Doubtful. This was a weakness of the ghost of Makarska Vis. "Excuse me? I was maundering."
"I asked if you know where we are. Not that it matters."
"No. But I know where we're going. Starbase Tulsa."
That name. It throbbed like the beat of primitive drums. Starbase Tulsa, the womb from which every Guardship sprang and to which every Guardship made its periodic hadj. If there was an object of greater dread than a Guardship it was that stellar citadel whence the invincible issued.
An entire mythology revolved around Starbase. It might be heaven or it might be hell. For the mass of humanity and those nonhumans adrift in Canon space, it was more of the latter. It was a place where devils spawned.
Midnight began to shiver. Her wings, which had lost so much of their luster and color already, drooped, faded. Her timidity could not withstand the onslaught of dread.
"We'll be no worse off than we are now, Midnight."
"I know. But I can't help it." Tears tracked her cheeks. She stared at Amber Soul.
Turtle did, too. "Stay with her. Try to get something down her. I think she senses our presence and concern, on some level, and that comforts her."
Midnight had a high empathy quotient and an inability to resist appeals. She would forget herself for a while, ministering to Amber Soul.
"I have a few chores to do. I'll be right back."
In his own suite Turtle examined the comm. Getting the Deified Makarska Vis was easy. In moments he had her on screen, looking vexed. "You!"
"Me. Greetings, Deified. Did I disturb you?"
"Yes."
"Good. You have been disturbing a friend of mine, presumably venting your spite on her because she is incapable of returning your vitriol."
The Deified Makarska Vis gushed filth.
"To me you are a ghost, a memory mummy impressed upon the motions of electrons. I am not awed. If you do not wish to be disturbed, you will stop harassing my friend."
Would it work? Was she possessed of sufficient determination to lock him out? He shrugged and returned to Midnight and Amber Soul.
— 37 —
Among the satellites orbiting the ringed gas giant, there were a dozen moonlets that were natural only in appearance. They were created things half the size of a Guardship, sheathed in ice that concealed their true nature. The ice had been bombarded to give them an ancient, lunar appearance. Everything was camouflage here. This outpost was too near the frontier.
Blinding light ripped from one of the moonlets. Meteor impact? No. This came from within, sustained. Ice turned to water and water to gas. The light died, leaving a cone burned through the mask. The moonlet began moving.
A day later, far from its primary, it flicked out of existence. It had clambered onto the Web. Invisible, it hastened toward the Atlantean Rim of Canon space.
The intruder was invisible but not undetectable at close range. As the object breached the Rim, it very nearly ran over Guardship XXVIII Fretensis. Alarms sounded. The Guardship swept in pursuit.
— 38 —
On impulse WarAvocat went to Kez Maefele's door. The Ku responded immediately. "WarAvocat?"
"We're due to break away soon. Approaching Starbase. I thought you might be interested."
"Am I that obvious?"
"I know your weakness now. Curiosity. I could use it to trap you."
"The Deified Makarska Vis took care of me when she was WarAvocat."
"By main strength and awkwardness. The woman's tactics had the subtlety and finesse of an ax murder."
"There is something to be said for overwhelming might."
"Speaking of Makarska Vis, word is you bluffed her into backing down."
"I am sure she did not stop harassing Midnight because I told her to back off."
"No. Your suggestion got backing from Gemina. She'd begun showing divisive, political tendencies. I'm going to Hall of the Watchers. Their wall gives the best view. Are you coming?"
"Yes. You have a motive for doing this?"
Startled, WarAvocat said, "No."
"You did not mean to impress me with the power of the Guardship fleet?"
"No." He started walking. The Ku followed. "We are a less complex people than you think."
"Maybe. Few of you are subtle."
"We have no need."
"Remarkable. Especially considering the longevity and persistence of the players."
"It's gone funny on some Guardships. Here it hasn't because the soldiers nourish the roots of the culture. Soldiers tend to be direct and simple."
"And if something evades immediate comprehension, they blow it up or kill it. Ku warriors were the same."
It took an hour to reach Hall of the Watchers, by which time VII Gemina was off the Web and closing with some stellar concourse in the form of a triple wheel station, the rotational axis of which was a hollow cylinder large enough to pass a Guardship. Traffic was heavy.
WarAvocat observed, "Somone else has come in recently, for refitting. There's always activity but seldom this much."
"This is Starbase Tulsa?"
WarAvocat chuckled. "No. This is the Barbican, Starbase's only intersection with the universe outside. This is as far as outsiders come. They make deliveries here. Our own ships carry materials from here."
"Then the Guardship fleet is not self-sufficient?" Was that overdoing it? If not, it was on the boundary. WarAvocat looked like he was wondering if that ignorance was feigned. He had, after all, spent a long life studying the Guardships.
"You sound surprised."
"Not entirely. Logically, no system could be entirely closed. I know it was open long ago. But I have been out of touch. I assumed self-sufficiency had been attained."
"We work toward it. But it isn't an overriding concern. Someday."
"Then the system is vulnerable."
"Possibly. Not very. House Horigawa, who have the monopoly on supplying us, have remained faithful through the most trying tests."
"To their extreme benefit." That was no secret. House Horigawa had become one of the dozen richest by serving the Guardships.
"They did come out of the Enherrenraat incident very well." In part because they had betrayed the conspiracy before it had been ready to move.
Turtle watched quietly as VII Gemina entered the station's axial cylinder. "Masterful steersmanship," he said.
"You have to do it right," WarAvocat said. "We have secrets even from ourselves, I think. No one's ever told me why we run the Tube." VII Gemina left the Tube and began accelerating. "We go back onto the Web now."
"I fear I've missed the strategy here." Turtle did not have to feign ignorance now. "Why should everyone break off the Web here?" The answer, by remaining elusive, had kept him from bringing the Dire Radiant in here.
"No choice. This is the most unusual strand on the Web. There's a break in the strand here. The gap is only a few light seconds across, but it's enough. Any attacker has to come off. He has to cross the gap under fire. Messenger ships are always stationed at the tag end on the other side. You can take the Barbican by surprise, but anything beyond will be a deathtrap before you get there."
"Has it been tried?" He knew it had. What he did not know was why attacks against Starbase inevitably failed.
"Everything has been tried. That, half a dozen times."
"And there were no survivors to carry the news."
"None. The price of attacking Starbase is absolute and final."
VII Gemina climbed onto the Web with hydraulic ease. The wall, still carrying a forward view, flashed on a gleaming strand. The Guardship surged along it. In seconds the wall went nova.
The light storm cleared. The wall revealed the shine of a guttering red dwarf glimmering off the backs of two orbital fortresses and the complex they guarded. The primary around which the three scampered was a supergiant with a thousand moons, a planet a minim short of being fat enough to become a star itself. Turtle wondered how it had come to be paired with the red dwarf.