"You seem a little more relaxed," Fitzsimmons said, in an offhand way, as he coiled up a length of comm cable. He was trying not to smirk. "Now your precious baby is on the other side of the lock."
"Maybe," Gretchen said, nodding. "I — "
Her comm warbled, and Magdalena's voice filled the air around them. "Hunt-sister, the main comm array is working, and there's someone who wants to speak with you."
"Patch 'em through," Gretchen said, turning away from the two Marines. "Someone on the Cornuelle?"
"No," the Hesht said in a sly voice, "I managed to whisker the camp planetside. Everyone seems to be alive — but they're pissed and hungry and want to know if the showers are working."
Damn. Gretchen clicked her teeth, cursing herself for forgetting about the scientists stranded on the planet. "I'm a fine leader," she muttered. "We should have called them first thing. They must be half-mad with fear from being abandoned."
"I wouldn't say half covers the strength of their feeling," Maggie commented. "You want to take this call from the bridge?"
"Doctor Lennox, I'm sorry, but Doctor Clarkson," Gretchen repeated for the sixth time, "is dead. Everyone who was on the Palenque, save for crewman Fuentes and crewwoman Flores, is dead."
In the v-pane beside the captain's chair — now covered with an Imperial Marine field blanket — a thin, distressed-looking woman stared back at Gretchen, her face framed by the hood of a z-suit which had seen better days. Two men crowded behind her in some kind of shelter — Gretchen could make out the roof supports characteristic of an extruded building — and both of them seemed to have grasped the facts of the matter, to judge from their stunned expressions.
"I–I don't understand. He just went on the shuttle…" Lennox had faded blond hair and high cheekbones. Gretchen guessed she'd been very pretty when she was younger, but years spent in the glare of alien suns had not treated her kindly.
"Margaret," Gretchen leaned forward, catching the woman's eye. "I know it seems very sudden, but you've been out of contact with the Palenque for weeks — surely you thought something had gone awry aboard?"
"Yes…" Lennox swallowed and seemed to become aware of her surroundings again. "I just hoped…he was still alive."
"I'm sorry, but there was an accident and the crew, Doctor Clarkson and Doctor McCue, were all killed. Now — is everyone at base camp all right? Do you need medical assistance?"
"We're fine," rumbled one of the two men, a hulking, bearded face with a stout nose. "And very, very glad to hear from you, Doctor Anderssen. I am Vladimir Tukhachevsky — dobre den!"
"Good day to you, Doctor." Gretchen bobbed her head in greeting. "I know you all want to get a real shower and eat a different brand of ration bar, but there's going to be a delay before we can bring you back up to the ship."
"What do you mean? Is there still a problem?" The other man — a smaller, wirier fellow — pushed his face into the camera. "Don't you have a rescue ship?"
"Mister Smalls," Gretchen smiled amiably in greeting. "The Imperial Navy has been good enough to bring us here to help you, but accommodations are lacking on the Cornuelle for guests. There is also a problem with the shuttle engines, which has to be resolved. When there is a place to put you on the Palenque, and we can retrieve you safely, we will do so immediately."
What a fine manager I make, passed through the back of Gretchen's mind. Next I'll be expressing my profound sympathies at their recent layoff.
Tukhachevsky frowned, heavy black eyebrows beetling in concern. "What kind of accident, Doctor Anderssen? Has the Palenque been damaged?"
"She's…a little Spartan right now, Doctor." Gretchen — watching the faces of the three scientists on the planet — decided not to explain the events of the artifact and its activation. Not today, at any rate. "The accident that killed the crew also…destroyed most of the amenities onboard. Luckily, the Cornuelle has been able to supply us with new bedding, towels and food." If you call Marine ration bars and olive-colored threesquares food.
"In any case, we should have a shuttle ready to go in a day, perhaps two, so call in your field crews and get everyone ready to ship up."
Lennox nodded, turning away with a distant, frightened expression on her face. Smalls was already gone, leaving only the bearlike Tukhachevsky with a troubled look in his eyes.
"Doctor? Is something wrong?"
"Ah…" Vladimir twisted the ends of his mustache with a nervous motion. "Almost everyone is already in camp. Since the Palenque stopped responding to our hails, I fear morale has suffered. No one is even working in the excavation anymore. But one of us, I fear, is not here. She's gone, out wandering in the wasteland."
"Who?" Gretchen felt irritated, but at the same time she knew who it must be, even before Tukhachevsky said her name aloud. Who else would I want to talk to? Who do we need to talk to?
"Our own dear Russovsky," Vladimir said sadly, scratching a sore on the side of his nose. "She left in her Midge the same day Clarkson and McCue went up to the ship. We've heard nothing from her since, not so much as a word."
Aboard the Cornuelle
"Captain? The civilians have established contact with their ground team. Do you want the recording on your number two?" The midshipman looked up with a painfully earnest expression on his face, fingers poised over the main communications panel.
Hadeishi shook his head. "No, thank you, Smith-tzin. Just give me a realtime on my display if anything interesting happens." He gave the young officer a stern look. "Has Sho-sa Kosho set you to updating our navigational charts?"
"Hai, Captain!" Smith managed to come to attention in his shockchair, a talent Hadeishi remembered all too well himself. His first posting had been under a Mйxica captain with a very strict sense of propriety. "All spare passive sensor time is already tasked."
"Good. Carry on." Updating local navigational charts was dull — most of the time — but frighteningly essential to safe navigation and the rapid response of the Fleet to any threat. Hadeishi tapped up the boy's report and found the usual litany of planets, planetesimals, asteroids and stray cometary bodies. Too early to find anything interesting. A pity.
The bridge was quiet and busy, filled with the little sounds of men and women working at routine tasks made fresh by a new duty station for the ship and at least the prospect of danger. Hadeishi let the shockchair take more of his weight, eyes roving idly from station to station. The well of the threat board drew his attention at last, as it usually did, and he frowned. The red sphere of Ephesus swam in the center, slashed with the white of enormous storms, surrounded by a scattering of tiny lights — each one tagged with ship identification numbers, directions of movement, thrust and mass figures — and there was absolutely nothing going on.
Even the tense atmosphere aboard the Palenque had abated — no new horrors had been discovered, the alien devices were secured — and everyone aboard was busy restoring ship's systems. Hadeishi considered remanding the gun control orders which kept two forward beam weapons targeted on the civilian ship. But he did not. Quarantine restrictions were strict and he had no desire to generate more paperwork for himself.