No sooner had he done so than the forward bridge door opened and Jag waddled in. “The baby is trapped,” he barked as he made his way over to the physics station, which was currently unoccupied. “It’s stuck in close orbit around a star that emerged from the same shortcut the baby did.”
“Did you call out to by radio?” asked Rissa. “Any response?”
“None,” said Jag, “but the star is a real noisemaker. Our message might have been lost going in, or the reply might have been lost coming out.”
“It would be like trying to hear a whisper during a hurricane,” said Keith, shaking his head. “All but impossible.”
“Especially,” said Longbottle, popping up in the starboard pool on the bridge, “if the darmat is dead.”
Keith looked at the dolphin’s face, then nodded. “That’s a good point. How do we tell if something like that is still alive?
Rissa frowned. “None of us would survive five seconds close to a star without a lot of shielding or heavy-duty force screens. The baby is naked.”
“It’s worse than that,” said Jag. “The thing is black. Although the luster-quark matter is transparent to electromagnetic radiation, the regular-matter dust that permeates it is not reflecting any appreciable amount of the star’s light and heat. The child may be cooking itself.”
“So what do we do?” asked Keith.
“First,” said Jag, “we should get it into the shade—build a reflective foil parasol that could be jockeyed in between the darmat and the star.”
“Can our nanotech lab do that here?” asked Keith. “Ordinarily, I’d have New Beijing build such a thing and shunt it through the Tau Ceti shortcut to us, but I saw the mess they were in when I popped back for my meeting.”
There was a young Native American sitting at InOps. “I’d have to check with Lianne to be sure,” he said, “but I suspect we can pull it off. It won’t be easy, though. The parasol will have to be over a hundred thousand klicks wide. Even at just one molecule of thickness, that’s still a lot of material.”
“Get to work on it,” said Keith. “How long?”
“Six hours if we’re lucky,” said the man. “Twelve if we’re not.”
“But even if we shield the baby, then what?” asked Rissa. “It’s still trapped.”
Keith looked at Jag. “Could we use the parasol as a solar sail, and let the solar wind blow it away from the star?”
Jag snorted. “Ten to the thirty-seventh kilos? Not a chance.”
“Okay, okay—what about this?” said Keith. “What if we protect the baby with some sort of force shield, and then detonate the star, so that it goes nova, and—”
Jag was barking in a staccato pattern—Waldahud laughter. “Your imagination is unbridled, Lansing. Oh, there has been some theoretical work on controlled nova reactions—I’ve been exploring that area a bit myself—but there’s no shield we could build that would protect the baby from a star going nova only forty million kilometers away.”
Keith was not to be deterred. “Okay, try this: Suppose we force the new star back through the shortcut. When it passes through the shortcut, its gravitational pull will disappear, and the baby goes free.”
“The star is moving away from the shortcut, not toward it,” said Jag. “We cannot move the shortcut at all, and if we had the power to turn a star around, we would also have the power to skim a Jupiter-sized object out of a close orbit around the star. But we don’t.” Jag looked around the room. “Any more bright ideas?”
“Yes,” said Keith, after a moment. He looked directly at Jag. “Yes, indeed!”
When Keith had finished talking, Jag’s mouth hung open for a few moments, showing the two curving blue-white translucent dental plates within. Finally, he barked in a subdued fashion. “I—I know I said such things were possible, but it has never been tried on anything approaching this scale.”
Keith nodded. “Understood. But unless you have a better suggestion—”
“Well,” said Jag’s Brooklynite voice, “we could leave the darmat baby in orbit around the star. Assuming it is still alive, once we put the parasol sun-shield in place, it could, in theory, live out the rest of its natural life—however long that is—in close orbit around that star. But if your plan does not work, the darmat child will be killed.” Jag’s voice became quieter. “I know, Lansing, that I am the one always looking for glory—and, since my role in what you propose is pivotal, I have no doubt that considerable glory would accrue to me were we able to pull this off. But it really is not our decision to make. Ordinarily, I’d say ask the—the patient—for permission before attempting something as risky as this, but that is not possible in this case, because of the radio noise. And so I suggest we do what both your race and mine would do in such circumstances: we should ask the next of kin.”
Keith thought about that, then began to nod slowly. “You’re right, of course. I keep seeing the macro-issue, that if we pull this off, it’ll be great for our relationships with the darmats. Damn, sometimes I’m pretty pigheaded.”
“That is all right,” said Jag lightly, choosing not to take offense at Keith’s unfortunate choice of words. “Rumor has it that you are going to have a very long time to acquire more wisdom.”
Keith spoke into the mike. “Starplex to Cat’s Eye. Starplex to Cat’s Eye.”
The incongruous French accent; Keith half expected the thing to say Bonjour. “Hello, Starplex. It is wrong to ask, but…”
Keith smiled. “Yes, we have news of your child. We have located it. But it is in close orbit around a blue star. It is unable to get away under its own power.”
“Bad,” said Cat’s Eye. “Bad.”
Keith nodded. “But we have a plan that may—I repeat, may—allow us to rescue the child.”
“Good,” said Cat’s Eye.
“The plan involves much risk.”
“Quantify.”
Keith looked at Jag, who lifted all four shoulders. “I can’t,” said the human. “We’ve never done anything like this on this scale before. Indeed, I only recently learned that it was theoretically possible. It may work, or it may not—and I have no way of knowing the likelihood of either outcome.”
“Better idea available?”
“No. No, in fact, this is our only idea.”
“Describe plan.”
Keith did so, at least as much as the limited vocabulary they had established allowed.
“Difficult,” said Cat’s Eye.
“Yes.”
There was a long period of silence on the frequency used by Cat’s Eye, but lots of traffic on the other channels—the darmat community discussing its options.
At last, Cat’s Eye spoke again. “Try, but… but… two hundred and eighteen minus one is much less than two hundred and seventeen.”
Keith swallowed. “I know.”
The PDQ (containing the cetacean physicist Melondent) and the Rumrunner (with Jag and Longbottle aboard) headed through the shortcut to the sector containing the darmat baby. Working in tandem, the two ships deployed the molecule-thick parasol. Reaction motors were mounted on the parasol’s frame, firing away from the blue star to keep the solar wind from blowing it away. Once the baby was in the shade, its nearside surface temperature began to drop rapidly.