There was power at its rawest. "You would, wouldn't you?"
"It's all the same to me. Relief efforts cost us time better spent tracing the carrier of the rebel disease."
"Send the others home and I'll cooperate."
The shimmer buzzed at WarAvocat. He lifted an eyebrow. "Personal protection. Activate." A shimmer enveloped him. He moved forward, pushed the Immunes aside, lifted Midnight off Amber Soul. "That one stays. And the winged artifact. The rest go back to Merod Schene."
It was the best Turtle would get.
WarAvocat ordered the Immunes moved and the relief effort resumed. He settled into a seat. "Come here, Kez Maefele. Sit down."
Intensely aware of the scrutiny of several hundred Deified, Turtle sat.
"What is that creature?"
"Amber Soul? I don't know. Nobody does. I don't think she knows herself."
"How did she become an Immune?"
"Because she's so damned dangerous."
"Psionic?"
"Yes."
"There was a creature of her species aboard the Traveler that carried the krekelen to P. Jaksonica. It called itself Seeker of the Lost Children. That mean anything to you?"
"No." Turtle watched Guardship security lead the Immunes away. Midnight looked at him, lost, her wings drooping sadly, colorless. He tried to look apologetic.
Amber Soul screamed.
— 22 —
Commander Haget paced. His clomping abraded Jo's nerves. She wanted to tell him to sit down and stop fidgeting.
"Sergeant."
"Sir?"
"Any suggestions about how to fill unstructured time? I've never had to do nothing before."
Write your memoirs. That'll keep you busy for ten minutes. She shrugged. "In WarCrew we freeze down for the long waits. Short waits we sleep, we drill, we play games. We screw a lot. Sir." She bit down on a grin. His reaction was what she expected. In WarCrew they would have a lot to say about an officer like him.
"Why were you selected for this mission?"
"I screwed up. I got noticed."
"You don't want to be noticed?"
"It's the same as volunteering." Where did this guy live? OpsCrew! Poor short-lifers. This guy wasn't old enough to remember Kole Marmigus alive. "We don't volunteer. How old are you, sir?"
He was surprised. As though that was too personal a question. Maybe it was. They did things differently in OpsCrew.
"Thirty-nine."
"You've done well, then. Made full Commander."
"I suppose I have. How old are you?"
"I was elected four thousand years ago." She grinned at his reaction. "Twenty-six, physical. But I got killed during the Enherrenraat business. I don't know how old that me was or how much experience I lost."
He got that funny look. Like he was talking to a ghost. They never really understood. But dealing with the Deified did not bother them, and the Deified were nothing but electronic spooks. Weird people.
Someone tapped on the door. Haget disappeared. Jo opened up. "Chief Timmerbach. Come in."
"I need to see the Commander."
Haget appeared. "Chief?"
"Could you come to the operating bridge, sir?"
"What is it?"
"The Presence, sir." The Chief's fear was palpable.
"You want me to stand witness to the fact that this isn't an inconvenience created for my benefit, Chief?"
"I guess that's one way of putting it, sir."
"Very well. Sergeant, will you accompany us?"
"Yes, sir." Jo felt more excitement than unease, and was surprised she felt no fear.
She'd never been into the command center of any ship. And the Presence was something she understood only intellectually. It was not something Guardships feared. It fled from them.
There was no hard proof it bothered smaller ships, either. Except that ships did disappear, and others had brushes with the Presence that left everyone aboard shaken.
Dead silence reigned on the bridge. They were not the only spectators. Hanhl Cholot was there, sober and grim. He crossed gazes with Haget. Haget nodded, accepting his presence. This was a Cholot Traveler at risk.
Haget joined Timmerbach before a screen four meters high and six wide. Jo stayed with them. Cholot followed.
A ribbon of yellow smoke curved away into apparent distance on screen. Jo got the impression the Traveler was moving through the outer fringes of the smoke.
Haget grunted. "We must be close."
"We're as near the edge as we dare go, moving dead slow for the Web. But we're gaining on it. The disturbances and the fogging are getting worse. Can you feel it, sir?"
Jo felt the directionless dread, the creeping spine chill. Something close was hungry and deadly and getting nearer.... But that made no sense. There was no concrete object for her dread.
"Yes. I don't suppose we'd have a turn node coming up?"
"No, sir." Timmerbach reached up to indicate a remote starburst. "This is J. Duosconica, anchor for eight strands. We'll be all right if we reach it."
The starburst moved closer slowly.
Jo had thought you were supposed to see stars from the Web same as in starspace. This space could not be vacant, could it?
There were points of light on the periphery of the screen.
Something ahead was masking everything but the brilliance of that anchor point.
The dread grew.
The foggy ribbon grew foggier.
That was not right. A healthy strand looked like a cable of fiber optics, brilliant with light, solid, gleaming when seen from afar. Like the strands coming off that anchor point.
Hager asked, "Can you break away at J. Duosconica? Lay over till it's safe?"
"The star is a white dwarf. Nexus is too close in. Too hot for us. We have to go on. And hope we get there behind the Presence."
The dread grew.
The shaking started. It began as vibrations Jo barely felt through her soles. In minutes the Traveler was bouncing like a light aircraft in heavy turbulence.
Timmerbach shouted at his bridge gang.
"We can't hold it any farther off the centerline, sir. We're risking premature breakaway now."
Jo grimaced. If they dropped off now, they would be almost a light year from the overly hot J. Duosconica. Climbing back on might be impossible. Misty as the strand was, instruments might not locate it.
Jo palmed her communicator. "Colonel Vadja. Klass."
After a moment, "Vadja here, Sergeant. What's happening?"
"Trouble with the Web. I'm on the bridge. I thought it might be interesting to see what our aliens are doing. Can you cover it?"
"Will do, Sergeant."
Commander Haget nodded. "Good thinking, Klass. Chief, time estimate to the anchor point?"
"Ten minutes. Roughly. We may have to move back into the strand if..."
"Chief!" someone shouted. "We got something coming up behind us. Fast! Gods! It's a big mother... Saldy. What the hell is that? It's going to run us over!"
Timmerbach ran around, cursed, shook a fist at a secondary screen. "Take us in to the core! Maximum ahead. That's a Guardship! That's a goddamned Guardship, and it's going to smash us right off the Web!"
The Traveler rumbled and shuddered and surged. Jo staggered, grabbed for a handhold. The anchor point swelled. So did the darkness surrounding it. The strand grew more turbulent, the ride rougher. The Traveler creaked, groaned. There was a shriek of tormented metal somewhere aft.
The aft view showed a glowing egg ploughing through Web stuff, swelling. Timmerbach raged. "That bastard can see us! He don't care if he kills us! The goddamned arrogant asshole! Seligo. Pick a strand coming off the anchor. Now!"