A Circus of Hells df-2 Read online

Page 17


  “Maybe I can help you,” Djana said.

  “Your help would be to Merseia,” Ydwyr reproved her.

  Flandry pounced. “That’s what you are to him, girl,” he exclaimed in Anglic. “A tool for his damned planet.” In Eriau: “Move, you!”

  The girl shook her head blindly. It wasn’t clear which of them she meant. Forlorn, she trudged out behind the tall nonhuman figure, in front of the man’s weapon.

  High and distant, little more in the naked eye than a glint, the enemy ship held her position. Magniscreens would reveal that three left the house for the boat—but not their species, Flandry hoped. Just three sent out to fetch something…The gangway clattered to boots.

  “Aft,” Flandry directed. “Sorry,” he said when they were at the bunks, and stunned Ydwyr. He used the cord to secure his captive and urged Djana forward. Her lips, her whole slight body trembled.

  “What will you do?” she pleaded.

  “Try to escape,” Flandry said. “You mean there’s a different game going?”

  She sank into the seat beside his control chair. He buckled her in, more as a precaution against impulsive behavior than against a failure of interior grav, and assumed his own place. She stared blankly at him. “You don’t understand,” she kept repeating. “He’s good, he’s wise, you’re making such a terrible mistake, please don’t.”

  “You want me brainscrubbed, then?”

  “I don’t know, I don’t know. Let me alone!” Flandry forgot her while he checked the indicators. Everything seemed in order, no deterioration, no vandalism, no boobytraps. He brought the engine murmurous to life. The gangway retracted, the airlock shut. Goodbye, Talwin. Goodbye, existence? We’ll see. He tickled the console. The skill had not left his fingers. Jake floated aloft. The village receded, the geysers, the mountains, he was skyborne.

  The outercom blinked and buzzed. Flandry ignored it till he was lined out northward. The other spacecraft swung about and swooped after him. Several kilometers off, she proved to be a corvette, no capital ship but one that could eat a scoutboat for breakfast. Flandry accepted her call.

  “Saniau to Terran vessel. Where are you bound and why?”

  “Terran vessel, and she is a Terran vessel, to Saniau. Listen with both ears. Dominic Flandry speaks. That’s right, the very same Dominic Flandry who. I’m going home. The datholch Ydwyr, Vach Urdiolch, nephew to the most exalted Roidhun and so forth, is my guest. If you don’t believe me, check the native town and try to find him. When he recovers from a slight indisposition, I can give you a visual. Shoot me down and he goes too.” Pause.

  “If you speak truth, Dominic Flandry, do you imagine the datholch would trade honor for years?”

  “No. I do imagine you’ll save him if you possibly can.”

  “Correct. You will be overhauled, grappled, and boarded. If the datholch has been harmed, woe betide you.”

  “First you have to do the overhauling. Second you have to convince me that any woe you can think of betides me worse than what does already. I suggest you check with the qanryf before you get reckless. Meanwhile,” and in Anglic, “cheerio.” Flandry cut the circuit.

  At his velocity, he had crossed the Hellkettle Mountains. The northlands stretched vast and drear beneath, gleaming ice, glittering snow, blots that were blizzards. He cast about with his instruments for a really huge storm. There was sure to be one somewhere, this time of year…yes!

  A wall of murk towered from earth to high heaven. Before he had pierced it, Flandry felt the thrust and heard the scream of hurricane-force winds. When he was inside, blackness and chaos had him.

  A corvette would not go into such a tempest. Nothing except a weathership had any business in one; others could flit above or around readily enough. But a small spaceboat with a first-class pilot—a pilot who had begun his career in aircraft and aerial combat—could live in the fury. And detectors, straining from outside, would lose her.

  Flandry lost himself in the battle to keep alive.

  Half an hour later, he broke free and shot into space.

  Talwin rolled enormous in his screens. Halfway down from either pole coruscated winter’s whiteness; the cloud-marbled blue of seas between icecaps looked black by contrast. Flandry waved. “Goodbye,” he said anew. “Good luck.”

