Finally he reached a region he judged to be somewhere in the center of the ship. There was a huge bubble, opaque because of its coating, with an enormous number of connections. It was as if this were the central cell of a living entity, to which all others reported.
And of course it was, he realized. This was the abode of the Gaol captain! He was about to face his reckoning.
"Wipe a section clear," a loudspeaker said.
Jack realized that he was still carrying his bundled clothing.
He used this to rub on the available surface of the sphere. It was like scraping snow off a windshield. Now a window of clarity appeared.
Inside the bubble was the Gaol captain. For the first time Jack saw such a creature with his own eyes, from up close, instead of by telepathic projection through other eyes.
The thing was horrible. All the details were as he had been shown before, but now they were in sharp ugly focus. The great external rib cage, as if it had once been fleshed but now was a carcass. The sacful of body organs, as if the guts had been wrapped in membrane and hung inside the stripped rib cage to cure. The legs and neck projecting from the general region of that internal mass, emerging from the cage. What a monster!
Yet perhaps it was in keeping with the spaceship the Gaol used.
For this huge ship had riblike projections reaching up to join at the top. It was surely the kind of structure the Gaol would feel comfortable with, because of their own skeletal structure. Just as human beings felt comfortable with devices that had their controls at the top and their propulsion at the bottom, emulating the human head and feet. Maybe the nature of the originating species could be derived by inspecting their spaceships, if one knew how to interpret the signals.
"I did not know that the Imago could strike at this range," the speaker said. It was obviously translating for the Gaol inside the sphere.
Jack did not reply, because he had not been directed to. But he felt a thrill of excitement. Had the Gaol been converted?
"What is the mechanism?"
Now Jack could speak. But he did not have to speak, because the null effect did not extend to his mind. Would he be better off to refuse to, so that the Gaol would not learn what was going on?
The null did not allow him to lie; he had either to +Lell the truth or say nothing.
He decided to respond with limited candor. "The Imago's power extends beyond its host. This enabled the minions of the Imago to take charge of the other Gaol ship."
"This one, too. But our tracers show the host of the Imago to be on the surface of the planet, and our experience of prior millennia indicates that the direct range of the Imago does not extend to interplanetary distances, and that of the Imago's converts does not extend beyond immediate personal contact. How has the Imago reached me?"
Had the Imago reached it-Jack assumed the creature was neuter for convenience-or was it merely saying so to fool Jack into betraying critical information? If he told of the Imaget, and the Gaol had not been converted, it could take the Imaget from him and destroy it, thereby achieving victory. But if the Gao had been converted, the Imaget would be an even more useful tool for the conversion of other key entities aboard this craft, giving Jack the victory.
Jack decided not to gamble. He remained silent.
"We are at a temporary impasse," the Gaol's translated voice said. "I control your actions and can cause you to be extinguished.
But you may be the only available creature who knows the agency by which the Imago is reaching me. If I do not ascertain this mechanism and abolish it promptly, I will be subverted by the Imago. Death is preferable. However, if I die without ascertaining the mechanism of corruption, there is a significant risk that the Imago will succeed in corrupting some other Gaolas it did our cyborg, and that would put the empire at risk. This is not desirable.
Speak."
"You are correct that the Imago is reaching you, but I do not regard th at as subversion. I call it liberation. I prefer to wait for your conversion to be complete before giving you information that might enable you to interrupt it."
"I appreciate your point. But at the present rate of progression, my conversion will not be complete before the mold destroys the key mechanisms of this ship. Then all of us will die, regardless who is ascendant. this seems to be no more to your interest than to mine. Speak."
The fungus! Jack had forgotten about that. The Gaol was right; the ship was being destroyed while they talked. If they all died, so would the Imaget, depriving the Imago of its most useful immediate tool. It would also deprive Tappy of Jack, and that was apt to be a disaster of another kind. The Gaol empire might very well succeed in prevailing, if Jack and the Imaget perished together.
But the Gaol captain, by its own statement, had not yet been converted. He could not let it know about the Imaget yet! So what was he to do?
"I agree that we are at an impasse. I prefer to save the ship and all our lives. But I can not allow the Imago to be placed in jeopardy by trusting you. What is your offer?"
"Our loyalties are opposed. I must ascertain the detail nature of the Imago's threat, and survive to report it to my authority.
You must subvert me so that you can eliminate the threat to the freedom of the Imago that I represent. We must come to a decision immediately. I offer a trade: give me the information so that I may relay it to my authority, and I will free your will, and turn myself and my ship over to you. Speak."
That was a considerable offer! The empire would know exactly what it faced, but this ship, under competent command, would be at the service of the Imago. That would allow a fair fight, as it were. It was devilishly tempting. But there was a flaw in it. "How can I trust you to keep the deal?"
"How can I trust you to provide accurate information?" the Gaol countered. "It is evident that neither of us has a guarantee, but that we can establish a guideline for action that will serve both our purposes. This must serve in lieu of trust. Speak."
could he believe this? Jack wished he knew whether the Gaol were creatures of honor. Presumably they would not be able to maintain an enduring empire if they were not consistent in their statements and actions. But was that enough?
He flipped a mental coin and decided to gamble. "Agreed.
The honkers provided the host of the Imago with an Imaget, which facilitates conversion. That Imaget is now facilitating your conversion."
Il1 restore your free will. Is this Imaget the creature Malva's projection perceived near the Imago host?"
Jack found that he could move and speak on his own. The Gaol had honored part of the deal. "Yes. It was planted on the host by a honker, and later developed and hatched. It identifies with her and enhances her power, which is that of the Imago."
"I will direct this ship as you command. I suggest that you take it aground so that the antidote can be obtained. or your life can be saved if the antidote is too late."
The Gaol was honoring more of the deal. "Do the four guard satellites have any living creatures on them?"
"None. They are robot controlled."
"Destroy them."
A screen lighted on a nearby wall. It showed the planet, with its satellite guard stations. Suddenly all four exploded.
"Where is the Imaget now, and how does it reach me?" the Gaol asked.
This was the critical point. If all this was a lie, and the satellites had not really been destroyed, the captain could renege and Jack would be lost. But the Gaol seemed to be playing it straight, and Jack had to do the same. "It is here on my body. It has been broadcasting telepathically to you."