“This is a threat to the whole of Ulubis system,” Sorofieve said. Sal suppressed a sigh. This was only Sorofieve’s third day in this latest round — he’d replaced First Secretary Heuypzlagger, who’d found the high gravity too wearing — and he was talking to a Dweller called Yawiyuen who was also new to the process, but even so. They’d been circling over this same ground for weeks now.
“These Starveling Cult people will show no respect for Nasqueron’s neutrality,” the sub-master concluded.
“How do you know?” Gruonoshe, another of the Dwellers, asked. They were nine in alclass="underline" the two human negotiators and a couple of assistants each — Liss was there in a seat behind Sal, having declared herself quite happy in the high gravity — Chief Seer Meretiy of Sept Krine, and just the two Dwellers, both in ceremonial half-clothes, ribboned and jewelled.
“Know what?” Sorofieve asked.
“Know that these Starveling Cult people will show no respect for Nasqueron’s neutrality,” Gruonoshe said, innocently.
“Well,” Sorofieve said, “they are invaders, warmongers. Indeed, not to put too fine a point on it, they are barbarians. They respect nothing.”
“Still, it does not follow that they’d quarrel with us,” Yawiyuen said, signal skin showing reasonableness.
“They want to take over the whole system,” Sorofieve said, looking to Saluus for help. “To them that would include Nasqueron.”
“We have heard of the Starveling Cult,” Yawiyuen told them. (- Wonder from where? Liss sent to Saluus via his ear stud.) “It appears to be an unremarkable Quick hegemonist diffusion, concerned with conquering its own kind and species-type-suitable environments, uninterested in attacking gas-giants.”
“The point here,” Saluus said smoothly, his amplified voice sounding rich and powerful, “is that they are only attacking Ulubis system to get to Nasqueron.”
“Why?” Gruonoshe asked.
“We’re not entirely sure,” Saluus said. “We are sure they want something from Nasqueron, something they can’t get from any other gas-giant, but exactly what that may be, we can’t say. But we are quite positive that that is why they are mounting this attack in the first place.”
“Why are you sure?” Gruonoshe again.
“We intercepted intelligence to that effect,” Sorofieve replied.
“What intelligence?” Yawiyuen asked.
“The intelligence,” Sorofieve said, “came from the personal diary of the Supreme Commander of the Starveling Cult invasion fleet sent to the Ruanthril system nearly eighteen years ago. The fleet was intercepted by a Mercatorial force. The captured records show that the enemy commander complained specifically about the need to divert so many of the E-5 Discon’s forces to somewhere as out of the way and strategically unimportant as Ulubis, just for some item or piece of information in Nasqueron.”
“Nasqueron was mentioned by name?” Gruonoshe asked.
“It was,” Sal said.
He half-expected a little voice in his ear to say something like “Good lie’ but then remembered that even Liss hadn’t been told the full truth about the Dweller List and the mythical Transform. She would have an idea, as a lot of people close to the epicentres of power did, that Fassin had been sent on a secret mission to look for something valuable in Nasqueron, and that the object of this search might have some bearing on the war, but that was about all. She hadn’t been present at the briefing by the AI projection of Admiral Quile, hadn’t been let in on the secret subsequently by some of those who had been there — as Sal had — and so didn’t know the details of the intelligence they’d been given.
“Well then,” Yawiyuen said reasonably, “you should let the Starveling Cult attack us and we will deal with them.”
This, of course, was exactly what the Emergency War Cabinet hoped would happen.
— Can we just say yes here? Liss sent.
“Wouldn’t you then want some help from us?” Sorofieve asked.
“Oh, no!” Gruonoshe exclaimed, as though the idea was just too preposterous even to think about.
“As sub-master Sorofieve has said,” Saluus said, “we are quite certain that the Starveling Cultists intend to take the entirety of Ulubis system, including Nasqueron. We’re all under threat. That’s why it would make sense for you and us to organise our defence together.”
“A common threat requires a common response,” Sorofieve told the Dwellers.
“Or maybe a pincer movement,” Yawiyuen suggested brightly.
Saluus wanted to sigh again. These two guys were supposedly top-grade negotiators with the authority to speak provisionally — in advance of some sort of still undefined plebiscite procedure — for the entire Dweller society on Nasqueron, but they frequently sounded like children. “Well, perhaps,” he said. “Providing we can, at the very least, coordinate our actions.”
“And of course,” Sorofieve said, “it may be that we can share defence technologies.”
“Oh!” Yawiyuen said, rising above his dent-seat a fraction. “Good idea! What do you have that we might want?” He appeared guilelessly enthusiastic.
“Our strengths would lie more in intelligence, in knowing how these Starveling Cultists will think,” Saluus said. “They’re basically humans, too. For all our differences, we think pretty much the same way they do. Our contribution would be to try to anticipate them, to out-think them.”
“And ours?” Yawiyuen asked, settling back down in his seat again.
“Weaponry, I bet,” Gruonoshe said, sounding unimpressed.
“As we have discovered, very much to our cost,” Saluus said, “you have the better of us in offensive capability, certainly—”
“Defensive capability,” Gruonoshe interrupted. “Surely?”
Sal did his best to move his helmeted head in an acknowledging nod, straining his neck muscles in the high gravity. “Defensive capability, as you say,” he said. “If we were able to share some of your knowledge of—”
“Weapons technology is not something we are going to share,” Gruonoshe said crisply.
“We could say we wanted to,” Yawiyuen told them. “We could even mean it — you might argue us round, somehow, to said point of view — but those who control the weapons themselves would not permit it.”
“Well, can we perhaps talk to them?” Saluus asked.
Yawiyuen bobbed over his seat. “No.”
“Why would that be?” Sorofieve asked.
“They don’t talk to aliens,” Yawiyuen told them bluntly.
“They barely talk to us,” Gruonoshe admitted.
“How might we be able to—?” Saluus began.
“We are not the Mercatoria,” Gruonoshe said, interrupting Saluus again. This was not an experience he was used to. He could see how it might get annoying. “We are not the Mercatoria,” the Dweller repeated. He sounded indignant. “We are not one of your states or mercenary- or irrationality-inspired groupings or forces.”
— Bit of stress there, Sal heard in his ear.
“If I may,” Chief Seer Meretiy began. The Seers were under instruction only to take a part in the talks when they felt there was some sort of basic misunderstanding taking place. Meretiy obviously felt that was happening now, but he didn’t get a chance to take his point further.
“What is meant, one believes,” Yawiyuen said, “is that things do not work with us the way that they work with you. We are delegated to speak to you, and what we take from here will be shared with all who wish to take notice. We are not in a position to order other Dwellers to do or not do certain things. No Dweller is, not in the hierarchical sense that you may be used to. We can share information. The information regarding the approach of the Starveling Cultists has been made available to whoever it may concern, as was the information regarding the build-up of Mercatorial forces immediately prior to the unfortunate incident which took place within C-2 Storm Ultra-Violet 3667. Those in charge of the relevant defensive systems will doubtless have taken note of said information. That is really all we can share with you. Our colleagues in charge of the defensive systems would not consider talking to outsiders and there is no precedent for sharing, lending, leasing or giving such technologies to others.”