  Meters shouted to his eyes of patrol ships waiting for him. You didn’t normally risk hyperdrive this near a planet or a sun. Matter density was too great, as was the chance of gravitation desynchronizing your quantum jumps. The immediate scene was scarcely normal. Flandry’s hands danced.

  Switchover to secondary state in so strong a field made the hull ring. Screens changed to the faster-than-light optical compensation mode. Talwin was gone and Siekh dwindling among the stars. The air droned. The deck shivered.

  After minutes, a beep drew Flandry’s attention to a tell-tale. “Well,” he said, “one skipper’s decided to be brave and copy us. He got away with it, too, and locked onto our ‘wake.’ His wouldn’t register that steady a bearing otherwise. We’re faster, but I’m afraid we won’t shake him before he’s served as a guide to others who can outpace us.”

  Djana stirred. She had sat mute—lost, he thought when he could spare her a thought—while they ran the polar storm. Her face turned to him beneath its heavy coif of hair. “Have you any hope?” she asked tonelessly.

  He punched for navigational data. “A stern chase is a long chase,” he said, “and I’ve heard about a pulsar not many parsecs off. It may help us shed our importunate colleagues.”

  She made no response, simply looked back out at space. Either she didn’t know how dangerous a pulsar was, or she didn’t care.

  Chapter XIX

  Once a blue giant sun had burned, 50,000 times more luminous than yet-unborn Sol. It lasted for a bare few million years; then the hydrogen fuel necessary to stay on the main sequence was gone. The star collapsed. In the unimaginable violence of a supernova, momentarily blazing to equal an entire galaxy, it went out.

  Such energies did not soon bleed away. For ages the blown-off upper layers formed a nebula of lacy loveliness around the core, which shone less white-hot than X-ray hot. Eventually the gases dissipated, a part of them to make new suns and planets. The globe that remained continued shrinking under its own weight until density reached tons per cubic centimeter and spin was measured in seconds. Feebler and feebler did it shine, white dwarf, black dwarf, neutron star—

  Compressed down near the ultimate that nature’s law permitted, the atoms (if they could still be called that) went into their final transitions. Photons spurted forth, were pumped through the weirdly distorted space-time within and around the core, at last won freedom to flee at light speed. Strangely regular were those bursts, though slowly their frequencies, amplitudes, and rate declined back toward extinction—dying gasps.

  Pulsar breath.

  Djana stared as if hypnotized into the forward screen. Tiny but waxing among the stars went that red blink…blink…blink. She did not recall having ever seen a sight more lonely. The cabin’s warmth and glow made blacker the emptiness outside; engine throb and ventilator murmur deepened the eternal silence of those infinite spaces.

  She laid a hand on Flandry’s arm. “Nicky—”

  “Quiet.” His eyes never left the board before him; his fingers walked back and forth across computer keys.

  “Nicky, we can die any minute, and you’ve said hardly a word to me.”

  “Stop bothering me or we will for sure die.”

  She retreated into her chair. Be strong, be strong.

  He had bound her in place for most of the hours during which the boat flew. She didn’t resent that; he couldn’t trust her, and he must clean himself and snatch some sleep. Afterward he brought sandwiches to his captives—she might have slipped a drug into his—and released her. But at once he was nailed to instrument and calculations. He showed no sign of feeling the wishes she thrust at him; his will to liberty overrode them.

  Now he crouched above the
pilot panel. He’d not been able to cut his hair; the mane denied shaven countenance, prim coverall, machine-controlling hands, and declared him a male animal who hunted.

  And was hunted. Four Merseian ships bayed on his heels. He’d told her about them before he went to rest, estimating they would close the gap in 25 light-years. From Siekh to the pulsar was 17.

  Blink…blink…blink…once in 1.3275 second.

  Numbers emerged on a plate set into the console. Flandry nodded. He took the robotic helm. Stars wheeled with his shift of course.

  In time he said, maybe to himself: “Yes. They’re decelerating. They don’t dare come in this fast.”

  “What?” Djana whispered.

