“Acknowledged.” Ferrol looked over his shoulder at Roman. “It’ll be just another minute, Captain.”
Roman nodded and looked over at Marlowe. “ETA on the sharks?”
“Twenty-eight minutes for the leader,” the other said tightly. “A few minutes later for the others.”
Ferrol looked at his tactical display, feeling an odd mixture of frustration and melancholy. There were a total of ten Tampy ships harrassing the sharks now, but for all the effect they’d had on the predators’ progress they might just as well have stayed away. The sharks were still coming, the Tampies’ clumsy snare webbing hanging uselessly off their vulture vanguards or else simply vanished long behind them. Still coming… and on Amity’s other side, the corralled space horses very clearly knew it. Their restless milling about the enclosure had ceased; now, as if somehow divining what the Amity and Scapa Flow had in mind, they were pressed abnormally close together around the spot where, if all went well, a section of their cage was about to be vaporized.
And when that happened…
Ferrol bit at his lip, eyes suddenly brimming with moisture. In the wake of his confrontation with Roman and Kennedy everything he’d ever known or thought he’d known about the Tampies had collapsed into chaos, leaving his emotions far too tangled for him to really know anymore how he felt about them. But amid all the turmoil one fact stood out crystal clear.
The Senator, with all his cold-blooded conniving, had won. And the thought of that made Ferrol ill.
“Backup at full,” Demarco said. “All boards show green.”
Angrily, Ferrol blinked the moisture from his eyes. “They’re ready, Captain,” he said, not turning around.
“Very good, Commander,” the other said, his voice steady. “You may give the order.”
Ferrol gritted his teeth, shifting his attention to the visual display. “All right, Mai.
Get ready… fire.”
From the radio came the faint crack of the Scapa Flow’s capacitors; and on the visual a faint spiderweb of brilliant blue coronal discharge abruptly appeared as the massive jolt of current vaporized a half-dozen square kilometers of webbing. For a second the blue light illuminated the dark masses grouped silently behind it. Then the spiderweb was gone… and in the dim red light of the dwarf star Ferrol could see the masses moving toward the opening.
At the helm, Kennedy exhaled audibly. “There it is,” she murmured. “The end of an era.”
Ferrol nodded. They were beginning to flow through the gap now, the individual space horses making up the mass angling off in all directions as soon as they were clear of the webbing. He glanced at the tactical, wondering vaguely if the Tampies running before the sharks out there had noticed that their precious herd had been stampeded. Wondered if they would see it as a betrayal, or as a painful but necessary kindness.
He didn’t know. For that matter, he didn’t even know which way he’d originally meant it.
So much, he thought bitterly, for trustworthy instincts.
“They can come back,” Marlowe said. But not as if he believed it. “They got to space once before without the space horses. Surely they can do it again.”
Ferrol turned to see Kennedy shake her head. “Not without our help,” she said.
“The first time was a fluke—a space horse wandered into one of their systems and stayed there long enough for them to figure out how to catch it. They’ve never had any mechanical StarDrive of their own.”
“We can hope they had enough foresight to keep a few of their space horses out of this fight,” Roman said. “On the other hand…” He hesitated, a muscle in his cheek twitching once.
“Quentin?” Ferrol said quietly.
Almost reluctantly, Roman nodded. “It may not really matter how many they come out of this with,” he agreed soberly. “The very fact that there are creatures out there they can’t defend their space horses against may force them to turn the last ones loose anyway.”
For a minute the bridge was silent. The logjam at the exit hole had cleared out now, Ferrol saw, and the fifty or so space horses that still remained inside were flowing smoothly and swiftly out. In seven hundred years, he’d heard once, none of the Tampies’ space horses had ever died… which meant it had taken them all seven hundred of those years to assemble this stock.
And now they were all leaving; chunks of lumpy air from a punctured balloon. The end of an era, indeed.
“And speaking of ships without a mechanical StarDrive,” Roman said into his thoughts, “it’s time we cleared away those vultures and got out of here ourselves.
Commander?”
“Yes, sir.” Ferrol took a deep breath, watching the tactical as he keyed the radio.
“Amity to Scapa Flow; Mai, we’re pulling out. Get the net guns ready, and then—”
He broke off. Something on the tactical display…
“What is it?” Roman asked, his voice frowning.
Ferrol stared at the display, wondering if he was imagining things. But there was no mistake. The newly freed space horses, which had been angling sharply away from the approaching sharks’ trajectory as they left the corral, had begun to curve back inward toward that vector again. “Captain, take a look at the tactical,” he said carefully. “The escaping space horses… aren’t escaping.”
He turned to find Roman frowning at his own displays. For a moment their gazes locked—“Kennedy, are they still in too close to the star to Jump?”
Slowly, she shook her head. “I don’t think so, sir,” she said. “Not given what we now know about how much heat and radiation they can handle.”
“They’ve each picked up an optical net,” Marlowe pointed out doubtfully.
“Maybe…” He trailed off.
“But they’re not running away.” Kennedy looked over her shoulder at Roman, a vaguely stunned expression on her face. “They’re going to attack.”
Roman looked at her a moment; then, abruptly, reached for his console. “Amity to Tampy ships,” he called. “This is Captain Roman. Pull out of there, right now.
You’re about to be crushed by your own space horses.”
His answer was a burst of unintelligible whinelike squeaks and moans. “Damn,” he swore under his breath.
“Tie Rrin-saa into the line,” Ferrol suggested. “He can translate for you.”
Roman nodded, already keying for intercom. Ferrol shifted his attention back to the tactical; and a minute later the Tampy space horses began to veer away out of the sharks’ path. Out of the sharks’ path, and toward the loose sphere of space horses now closing in on the predators like a giant fist. “Make sure all recorders are on,”
he told Marlowe. “We’re going to want to get all of this.”
And the battle began.
It was, to Ferrol’s mind, a surprisingly leisurely confrontation; but perhaps all the more awesome for its slow, inexorable pace. Even as the Tampy ships reached the contracting sphere of space horses the sharks were breaking their own flying formation, angling outward to face their attackers like the fingers of an opening hand. Between the two groups, the vultures swarmed about like smoke in random cross breezes, either unable to maintain their optical nets in the face of the assault or else simply being thrown about by conflicting telekinetic forces.
Without warning, the Amity jerked, jamming Ferrol back into his seat. “Rrin-saa!”
Roman snapped. “What was that?”
“Sleipnninni wishes to join,” the Tampy’s voice came faintly over the intercom.
“Sso-ngu is having trouble holding him.”
“He has to,” Roman told him. “We can’t risk dragging the Amity into the middle of something like that. Change Handlers if Sso-ngu can’t hold on—double up if you have to—but keep Sleipnir here. Is that understood?”
“Your wishes are ours.”
Kennedy half turned. “We may be fighting a losing battle, Captain,” she said tightly. “The other Tampy space horses have gone back in, too.”
Ferrol swallowed hard. Kennedy was right: freed of the immediate threat of being the closest ones to the sharks, they’d now turned around to join the shrinking sphere, their tethered ships dragged helplessly along behind them like so much tinsel. Like Sleipnir, sensing somehow the group blood lust; unlike Sleipnir, too close to the center to have a hope of ignoring it.