being sick.
The lights were so dim Paula saw the men only as vague shapes. The cold made her shiver. They had turned the life systems down to save energy. Someone lit a crystal lamp. Saba turned, his face white in its light.
“That’s my wife, who does not clean up.” He batted a floating book tape away from him.
They put the lamp under the chart and leaned over it. Paula moved along the curved wall. The chart of lines and circles and colored dots looked like a choreograph.
Tanuojin said, “We’re falling into Jupiter’s influence. How long will this take?”
“Six hours,” Leno said. He wore a pressure suit; his arm was ham-sized. His finger moved over the drawing between him and Saba. “We’ll have to start here. Unscrew the hood and the hood mounting, set the ancillary crystal, take out this coupling, set the two behind it, and replace the coupling and set the crystal in its head. Reset the timing. It needs two engineers and someone to hold the lamp and the tools.”
Saba’s head bobbed. The light shone on the curve of his cheekbone. “You and I can do it.”
Leno turned to his second officer. “You’re dismissed. Go get some sleep.”
“Yes, Akellar.”
Another man had come in behind the others. She could not see who it was. He gave something to Tanuojin. The tall man swung around, his face turning into the light. “You’d better do this a little faster than six hours. We’ll reach primary Jupiter in five.” He left.
Leno was rolling up the chart. Paula went down the room, into the warmth of the crystal lamp. Saba said, “I need a volunteer from my watch, to go in with us.”
Near the hatch, in the dark, the other man said, “I’ll go.” It was Kasuk.
“Good,” Saba said. “Get into your suit.”
Leno clipped down the ends of his chart and fit it into a tube. When Kasuk had gone, he said, “You know, Saba, I wouldn’t expect this even of you.”
“Expect what?”
“If
“Tanuojin is one of the best officers in the fleet.”
“I didn’t deny that. One of my own friends wouldn’t jeopardize his ship for my sake.”
Saba said, “Are you coming to your point?”
In the pressure suit Leno looked two times Saba’s size. He said, “I think I’ve passed it.”
“Let’s go.” Saba turned toward Paula, above him in the dark. “Tell Tanuojin I’m taking Kasuk with me.”
“Hurry, will you? I’m freezing.”
“Don’t worry. If we don’t do this right, we’ll pretty soon be as hot you want.” He laughed.
Jupiter made the space around her seethe. The two ships slipped deeper into the turbulence. The seal between them cracked and broke, and they drifted apart. Saba, Leno, and Kasuk were stranded in
Tanuojin, in the cage, sent
“We can’t do it,” someone said, behind her: one of Ebelos’s crew. “The old dragon’s burned a couple more.”
Paula shook her head, dazed. Sril’s arm slipped around her waist. “Hold on, Mendoz’.”
The darkened bridge was faintly lit by the green cube of the holograph. The images of the two ships were bright yellow. The radiant Planet was interfering with the sensors and the images began to flutter. She put her hand on Sril’s arm.
Tanuojin put his hand out of the cage. “Bakan. Throw a schema of the Jovian fields into the holograph.”
Sril muttered in his throat. In the holograph the images of the ships had dissolved into hazy blurs. Suddenly
Bakan said, “I have the field schema.” A three-color diagram appeared in the holograph, showing the curving blue and orange space of Jupiter. The multiplying images of the ships sailed through it. A blue curl brushed one of
“Marus,” Tanuojin said. “Bring her up to zero-eight.”
Paula’s eyes hurt from trying to follow the chaos in the holograph.
“It’s no use,” a strange voice murmured, over her shoulder. “He can’t do this.”
Paula was leaning on Sril, her hand fisted in his sleeve. He gave her a slight hug. He heard them. The low voices whispered behind her.
“
“What’s her capacity—eighteen?”
“Look how he’s wasting energy.”
Junna flung his head back. He and Paula were within arm’s distance of each other. His eyes shone. With one hand he raked aside his thick floating hair. The blue and orange fields lapped and made a whorl of space that intersected the map cube. There were eight things that looked like
“Marus!” Tanuojin cried. “Reverse—eight-zero. Now! Pick her up, damn it, if you drop her I’ll kill you.”
“He’ll kill us all,” the strange murmur said behind her. “We have to grab this ship.”
Paula got hold of Junna’s hand. He gave her another desperate look and turned his face back toward his father in the cage.
The schema of the fields, drawn by the computer inside the ship, was the only steady image in the map. Ebelos was a long blur that filled half the cube, and
“Marus,” Tanuojin said. “Now hold her. Hold her. Let the field bring her to us.”
The map was a streaming blur of colors. Sril muttered, “I can’t see a thing.” Paula’s nose was bleeding; she went cross-eyed at the fog of blood in the air before her.
“Bakan,” Tanuojin said. “Tell the docking crew to be ready with the new seal.”