  “The pursuit. They spot us aiming nearly straight on for that lighthouse. Get too close—easy to do at hyper-speed—and the gravity gradient will pluck you apart. Why share the risk we have to take? If we don’t make it, Ydwyr will’ve been more expendable than a whole ship and crew. If we do survive, they can catch us later.”

  And match phase, and lay alongside, and force a way in to rescue Ydwyr…and her…but Nicky, Nicky they would haul off to burn his brain out.

  Should it matter?

  “I’ll be sorry, we both will be sorry for you, but Merseia—”

  He turned his head. His grin and gray eyes broke across her like morning. “That’s what they think,” he said.

  I only care because you’re a man, the one man in all this wasteland, and do I care for any man? Only my body does, my sinful body.

  She struggled to raise Ydwyr’s face.

  Flandry leaned over and cupped her chin in his right hand. “I’m sorry to’ve been rude,” he smiled. “Sorrier to play games with your life. I should have insisted you stay on Talwin. When you wanted to come, with everything else on my mind I sort of assumed you’d decided you preferred freedom.”

  “I was free,” she said frantically. “I followed my master.”

  “Odd juxtaposition, that.” A buzzer sounded. “ ’Scuse, I got work. We go primary in half a shake. I’ve programmed the autopilot, but in conditions this tricky I want to ride herd on it.”

  “Primary?” Dismay washed through her. “They’ll catch you right away!” That’s good. Isn’t it?

  The engine note changed. Star images vanished till the screens readapted. At true speed, limited by light’s, the boat plunged on. Power chanted abaft the cabin; she was changing her kinetic velocity at maximum thrust.

  Blink…blink…blink…The blood-colored beacon glowed ever brighter. Yet Djana could look directly into it, and she did not find any disc. Stars frosted the night around. Which way was the Empire?

  Flandry had given himself back to the machines. Twice he made a manual adjustment.

  After minutes wherein Djana begged God to restore Merseian courage to her, the noise and vibration stopped. Head full of it, she didn’t instantly recognize its departure. Then she bit her tongue to keep from imploring a word.

  When Flandry gave her one, she started shivering.

  He spoke calmly, as if these were the lost days when they two had fared after treasure. “We’re in the slot, near’s I can determine. Let’s relax and give the universe our job for a bit.”

  “Wh-wh-what are we doing?”

  “We’re falling free, in a hyperbolic orbit around the pulsar. The Merseians aren’t. They’re distributing themselves to cover the region. They can’t venture as close as us. The potential of so monstrous a mass in so small a volume, you see; differential forces would wreck their ships. The boat’s less affected, being of smaller dimensions. With the help of the interior field—the same that gives us artificial gravity and counteracts acceleration pressure—she ought to stay in one piece. The Merseians doubtless figure to wait till we kick in our hyperdrive again, and resume the chivvy.”

  “But what’re we getting?” Blink…blink…blink…Had his winter exile driven him crazy?

  “We’ll pass through the fringes of a heavily warped chunk of space. The mass concentration deforms it. If the core got much denser, light itself couldn’t break loose. We won’t be under any such extreme condition, but I don’t expect they can track us around periastron. Our emission will be too scattered; radar beams will curve off at silly angles. The Merseians can compute roughly where and when we’ll return to flatter space, but until we do—” Flandry had unharnessed himself while he talked. Rising, he stretched prodigiously, muscle by muscle. “A propos Merseians, let’s go check on old Ydwyr.”

  Djana fumbled with her own buckles. “I, I, I don’t track you, Nicky,” she stammered. “What do we…you gain more than time? Why did you take us aboard?”

  “As to your first question, the answer’s a smidge technical. As to the second, well, Ydwyr’s the reason we’ve come this far. Without him, we’d’ve been in a missile barrage.” Flandry walked around behind her chair. “Here, let me assist.”

  “You! You’re not unfastening me!”

  “No, I’m not, am I?” he said dreamily. Leaning over, he nuzzled her where throat met shoulder. The kiss that followed brought a breathless giddiness which had not quite faded when he led the way aft.

  Ydwyr sat patient on a bunk. Prior to sleeping, Flandry had welded a short length of light cable to the frame, the other end around an ankle, and untied the rope. It wasn’t a harsh confinement. In fact, the man would have to keep wits and gun ready when negotiating this passage.

