“Calculating… Ready. Switching command control from Con-One to Con-Two. Ready to transfer.”
Virgil scanned the instrument cage of Con-Two, nearly identical to that of Con-One, and edged his finger over the transfer button.
“Is it clear of debris?”
“How to know? Make an educated guess.”
Virgil hesitated.
An explosion rang through the ship. A series of repercussions vibrated around him. The air itself shook against his body.
“Wha-Damage report, Ben!”
The computer made no reply. Virgil twisted about. Sirens wailed, bells clanged. Lights on the panels around him flashed like random explosions.
“Ben! Damage!” Receiving no answer, Virgil cursed and reached toward the input keyboard. Triple airlocks sealed shut behind him with an angry hiss.
DAMAGE REPORT, he typed.
DAMAGE REPORT: 20 MG MICROMETEOROID EXPLOSION IN MAIN COMPUTER LOGIC UNIT. REPAIRS IN PROGRESS. ALL OTHER SYSTEMS FUNCTIONING. 5 MG MICROMETEOROID EXPLOSION IN TRITIUM SLURRY-CONTAINED.
The readout scrim continued to issue reports on other minor damage. Virgil cancelled it and took a deep breath.
He typed: CALCULATE MATCHING VELOCITY FOR TARGET AND INITIATE.
WORKING, the computer replied. Virgil held on tight.
READY. He punched the button marked ENTER, and the ship rotated on its vernier rockets, then thrusted forward. Virgil breathed shallowly.
The engines cut off. He floated against the straps. His hands shot out for the keyboard.
TRANSFER TO TARGET AREA, he typed.
WORKING. TARGET AREA 1 KKM FROM SIGNAL.
INITIATE, he typed, and pressed the transfer button when it glowed ready.
Nothing happened when he appeared in space a thousand kilometers from the signal.
SHUT DOWN POWER AT ALL POINTS BUT THOSE VITAL TO REPAIR AND LIFE SUPPORT. Dozens of lights winked out on the instrument panels at the entering of his command. A message appeared.
SUFFICIENT REPAIR TO TAKE VOICE COMMANDS.
“Can you read me?”
YES, the answer appeared.
“Good. Monitor all frequencies for other signals. Scan for neutrino flux from points other than the signal. Power up the lasers and stand by to use them on my command or upon attack.”
YES.
Virgil adjusted his position in the chair, tightened a strap, loosened another. Looking up and out the viewing port, he saw the periodic flashes of the signal. They flared like rocket engines, forming a tiny X.
A spaceship appeared just long enough to unleash a searing laserblast, then disappeared again.
The conning tower above Ring Three split in half, torn first by the laser blast, then by its own erupting atmosphere. The computer immediately fired a return bolt-a useless gesture, as the other ship had already vanished.
“Get us out of here!” Virgil cried, punching up one gravity thrust on the nuclear engines and grabbing the pitch, yaw, and roll switches. Using them, he twisted and turned the ship enough to weave a contorted, random path away from the signal.
“What was it?” He fought with the controls and his stomach. A picture appeared on the HUD of a huge sphere. He tried to watch it even though his eyes reacted to the ever-changing directions of acceleration. A distance readout placed it at twenty kilometers away, its diameter over twelve hundred meters.
“It’s a Bernal Sphere! Someone transferred an entire habitat! Do you know where it’s gone?”
NO.
He fought with his breath while randomly tapping at the attitude controls. He tried not to be too regular in his finger rhythms, though he could not afford to give his whole concentration to the evasion tactic.
“Any messages received?”
NO.
He stopped pressing the attitude jet controls and cut off the main engine array. Weightlessness returned.
“Then let’s get away from here. Calculate a transfer to the next star on our tour, if you can’t find any planets here.”
WORKING… AREN’T YOU INTERESTED IN THE OTHER SHIP?
“I’m not interested in being murdered.”
NEXT STAR IS EPSILON INDI. REPAIRS ESSENTIAL BEFORE TRANSFERRING TO UNKNOWN TERRITORY.
“I don’t want to hang around here.”
SUGGEST TRANSFER TO A POINT SOMEWHERE THREE LIGHT DAYS FROM BETA HYDRI TO CARRY OUT REPAIRS WHICH REQUIRE HUMAN ASSISTANCE.
Virgil interlaced his fingers and kneaded them. He frowned.
He gripped the armrests so hard his knuckles cracked.
“Transfer out three light days to a random point.” He unwound his fingers and placed one over the transfer button. “Only make sure we don’t appear inside anything larger than what we have already.”
READY .
“What, no snappy comeback?”
He pressed the button.
