“I’m going to let you take a closer look, Vlad, but watch your ass. One man goes in first—and
“With all respect, Captain, I think—”
“I know what you think,” Colin said harshly. “The answer is no.”
“Very well.” Chernikov sounded resigned, and Colin sympathized. He would vastly have preferred to take the risk himself, but he was
Vlad Chernikov looked at the engineer he had selected for the task. Jehru Chandra had come many light- years to risk his life, but he looked eager as he double-checked the seals on his suit. Not cheerful or unafraid, but eager.
“Be cautious in there, Jehru.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Keep your suit scanners open. We will relay to Dahak.”
“I understand, sir.” Chernikov grinned wryly at Chandra’s manifestly patient reply. Did he really sound that nervous?
“On your way, then,” he said, and the engineer stepped into the airlock.
As per Cohanna’s insistence, there was no contact between Chernikov’s workboat and the battle station, but Chernikov studied the looming hull yet again as Chandra floated across the kilometer-wide gap on his suit propulsors. This ancient structure was thousands of years younger than
Chandra touched down neatly beside a small personnel lock, and his implants probed at the controls.
“Hmmmmm…” The tension in his voice was smoothed by concentration. “Dahak was right, Commander. I’ve got live computers here, but damned if I recognize the machine language. Whups! Wait a minute, I’ve got something—”
His voice broke off for an agonizing moment, then came back with a most unexpected sound: a chuckle.
“I’ll be damned, sir. The thing recognized my effort to access and brought in some kind of translating software. The hatch’s opening now.”
He stepped through it and it closed once more.
“Pressure in the lock,” he reported, his fold-space com working as well through battle steel as through vacuum. “On the low side—’bout point-six-nine atmospheres. My sensors read breathable.”
“Forget it right now, Jehru.”
“Never even considered it, sir. Honest. Okay, inner lock opening now.” There was a brief pause. “I’m in. Inner hatch closed. The main lighting’s out, but about half the emergency lights’re up.”
“Is the main net live, or just the lock computers?”
“Looks like the auxiliary net’s up. Just a sec. Yes, sir. Power level’s weak, though. Can’t find the main net, yet.”
“Understood. Give me a reading on the auxiliary. Then I want you to head up-ship. Keep an eye out for …”
Colin rested in his couch, eyes closed, concentrating on his neural feed as Chandra penetrated the half- dead hulk, gaining in confidence with every meter. It showed even in the technicalities of his conversation with Vlad.
Colin only hoped they could ever dare to let him come home again.
”…and that’s about the size of it,” Cohanna said, deactivating her personal memo computer. “We hit Chandra’s suit with every decon system we had. As near as Dahak and I can tell, it was a hundred percent sterile before we let him unsuit, but we’ve got him in total isolation. I
“Agreed. Dahak? Anything to add?”
“I am still conversing with
“How stupid?” he asked after a moment.
“Extremely so. In fairness, they were never intended for even rudimentary self-awareness, and their age is also a factor.
“I see. Are you getting anything at all?”
“Affirmative, sir. In fact, I am now prepared to provide a hypothetical reconstruction of events leading to
“You are?” Colin sat straighter, and others at the table did the same.
“Affirmative. Be advised, however, that much of it is speculative. There are serious gaps in the available data.”
“Understood. Let’s hear it.”
“Acknowledged. In essence, sir, Fleet Captain (Biosciences) Cohanna was correct in her original hypothesis at Defram. The destruction of all life on the planets we have so far encountered was due to a bio- weapon.”
“What
“Unknown at this time. It was the belief of the system governor, however, that it was of Imperial origin.”
“Sweet Jesu,” Jiltanith breathed. “In so much at least wert thou correct, my Hector. ’Twas no enemy wreaked their destruction; ’twas themselves.”
“That is essentially correct,” Dahak said. “As I have stated, the data are fragmentary, but I have recovered portions of memoranda from the governor. I hope to recover more, but those I have already perused point in that direction. She did not know how the weapon was originally released, but apparently there had been rumors of such a weapon for some time.”
“The fools,” Cohanna whispered. “Oh, the
“I fear my data sample is too small to answer that, yet I have discovered a most interesting point. It was not the Fourth Imperium which devised this weapon but an entity called the Fourth
For just a moment, Colin failed to grasp the significance. Dahak had used Imperial Universal, and in Universal, the differentiation was only slightly greater than in English. “Imperium” was