  “Have you been listening to our conversation?” he asked. “I left the intercom on.”

  “You are thanked for your courtesy,” Ydwyr replied, “but I could not follow the Anglic.”

  “Oh!” Djana’s hand went to her mouth. “I forgot—”

  “And I,” Flandry admitted. “We Terrans tend to assume every educated being will know our official language—by definition—and of course it isn’t so. Well, I can tell you.”

  “I believe I have deduced it,” Ydwyr said. “You are swinging free, dangerously but concealingly near the pulsar. From the relativistic region you will launch your courier torpedoes, strapped together and hyperdrives operating simultaneously. What with distortion effects, you hope my folk will mistake the impulses for this boat’s and give chase. If your decoy lures them as far as a light-year off, you will be outside their hyperwave detection range and can embark on a roundabout homeward voyage. The sheer size of space will make it unlikely that they, backtracking, will pick up your vibrations.”

  “Right,” Flandry said admiringly. “You’re a sharp rascal. I look forward to some amusing chit-chat.”

  “If your scheme succeeds,” Ydwyr made a salute of respect. “If not, and if we are taken alive, you are under my protection.”

  Gladness burst in Djana. My men can be friends!

  “You are kind,” said Flandry with a bow. He turned to the girl. “How about making us a pot of tea?” he said in Anglic.

  “Tea?” she asked, astonished.

  “He likes it. Let’s be hospitable. Put the galley intercom on—low—and you can hear us talk.”

  Flandry spoke lightly, but she felt an underlining of his last sentence and all at once her joy froze. Though why, why?

  “Would…the datholch…accept tea?” she asked in Eriau.

  “You are thanked.” Ydwyr spoke casually, more interested in the man. Djana went forward like an automaton. The voices trailed her:

  “I am less kind, Dominic Flandry, than I am concerned to keep an audacious and resourceful entity functional.”

  “For a servant?”

  “Khraich, we cannot well send you home, can we? I—”

  Djana made a production of closing the galley door. It cut off the words. Fingers unsteady, she turned the intercom switch.

  “—sorry. You mean well by your standards, I suppose, Ydwyr. But I have this archaic prejudice for freedom over even the nicest slavery. Like the sort you fastened on that poor girl.”

  “A reconditioning. It improved her both physically and mentally.”

  No! He might be speaki
ng of an animal!

  “She does seem more, hm, balanced. It’s just a seeming, however, as long as you keep that father-image hood over her eyes.”

  “Hr-r-r, you have heard of Aycharaych’s techniques, then?”

  “Aycharaych? Who? N-n-no…I’ll check with Captain Abrams…Damn! I should have played along with you, shouldn’t I? All right, I fumbled that one, after you dropped it right into my paws. Getting back to Djana, the father fixation is unmistakable to any careful outside observer.”

  “What else would you have me do? She came, an unwitting agent who had acquired knowledge which must not get back to Terra. She showed potentialities. Instead of killing her out of hand, we could try to develop them. Death is always available. Besides, depth-psychological work on a human intrigued me. Later, when that peculiar gift for sometimes imposing her desires on other minds appeared, we saw what a prize we had. My duty became to make sure of her.”

  “So to win her trust, you warned her to warn me?”

  “Yes. About—in honesty between us, Dominic Flandry—a fictitious danger. No orders had come for your removal; I was welcome to keep you. But the chance to clinch it with her was worth more.”

  Anglic: “No? I’ll—be—especially—damned.”

  “You are not angry, I hope.”

  “N-n-no. That’d be unsporting, wouldn’t it?” Anglic: “The more so when it caused me to break from my cell with a hell of a yell far sooner than I’d expected to.”

  “Believe me, I did not wish to sacrifice you. I did not want to be involved in that wretched business at all. Honor compelled me. But I begrudged every minute away from my Talwinian research.”

  Djana knelt on the deck and wept.

