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The Kzin asked, “Default option?”

The Hindmost answered, “Decide in advance what you will do if you don’t have time to decide.”

“Like the first move you learn in fighting with a Kzin dagger, a wtsai,” Louis said. “If you’re attacked too fast to think, there’s your training.”

“The disembowel.”

“Whatever. I just knew there must be one. Epees and handguns and hand-to-hand and yogatsu, it doesn’t matter: you train the moves into your reflex arcs so you don’t have to make up something while you’re being attacked. Likewise, you instruct a computer on what to do if you don’t tell it what to do.”

“Clever notion,” said the Kzin.

“Hindmost, I don’t quite understand your stepping disk network …”

They discussed it. The system wanted to know that you really meant the change you’d whistled or typed in. Push the edge of the disk down.

“Stet. Now I can do this and you cannot notice. We have deniability. Acolyte, I’ll need a distraction.”

“See if you can describe it,” Acolyte said.

“I haven’t the faintest bloody idea. I only need it for about two breaths.”

***

As they flicked through to the cabin, the Hindmost was saying, “Louis, are you aware that you were dying?”

Louis smiled faintly. “Tradition says that everyone is dying. Exceptions may be made for puppeteers and protectors. Hello, Bram. Any change?”

Bram was in a rage. “Hindmost, amplify the light and zoom. The village!”

The probe was moving through shadow; but much closer than the distant oncoming band of daylight was a glimpse of pattern crusting the dim snow-colors of a passing spill mountain.

The Hindmost sang flute and strings. The pattern brightened and began to expand.

The spill mountain village looked like a great blotchy cross seen from almost overhead. Houses were white of a different shade from the snowfields: sloped roofs under a snow blanket, strung out along ledges on a background of naked rock and snow laced with dark paths, sparsely patterned along twenty miles and more. Factories and warehouses crossed that band vertically, much more closely clustered, running from six to ten thousand feet high. At top and bottom were angular blobs of bright orange and bits of other colors, too.

Bram’s temper was under tight control. “You were needed. I feared the probe would pass before you returned. Can you see why that might be a concern?”

“Not … yes.”

Then Louis saw, too. Three bright silver squares: three of the oversized cargo plates. One was bare; one was loaded with cargo, hard to see for what it was. The third, a brown square with a bright rim: the Machine People cruiser still riding its cargo plate. It was tethered at the upper dock next to a naked rock cliff painted bright orange, and two patches of yellow and orange and cobalt blue: deflated balloons.

“That was a quick ride,” Louis said.

Daylight swept upon them at 770 miles per second. The view flashed bright, then dimmed to truer colors.

Acolyte reminded them: “They have their own webeye.”

The Hindmost popped up a window next to the probe’s—four now. They were now seeing through the bow of the cruiser.

Here were Red Herders muffled in lovely furs striped gray and white. Louis only glimpsed red hands in long loose sleeves, flat noses and dark eyes deep within hoods, but who else could they be? The Fearless Vampire Slayers. Several larger furry shapes must be Spill Mountain People. Their hands were broad, with thick, stubby fingers. Glimpses of faces inside hoods were silver-gray, like the hands.

They panted out puffs of frost as they worked. Red hands and brown hands gripped the fuzzy edges of the window, and the view wobbled.

The Hindmost said, “The probe will be well past before we can slow. Shall I bring it back for another view?”

Bram said, “Why? We have our view. Hindmost, we’re closing on the near end of the rim wall transport rail, and possible witnesses. Take the probe over the rim when you can.”

“Aye aye. Twelve minutes.”

The probe was in full daylight now, leaving the village far aft. The dismounted webeye was in jerky motion, carried along footholds and handholds chopped in stone. Windows overlaid on windows.

Bram asked, “Where have you been?”

Louis answered. “The time to check a pressure suit—”

“Yes. Report.”

“—is before you’re breathing vacuum—”

“You used a checklist. I use my mind.”

“And your first mistake will be memorable.”

“Report.”

“I can’t speak for a puppeteer’s suit. Ours will keep us alive for two falans. We refilled and recharged everything fillable and chargeable. The Hindmost still has six stepping disks not in use, and we can recycle some of what we’re using now. We can put webeyes anywhere. There aren’t any weapons in the lander bay. I assume you’ve stored them somewhere. You decide what you want us to be carrying. We couldn’t think of anything else to check.”

Bram said nothing.

Hidden Patriarch’s crow’s nest showed no change, and the Hindmost whistle-bonged that window off. The refueling probe ran along a rim wall touched with violet. The next window over rolled wobbling along a path that had become more than a rock climb, downhill toward rectangular patches of snow.

The Hindmost said, “You were dying.”

“Did you see … never mind,” Louis said. “Show me that medical report.”

The puppeteer chimed. Louis Wu’s medical record partly blocked both windows. “There, it’s in Interspeak.”

Chemical … major restructure … diverticulosis … tanj. “You can get used to what age does to you, Hindmost. Old people used to say, ‘If you can wake up in the morning with nothing hurting anywhere, it’s a sign that you have died in the night.’ ”

“Not funny.”

“But even an idiot might guess something’s wrong when he starts pissing gas with his urine.”

“I would have thought it rude to observe you at such a time.”

“I am much relieved. Even so, would you have noticed?” Louis read further. “Diverticulosis, that’s little blowout patches on your colon—my colon. Diverticuli [sic—should be “Diverticula”] can hurt you lots of ways. Mine seems to have extended far enough to attach itself to my bladder. Then it got infected and blew through. That left a tube connecting my colon and my bladder. A fistula.”

“What did you think?”

“I had the medkit. It was giving me antibiotics. For a couple of days I hoped … well, bacteria can get into a human bladder and make gas, but antibiotics would have cleared that up. So I knew I needed a plumber.”

Acolyte didn’t usually stare directly into anyone’s eyes, but he did now. His ears were folded out of sight. “You were dying? Dying when you refused the Hindmost’s offers?”

“Yes. Hindmost, if you’d known, would you have accepted my contract?”

“Not a serious question. Louis, I’m expressing admiration. You are a scary negotiator.”

Thank you.”

Bram said, “Please restore our view from the probe … Thank you. In six minutes we’ll move up the rim wall and cross to the outside. I trust we won’t lose the signal, Hindmost?”

“Scrith stops a percentage of neutrinos. Implied is some kind of nuclear reaction ongoing in the Ringworld floor, but the signal will dwindle predictably and I can compensate.”

Bram said, “Good. Is my suit in order?”

“It’s my spare, after all,” Louis said. “Take whichever suit feels lucky to you. I’ll take the other.”

The probe was slowing, slowing.

“Now?”

“Now.”

Chapter 26

The Dockyard

HIGH POINT, A.D. 2893

The cruiser and its cargo plate rose through the night. Warvia and Tegger clung to each other in the payload shell. Fear of heights was a terrible thing. They both shrieked when they felt the bump, then laughed because they were still alive.