintest pattern of white on her white skin. White on white, almost diamond-like, or… he wasn’t quite certain. He thought there might be the same pattern on her neck as well, but then again…
Much, much later, as they lay there together in Ghenji’s cubicle, he did not wish to think about the next day. He’d never really worried about missions and duty, not before he’d met Rokujo. So he tried to think of something, anything, that would divert her… and him.
“You said you were the snow-woman… and so did one of the techs…” Ghenji didn’t want to turn his statement into a question.
“That’s because of my billet, and my name. The name is the same as one from an old legend, and… you know what I do… I’m responsible for bringing people out of suspension, out of the cold… or putting them into it, if necessary.” She absently licked her lips, red, but thin, and, as he had discovered, more than mobile.
Ghenji couldn’t help watching closely. They were very close, and when she’d done that, it had looked to him almost as though she’d flicked her tongue—a rather pointed tongue. He wanted to shake his head. That wasn’t possible. “And the white hair?”
She just shrugged in that incredibly sinuous and sensual fashion that fascinated him. “The hair goes a long ways back, to Old Earth at least. It’s always run in my family. I’ve been told the women are an odd mixture.”
“What else runs in your family?” Ghenji tried to keep his tone light. “Besides passion?” He grinned.
“Jealousy.” She bent forward and nibbled his ear. “We don’t share. Ever.”
That was fine with Ghenji. Then he thought. “What about duty? You do have to share me with duty.”
“You’re fortunate. One of my ancestors didn’t understand that. I do… mostly.” She wrapped her arms around him, coiling herself about him.
At that moment, Ghenji had no more interest in biographical questions.
When he woke, she was gone.
VII
Once more, Flight Captain Ghenji Yamato waited in his needle, monitoring the net. Within his armor, he felt hot and clammy, yet cold and chill. Why? What had happened to the warrior-monk?
Kay-four, stand by for release.
Standing by, Sunbase control, he pulsed back.
Launch four!
The sudden acceleration slammed Ghenji and his armor into the needle’s couch as the Amaterasu’s mass drivers hurled his needle out and away. He and the remaining two needles of his flight slashed “upward” at an angle toward the second component of the Mogulate solar engineering facility. Ghenji checked vectors and relative speeds. Sunbase control, affirm, kay-four on-line.
He forced himself to concentrate on the mental display, while he kept checking the EDI and detectors for the first signs of the Parthindian defenders. Less than twelve minutes later, he had both visual and full EDI on the Mogulate defenses—and he didn’t like what he saw. There were close to forty hot-scouts comprising a defense net with four energy-screen hexagons, and all were lined up almost perfectly to block the Amaterasu’s needles.
He mentally checked the options, scanned the offshoots, and pulsed to his flight, Kay-four, course change follows… Execute… NOW!
The two quick heading changes would do nothing to the flight’s projected target release point, but they would change the angle of penetration of the defense screen—enough, Ghenji hoped, to allow a successful torp release. He wasn’t so sure about whether they could correct enough afterwards, assuming they did penetrate, to regain a departure vector that would allow successful recovery.
There were no real gaps in the defense screens, not given the speeds and vectors involved, and Ghenji angled his needle toward the lowest energy concentration level in the screens with the least course deviation possible. Then, just in the nanosecond when the needle impacted the screens, the system shifted all power to ablation and defense.
The needle was through the Mogulate defenses, and nothing lay between it and the second hollowed-out asteroid.
Ghenji released all four torps.
In his mental display, ahead of him, his screens showed far fewer energy lines impacting the Parthindian installation than during the first mission and, behind him, far greater numbers of energy flares that had once been Republic attack needles.
At that instant, the EDI screen blanked in overload protection. Nearly simultaneously, the needle bucked and shuddered—and the diversion screens crumbled. That was trouble. At the velocities his needle carried, anything at all that struck the needle could now turn it into a mass of scrap composite and metal.
A second shudder rattled the needle, and Ghenji couldn’t help but wince as fire shot through his back and down both legs. Then… he felt nothing below his waist. Nothing, not heat or chill.
Ignoring what he couldn’t do anything about, Ghenji forced himself to study the needle’s diagnostics. The shield generators had already gone red. The converter blinked amber, then red, and stored power reserves running down, barely enough for a return to the Amaterasu on residual velocity.
He funneled almost all the remaining power into the steering drives, trying to get the needle back at least close to the departure vector for rendezvous with the Amaterasu. If he didn’t get close enough, then injuries and habitability didn’t matter.
The fading screens did show him that the mission had been successful—where the second installation had been was a rapidly expanding mass of energy and mass. Then, needle system after system began to shut down.
Ghenji quickly cross-checked his departure vector against the projected track of the Amaterasu. Close… but was it close enough?
There were no other needles from flight four that had made it through, and the close-screens didn’t show any needle nearby enough to slave to. On his courseline and velocity, ETA with the Amaterasu was a good forty-three minutes away. And something like forty would be without power.