  Blink…blink…blink…furnace glare spearing from the screens. The hull groaned and shuddered with stresses. Fighting them, the interior field set air ashake in a wild thin singing. Often, looking down a passage, you thought you saw it ripple; and perhaps it did, sliding through some acute bend in space. From time to time hideous nauseas twisted you, and your mind grew blurred. Sunward was only the alternation of night and red. Starward were no constellations nor points of light, nothing but rainbow blotches and smears.

 

    Security Read onlineSecurityThe Valor of Cappen Varra Read onlineThe Valor of Cappen VarraThe Sensitive Man Read onlineThe Sensitive ManVirgin Planet Read onlineVirgin PlanetTo Build a World Read onlineTo Build a WorldSeven Conquests Read onlineSeven ConquestsMayday Orbit Read onlineMayday OrbitInnocent at Large Read onlineInnocent at LargeWinners! Read onlineWinners!Mother of Kings Read onlineMother of KingsUn-Man Read onlineUn-ManWar of the Gods Read onlineWar of the GodsGenesis Read onlineGenesisIndustrial Revolution Read onlineIndustrial RevolutionThe High Ones and Other Stories Read onlineThe High Ones and Other StoriesThe Chapter Ends Read onlineThe Chapter EndsFlandry of Terra Read onlineFlandry of TerraStarfarers Read onlineStarfarersA World Named Cleopatra Read onlineA World Named CleopatraOperation Chaos Read onlineOperation ChaosHarvest of Stars - [Harvest of Stars 01] Read onlineHarvest of Stars - [Harvest of Stars 01]The Rebel Worlds Read onlineThe Rebel WorldsPoul Anderson's Planet Stories Read onlinePoul Anderson's Planet StoriesNo World of Their Own Read onlineNo World of Their OwnThe Merman's Children Read onlineThe Merman's ChildrenThe High Crusade Read onlineThe High CrusadeThe Stars Are Also Fire Read onlineThe Stars Are Also FireThe Game of Empire df-9 Read onlineThe Game of Empire df-9The Sorrow of Odin the Goth tp-7 Read onlineThe Sorrow of Odin the Goth tp-7The Day After Doomsday Read onlineThe Day After DoomsdayGoat Song Read onlineGoat SongThe Wing Alak Stories Read onlineThe Wing Alak StoriesConan the Rebel Read onlineConan the RebelThree Worlds to Conquer Read onlineThree Worlds to ConquerIron mw-1 Read onlineIron mw-1The Fleet of Stars Read onlineThe Fleet of StarsCaptive of the Centaurianess Read onlineCaptive of the CentaurianessThe Sign of the Raven Read onlineThe Sign of the RavenThe Avatar Read onlineThe AvatarThe Boat of a Million Years Read onlineThe Boat of a Million YearsNew America Read onlineNew AmericaSatan's World Read onlineSatan's WorldGallicenae Read onlineGallicenaeA Midsummer Tempest Read onlineA Midsummer TempestA Stone in Heaven Read onlineA Stone in HeavenOrbit Unlimited Read onlineOrbit UnlimitedThe Corkscrew of Space Read onlineThe Corkscrew of SpaceTLV - 02 - The Road of the Sea Horse Read onlineTLV - 02 - The Road of the Sea HorseEnsign Flandry df-1 Read onlineEnsign Flandry df-1Young Flandry Read onlineYoung FlandryThe Broken Sword Read onlineThe Broken SwordSwordsman of Lost Terra Read onlineSwordsman of Lost TerraOrion Shall Rise Read onlineOrion Shall RiseA Knight of Ghosts and Shadows df-7 Read onlineA Knight of Ghosts and Shadows df-7The Queen of Air and Darkness Read onlineThe Queen of Air and DarknessTo Outlive Eternity Read onlineTo Outlive EternityThe Golden Slave Read onlineThe Golden SlaveDahut Read onlineDahutCaptain Flandry: Defender of the Terran Empire Read onlineCaptain Flandry: Defender of the Terran EmpireUn-Man and Other Novellas Read onlineUn-Man