She raised her shoulders and dropped them again with a sigh. 'Then I guess you're not interested to find out that Swimmer in Turbulent Currents has tracked you down here to Morgan's World. Whatever it is you did to stop him finding you this long, it isn't working any more.'
'And yet you are the one who loosed that abomination upon me. So why would I grant you an audience, given such foreknowledge?'
'Because, in the end, we both want the same thing, Trader. We both want to keep our people safe.'
The Shoal-member drifted up closer, the stubby tentacles that dangled below the main mass of his body now writhing in anger. 'How you must enjoy this, but I must inform you, Miss Merrick, that you are dead. All I see before me is a hollow shell filled with the beating heart of a Magi navigator. You are no more human than the creature that calls itself Hugh Moss.'
'Let's skip the philosophy lesson.' Dakota stepped forward, tapping her forefinger against the faintly sparkling surface of the field-bubble. She felt a faint, tingling shock from the contact. 'I want to know what happened when you went looking for the Maker.'
'Then first I must ask to what ominous depths your understanding of my history extends, Miss Merrick.'
'Deep enough.'
'Retrospective endeavours lead me to think back upon the paths I have swum. I should have contrived to drown your species in lonely darkness long before such terrible damage could be done.'
Something shone in the waters far below Trader's bubble, and she made out the outlines of his yacht's drive spines as they began to charge. He was already preparing to leave. She had a good idea of the technological riches the Caliph had gained in return for providing this hiding-place, but wondered what Swimmer in Turbulent Currents might do to the House of Attar once he found his prey absent.
She fought back the urge to remind Trader precisely who had started the nova war. 'The Magi came to our galaxy looking for a Maker they believed had laid the caches. Now I discover that you went in search of the Maker yourself. I want to know what happened.'
'Oh, Dakota, how alike you and I once were; how joined by the urgent romance, the idealism of our respective youths. But you are still so young and eager, ready to charge off in search of adventure and honour.' Trader swivelled in his bubble, his leathery fins manoeuvring gently. 'How I miss Mother Ocean and her crushing embrace; how I regret my present state of exile. And yet I would do again all that I have done thus far, truly I would, all in order to preserve her chill dark depths.'
He pushed up against the side of his field-bubble that was closest to her. 'I wonder to what allegiances you swear, however, or are those dissenting voices truthful when they say the only cause you serve is your own?'
'My sole allegiance is to life,' she replied. 'And the right to it.'
His manipulators twisted in amusement. 'The Emissaries are gathering their forces. I sense them sometimes, like dark sails upon a still sea, glimpsed over a far horizon.'
'There's a way to stop all this, Trader. The Magi Librarians tell me so, and the Maker – if it's still out there – might have the answer. I want to know what it said to you.' She paused, collecting herself. 'I want to know why you failed.'
Ah.' The waves beneath Trader trembled, interference patterns criss-crossing the surface of the waters. 'I was found wanting, as surely as you will be.'
'I don't understand.'
'Did you read no fairy tales, my dear child? Was there no parent to rock you to sleep, to tell you tales of derring-do? I confronted the dragon in its lair, my foolish girl, and found I was insufficiently pure of heart to gain access to the secrets it hoarded.'
He was taunting her.
'I don't have time for this bullshit,' she snapped.
'Then listen, and listen well. I travelled all across the face of the galaxy, to sparse regions almost devoid of the pulse of living stars. And there the Maker, to this day, still makes its long, slow progress through our universe. We had learned from the Magi that it held a secret they themselves sought; some undefined miracle that could end all troubles, still all conflicts. But necessity drove us to destroy the Magi before they could reduce us to little more than servants. We built our own starships and sailed them to those distant barren places wherein dwelt the Maker, but were met only with ashes and failure. We were rejected, turned back.
'I took the helm of that great endeavour and, yes, I sought to wrest secrets from the very entity that long ago sowed the seeds of the Magi's destruction. Few of my fleet returned to report on what had taken place. Instead, most were stranded there, their newly drive-equipped warships reduced to burned husks spinning in slow orbits around stars that had been dead a million years and more, drained by the Maker of the energies that had once burned bright within their cores.'
The waters began to foam, as a bass rumbling sounded from deep below. 'You are no one's saviour, Dakota Merrick,' Trader continued. 'You are a liar, a betrayer, a thief and a murderess, yet once again you delude yourself that you act out of the highest ideals. I cannot give you the answer I believe you seek. I can tell you only that the Maker nearly destroyed us when we attempted to destroy it. And so it may well do the same to you.'
Without a further word, Trader shot downwards. Blinding light shone up from the depths and the waves began to rise, smashing against the underside of the ceiling.
Dakota found her way back to the winding stairwell, cursing as she slipped on the waters now splashing down the worn stone steps. The entire building started to vibrate around her, the air filling with choking dust as bricks began working their way loose.
She ran past the slumped corpse of Murat Oran and out into the streets surrounding the tower. The roof of the tower exploded behind her, sending debris and foaming waters hurtling downwards, while the humming and shimmering form of a Shoal starship rose rapidly into the night sky, sending more water cascading down onto the buildings beneath. The vessel's drive spines glowed a deep cobalt blue, the air around them curiously puckered and distorted.
Dakota kept on running, ignoring the cries of the three guards who were now returning. She ducked down some steps between tall buildings, making her way to a sewer entrance close by the river.
I need your help, she had almost said to Trader, despite everything he had done to her. She remembered what the Shoal-member had said, that once he'd been like her, driven and idealistic. The notion that she might then become like Trader, weary, cynical and murderous, was one that appalled her. And yet the fear of what the power she'd gained might yet do to her remained in the back of her mind like a persistent whisper.
Thousands of gallons of briny water surged through the sloping streets. Trader's ship was barely a twinkling in the sky by now, and the air was filled with a sound like thunder as pulse cannons positioned upon the city walls began firing bolts of supercharged plasma skywards to no avail.
She paused, looking upwards, aware of the Librarian's thoughts as just a dimly sensed presence.
A long time ago, Trader in Faecal Matter of Animals had gone in search of the Maker and – in his own words – been found wanting. And still the dragon lurked unslain deep within its starry lair, waiting and watching to see who else might come creeping up close.
And now it's my turn, Dakota thought, with a final glance skyward.
She heard running feet coming closer, and ducked quickly into the lightless subterranean depths beneath the city. The end of Book Two of the Shoal Sequence – Taipei, June 2008 Acknowledgements With thanks to Jim Campbell for comments and suggestions. And Emma Chou, for all the obvious reasons.