‘Go on anyway.’
‘Is something happening? Something I don’t know about?’
‘What kind of something?’
‘I’ve been hearing sounds. I’ve been in this room for eleven years, Tom, so I’ve become quite astonishingly attuned to my surroundings. I’ve almost never heard any noises from elsewhere in Panoply, except for today.’
‘What kinds of noises?’
‘The kinds of noises people make when they’re trying very hard to do something without making any sound. Something that involves heavy machinery and tools.’ She faced him directly. ‘Is something going on?’
He’d never lied to her, in all the years they’d known each other. Never lied, or bent the truth, even when that would have been the kinder thing to do.
Today he chose to lie.
‘It’s the mouth bay,’ he said. ‘The launching rack was damaged when one of the cruisers came in too hard. They’ve been working around the clock to get it back into shape.’
‘The mouth bay is hundreds of metres away, Tom.’
‘They’re using heavy equipment.’
‘Look at me and say that.’
He met her gaze steadily. ‘It’s the bay. Why? What else do you think it might be?’
‘You know exactly what I think.’ She glanced away. He couldn’t tell whether he’d passed or failed the test of her scrutiny. ‘I’ve been trying to get Demikhov to talk to me. He’s using every excuse in the book not to return my calls.’
‘Demikhov’s been busy. That business with Gaffney—’
‘All right, so he’s been busy. But if you knew something was happening… if you knew they were planning something… you’d tell me, wouldn’t you?’
‘Absolutely,’ Dreyfus said.
They still had cam feeds from the docking hub of the Toriyuma-Murchison Spindle. Hundreds of people were still crammed into the boarding tubes, being ushered aboard the waiting liner. Dozens of constables, marked by their armbands, were assisting in the boarding process. Dreyfus already knew that many constables had elected to remain inside the Spindle rather than leave on earlier evacuation flights. A few hours earlier they’d just been ordinary citizens, going about their daily lives.
‘
The feed had locked on to a single boarding corridor. The viewpoint was from inside a transparent-walled tube filled with civilians, constables and servitors, floating in an unruly multicoloured jumble. The vast, white, porthole-sprinkled side of the
The
‘Jane…’ he began.
‘They can’t close the doors,’ she said numbly. ‘The locks on the
‘It’s not just the liner,’ Dreyfus said.
Air was still rocketing into space from the end of the docking tube. But now it was carrying people with it, sucked out by the force of decompression. It started at the far end and then raced up the tube, towards the cam. Dreyfus watched in horror as the people nearest the cam realised what was coming. He saw them scream and reach for something to hold on to. Then it hit them and they were just
He watched them spill into space by the hundreds: civilians, constables, machines, clothes, possessions and toys. He watched the people-shaped things thrash and die.
The cam greyed out.
Another feed showed the
‘She’s on drive,’ Dreyfus said. The liner’s quadruple engines cranked wide, spitting tongues of pink fire. The enormous vessel hardly appeared to move at first. Gradually, though, the slow but sure acceleration became apparent. The
Aumonier lifted her bracelet again. ‘Connect me to the
Since the
A voice, rendered small and reedy in transmission, spoke through her bracelet. ‘Pell, Supreme Prefect.
‘You already have my authorisation to fire, Captain.’
‘I just wanted to be certain that nothing’d changed, Ma’am.’
‘Nothing’s changed. Do your job, Captain Pell.’
‘Missiles launched and running, Ma’am.’
The cam feed switched to a long-range view of the Toriyuma-Murchison Spindle. With distance foreshortened by the cam angle, the
The missiles surged in, etching two bright streaks of exhaust fire, as if they’d gashed open space to reveal something luminous and clean behind it.
They detonated.
The nuclear explosion — the double bursts occurred too close in time to separate — whited out the cam view. There’d been no sense of the fireball expanding; it was just
It happened in deathly silence.
All the displays in Jane’s room flickered momentarily as the electromagnetic pulse raced across the Glitter Band.
Then the whited-out view dulled through darkening reds until the background blackness was again visible, and something mangled and molten was drifting there, something that had once been a habitat, but which now resembled more the blackened, tattered remains of a spent firework. The nukes had destroyed the manufactory, but in doing so they’d blasted away at least a third of the habitat’s length, leaving the rest of the structure cracked open along structural fault lines. The air inside wouldn’t have had time to escape through those cracks before it became searingly hot. No one would have had time to suffocate, either. But they’d have had time to see the fire surging towards them, even as that fire burnt the eyes out of their sockets.