and Other NovellasDavid Falkayn: Star Trader (Technic Civlization) Read onlineDavid Falkayn: Star Trader (Technic Civlization)Sir Dominic Flandry: The Last Knight of Terra Read onlineSir Dominic Flandry: The Last Knight of TerraVault of the Ages Read onlineVault of the AgesThe Devil's Game Read onlineThe Devil's GameA Stone in Heaven df-12 Read onlineA Stone in Heaven df-12Flandry's Legacy: The Technic Civilization Saga Read onlineFlandry's Legacy: The Technic Civilization SagaHarvest the Fire Read onlineHarvest the FireThe Sharing of Flesh Read onlineThe Sharing of FleshHarvest of Stars Read onlineHarvest of StarsAgent of the Terran Empire Read onlineAgent of the Terran EmpireWorld without Stars Read onlineWorld without StarsThe Corridors of Time Read onlineThe Corridors of TimeFire Time gh-2 Read onlineFire Time gh-2The Stars are also Fire - [Harvest the Stars 02] Read onlineThe Stars are also Fire - [Harvest the Stars 02]We Have Fed Our Sea Read onlineWe Have Fed Our SeaDemon of Scattery Read onlineDemon of ScatteryRogue Sword Read onlineRogue SwordRise of the Terran Empire Read onlineRise of the Terran EmpireThe Only Game in Town tp-4 Read onlineThe Only Game in Town tp-4Agent of the Terran Empire df-5 Read onlineAgent of the Terran Empire df-5The Day Of Their Return Read onlineThe Day Of Their ReturnBrain Wave Read onlineBrain WaveThe Day of Their Return df-4 Read onlineThe Day of Their Return df-4The Golden Horn Read onlineThe Golden HornHrolf Kraki's Saga Read onlineHrolf Kraki's SagaTau Zero Read onlineTau ZeroThe People of the Wind Read onlineThe People of the WindTLV - 03 - The Sign of the Raven Read onlineTLV - 03 - The Sign of the RavenFlandry of Terra df-6 Read onlineFlandry of Terra df-6Gibraltar Falls tp-3 Read onlineGibraltar Falls tp-3The Game Of Empire Read onlineThe Game Of EmpireThe Road of the Sea Horse Read onlineThe Road of the Sea HorseDelenda Est tp-5 Read onlineDelenda Est tp-5Time Patrol Read onlineTime PatrolBrave To Be a King tp-2 Read onlineBrave To Be a King tp-2The Man Who Counts nvr-1 Read onlineThe Man Who Counts nvr-1A Circus of Hells df-2 Read onlineA Circus of Hells df-2The Rebel Worlds df-3 Read onlineThe Rebel Worlds df-3The Unicorn Trade Read onlineThe Unicorn TradeLord of a Thousand Suns Read onlineLord of a Thousand SunsThe Helping Hand Read onlineThe Helping HandThe Shield of Time Read onlineThe Shield of TimeThe Van Rijn Method Read onlineThe Van Rijn MethodA Circus of Hells Read onlineA Circus of HellsEarthman, Beware! and others Read onlineEarthman, Beware! and othersIvory, and Apes, and Peacocks tp-6 Read onlineIvory, and Apes, and Peacocks tp-6Life Cycle Read onlineLife CycleThe Last Viking Read onlineThe Last VikingRoma Mater Read onlineRoma MaterThe Man-Kzin Wars 09 mw-9 Read onlineThe Man-Kzin Wars 09 mw-9For Love and Glory Read onlineFor Love and GloryEutopia Read onlineEutopiaTLV - 01 - The Golden Horn Read onlineTLV - 01 - The Golden HornThe Old Phoenix Tavern Read onlineThe Old Phoenix TavernThe Long Night df-10 Read onlineThe Long Night df-10The Dog and the Wolf Read onlineThe Dog and the WolfTales of the Flying Mountains Read onlineTales of the Flying MountainsThere Will Be Time Read onlineThere Will Be TimeA Knight of Ghosts and Shadows Read onlineA Knight of Ghosts and ShadowsThree Hearts and Three Lions Read onlineThree Hearts and Three LionsThe Makeshift Rocket Read onlineThe Makeshift RocketThe Dancer from Atlantis Read onlineThe Dancer from AtlantisFire Time Read onlineFire Time