Tia snuggled down into his arms, and turned into a big blue toy bear. The bear looked at him reproachfully. He started to get up, but the bedcoverings had turned to snowdrifts, and he was frozen in place. The bear tried to chip him out, but its blunt arms were too soft to make an impression on the ice-covered drifts. Then he heard rumbling, and looked up, to see an avalanche poised to crash down on him like some kind of slow-motion wave. The avalanche rumbled, and Tia-the-bear growled back, interposing herself between him and the tumbling snow.

 'Alex, wake up!'

 He floundered awake, flailing at the bedclothes, hitting the light button more by accident than anything else. He blinked as the light came up full, blinding him, his legs trapped in a tangle of sheets and blankets. 'What?' he said, his tongue too thick for his mouth. 'Who? Where?'

 'Alex,' Tia said, her voice strained, but excited. 'Alex, I have been trying to get you to wake up for fifteen minutes! There's a CenSec ship Upstairs, and it's beating the tail off those two pirates!'

 CenSec? Spirits of space-

 'What happened?' he asked, grabbing for clothing and pulling it on. 'From the beginning,'

 'The first I knew of it was when one of the pirates sent a warning down to the ship here to stay under cover and quiet. I got the impression that they thought it was just an ordinary Survey ship, until it locked onto one of them and started blasting.' Tia had brought up all of her systems again; fresher air was moving briskly through the ventilator, all the lights and boards were up and active in the main cabin. 'That was when all the scans stopped, and I started breaking loose. I ran that freeze-thaw cycle you suggested, and a couple of minutes ago, I fired the engines. I can definitely move, and I'm pretty sure I can pull out of here without too much trouble. I might lose some paint and some bits of things on my surface, but nothing that can't be repaired.'

 'What about Upstairs?' he asked, running for his chair without stopping for shoes or even socks, and strapping himself down.

 'Good news and bad news. The CenSec ship looks like its going to take both the pirates,' she replied. 'The bad news is that while I can receive, I can't seem to broadcast. The ice might have jammed something, I can't tell.'

 'All right; we can move, and the ambush Upstairs is being taken care of.' Alex clipped the last of his restraint belts in place; when Tia moved, it could be abruptly, and with little warning. 'But if we can't broadcast, we can't warn CenSec that there's another ship down here. We can't even identify ourselves as a friend. And we'll be a sitting duck for the pirates if we try to rise. They can just hide in their blinds and ambush the CenSec ship, then wait to see if we come out of hiding, as soon as we clear their horizon they can pot us.'

 Alex considered the problem as dispassionately as he could. 'Can we stay below their horizon until we're out of range?'

 Tia threw up a map as an answer. If the pirate chose to pursue them, there was no way that she could stay out of range of medium guns, and they had to assume that was what the pirate had.

 'There has to be a way to keep them on the ground, somehow,' Alex muttered, chewing a hangnail, aware that with every second that passed their window of opportunity was closing. 'What's going on Upstairs?'

 'The first ship is heavily damaged. If I'm reading the tactics right, the CenSec ship is going to move in for the kill, provided the other pirate gives him a chance.'

 Alex turned his attention back to their own problem. 'If we could just cripple them, throw enough rocks down on them or, wait a minute. Bring up the views of the building they're hiding in, the ones you got from my camera.'

 Tia obeyed, and Alex studied the situation carefully, matching pictures with memory. 'Interesting thing about those hills. See how some of them look broken off, as if those tips get too heavy to support after a while? I bet that's because the winds come in from different directions and scour out under the crests once in a while. Can you give me a better shot of the hills overhanging those buildings?'

 'No problem.' The viewpoint pulled back, displaying one of those wave-crest hills overshadowing the building with the partial roof. 'Alex!' she exclaimed.

 'You see it too,' he said with satisfaction. 'All right girl, think we can pull this off?'

 For answer, she revved her engines. 'Be a nice change to hit back, for once!'

 'Then let's lift!'

 The engines built from a quiet purr to a bone-deep, bass rumble, more felt than heard. Tia pulled in her landing gear, then began rocking herself by engaging null-grav, first on the starboard, then on the port side, each time rolling a little more. Alex did what he could, playing with the attitude jets, trying to undercut some of the ice.

 Her nose rose, until Alex tilted back in his chair at about a forty-five degree angle. That was when Tia cut

Вы читаете The Ship Who Searched
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату