you can handle. The odds are we'll probably all die horribly, but if we make it, we'll have the Empire by the throat. What do you say?'
Ruby looked at Owen. 'What does he say?'
Owen lowered his gun but didn't put it away. 'I know I'm going to regret this, but… you're an excellent fighter, Ruby; we could use another good fighter.'
'Then I'm in,' said Ruby. 'I never could resist a challenge.'
'How can we trust her?' said Moon.
'We can't,' said Jack Random. 'She's a bounty hunter.'
'And we're all outlaws,' said Hazel. 'Nobody trusts us, either. Anyway, she's my friend and I vouch for her. Anyone have any problems with that?'
Owen had quite a few, but had the sense not to say so. He shrugged, put his gun away, and smiled at Ruby Journey. 'Welcome to the rebellion.'
They made their way back to the
'All right, Oz,' he said easily. 'We've all had time to let the cold seep out of our bones, so let's have the bad news. What's been happening since I last spoke to you?'
'You wouldn't believe half of it,' said the AI. 'Practically everyone and his brother has tried to break into this ship while you were gone, using everything from computer viruses to a hammer and chisel. I tried reasoning with them and I tried shooting them, but they kept coming. Finally I persuaded the control tower to station a large presence of the city watch at the entrances to the landing fields, and that helped. By the way, the port controller asked me to tell you that he would like to have a word with you, and the word he has in mind is 'goodbye.' Mistport wants us out of here at the earliest possible moment, and if we don't get with it, they'll gather all their espers together and throw us back into space. I'm not entirely sure they're bluffing.'
Owen frowned. 'Any Imperial ships in the vicinity?'
'Hard to tell while I'm stuck down here. Nothing obvious on the far sensors, but there could be a small fleet hidden in orbit behind their screens, and the first we'd know of it would be when they opened fire. Next time you choose a yacht, pick something with a little more firepower.'
'Relax,' said Owen. 'You worry too much. This ship can outrun anything the Iron Bitch might send after us.'
'Speed isn't everything, Owen. It takes time to make the calculations that allow us to drop into hyperspace, even for a computer like me, and during that time we might as well have a target painted on our hull. Now then, if you've quite finished with me, I would like to have a word with you and Jack Random.'
Random looked inquiringly at Owen, who shrugged. 'Oz has been finding all kinds of stuff hidden in his memory files, mostly planted there by my father, designed only to appear as and when necessary. Apparently your being here has triggered one.'
'Go ahead, Oz,' said Random. He looked at Owen. 'The last time I heard from your father, I ended up paying postage on it.'
'Yeah,' said Owen, 'that sounds like Dad.'
And then suddenly a hologram of Owen's father was standing before them in the lounge, large as life and twice as confident. A cold hand clutched at Owen's heart. His father looked exactly as he had the last time Owen had seen him in the flesh, just twenty-four hours before he'd been cut down in the streets as a traitor. It occurred to Owen that he'd never had a chance to say goodbye and wondered why that suddenly mattered to him so much. The late Deathstalker looked harried and preoccupied, but his voice was steady and courteous.
'Hello, Jack. Been a while, hasn't it? If you're listening to this then I'm dead, and young Owen has come looking for you. Look out for him; he means well, but he's not a warrior. Spends all his time poring over books and histories. Don't ask me where he gets it from. Not quite what I had in mind for my only son and heir, but hopefully his distance from me will help to protect him if things go wrong. I'd like to think some good came of it. Jack, just because I'm dead, don't let the cause fall apart. Fight on. I don't want to have died for nothing.
'Owen, if all has gone according to plan, you should have my .ring. Guard it well. Concealed in its structure are the coordinates for the planet Shandrakor, where the original Deathstalker, founder of our Clan, fled in disgrace many centuries ago. Know now the great secret of our Family: the Deathstalker is not dead. He lies waiting in stasis, in his Last Standing on Shandrakor, together with a mighty armory of ancient and forbidden weapons. You must go there and wake him. He knows many secrets, including the location of the Darkvoid Device. With this weapon, lost for so long, your forces will be the equal of anything the Empire can send against you.
'Also hidden in my ring are the coordinates for the planet Haden, lost world of the Hadenmen. An army of augmented men lie waiting there in stasis for you to awaken them, in the Tomb of the Hadenmen. Our Family has had dealings with them in the past. They will respect your name and will fight for the cause. How much you trust them is up to you.
'I'm sorry this has been thrust upon you, Owen. It was never meant that you should have to carry such a weight. But it seems we have a traitor in our midst. One by one, all the key figures in the planned rebellion have been singled out and killed. I can only assume my own time is near. I've loaded the AI with everything I thought might prove useful, hidden as deeply as I can. This is the last message; there won't be any more. You're on your own now, Owen. I wish… I wish I'd talked with you more. I know you never approved of my intrigues, or the cause; hopefully by now you will have discovered why I thought it so important and will have made the cause your own. Be strong, Owen. Do what you have to.
'I wasn't really such a bad father, was I? I know I wasn't there as often as I might have been, but there was always so much work that needed doing. Never think I didn't love you. You can trust Jack Random. He's a good man. I keep thinking there's something else I should be saying, but I don't know what. Goodbye, Owen. Goodbye.'
The hologram snapped off and Owen's father disappeared, and for a long moment there was only quiet in the lounge. Jack Random sighed heavily.
'Another old comrade gone. I never thought I'd outlive so many friends.'
'Are you all right, Owen?' said Hazel.
'Yes. I'm fine. He's still doing it. Still trying to run my life.' Owen tried to be angry, but for once the anger wouldn't come. 'What really makes me mad is I have no choice but to follow his plans and take up his precious cause, whether I believe in it or not, just to survive. He's still pulling the strings of my life, even after he's dead.'
'I always thought the original Deathstalker was dead,' said Hazel. 'I mean, I saw his tomb on the holo once on Golgotha.'
Owen nodded distractedly. 'According to all the histories, he was hunted down and killed by the Shadow Men, nine hundred and forty-three years ago. He was officially pardoned, if not exonerated, some four hundred years later. They even built a monument for him. I wonder whose body they put in the tomb… Well, at least now we have a choice of destination. Shandrakor to search for my ancestor, or Haden to raise an army.'
Tobias Moon fixed Owen with his disquieting golden eyes. 'I have waited a long time to rejoin my people.'
'Well, you'll have to wait a bit longer,' said Random. 'If there's an armory on Shandrakor, we need to check it out. Especially if the Darkvoid Device is there.'
'This is my ship,' said Owen. 'I'll decide where we're going.'
'Then get on with it,' said Ruby Journey, trimming her nails with a nasty-looking dagger. 'There are a lot of people looking for you, Deathstalker, and I don't think we should still be here when they arrive.'
'She's got a point,' said Hazel, and Owen nodded.