will need you. And—on a more personal level—I will fight better knowing that you are elsewhere, able to survive if I do not.”
Colin closed his eyes, hating himself for knowing Dahak was right. He didn’t
“All right,” he whispered. “I’ll be with ’Tanni in
“Thank you, Colin,” Dahak said softly.
They did what they could.
But that was all they could do, and so they awaited Great Lord Tharno: fourteen manned warships, eleven with no crews at all, and one—the most sorely hurt of all—manned only by a huge, electronic brain which had learned the hardest human lesson of all: to love.
“Hyper wake detected, Captain,” Jiltanith’s plotting officer said, and alarms whooped throughout their battered fleet. “ETA fourteen hours at approximately one light-week.”
“My thanks, Ingrid.” Jiltanith turned to Colin. “Hast orders, Warlord?”
“None,” Colin said tensely from the next couch. “We’ll go as planned.”
Jiltanith nodded silently, and their eyes turned as one to the scarlet hyper trace flashing in
Great Lord of Order Tharno watched his read-outs, aware for the first time in many years of the irony of his rank. He had spent a lifetime protecting the Nest, honing his skills and winning promotion, to end here, as no more than an advisor, the spark of intuition Battle Comp lacked.
Yet the thought was barely a whisper, a musing with no hint of rebellion, for Battle Comp was the Nest’s true Protector. For untold higher twelves of years, Battle Comp had been keeper of the Way, and the Nest had endured. As it would always endure, despite these demonic nest-killers, so long as the Aku’Ultan followed the Way.
Still, he wished at least one of Hothan’s command ships had survived, and not simply because he had all too few of his own. No,
His crest flattened as the advanced scouts reported. The scant double twelve of emission sources floating a half-twelve of light-days from
Yet had many reinforcements been available, surely more of them would have engaged Hothan. The diabolical trap which had closed upon him proved the nest-killers had known what they faced; knowing that, they would have mustered every ship to destroy him. Tharno suspected Battle Comp was correct, that the nest-killers
To return to the Nest would mean Tharno’s death in dishonor, perhaps even the ending of
And Tharno was well aware of his nestlings’ danger. They were outclassed. To triumph, they must fight as a unit, closely controlled and coordinated, and too many command ships had perished.
The remnants of the Great Visit micro-jumped towards their foes, and
“Lord, what a monster,” Colin murmured as the holo image floated above
“Aye.” Jiltanith’s mental command turned the holo of the sleek, powerful cylinder for her own perusal. ” ’Tis seen why these craft do form their reserve.”
You can say that again, babe, Colin thought. That mother’s a good ninety kilometers long, and she just
“Dahak?” he said aloud.
“Formidable, indeed,” Dahak said over the fold-space com. “Although smaller, this unit appears fully as powerfully armed as was
“Yeah, and they’ve got twenty-four of them in each flotilla.”
“That may be correct, but it is premature to conclude it is. We have actually observed only six such formations.”
“Right, sure,” Colin grunted.
“It would certainly be prudent to assume all are at least equally capable,” Dahak agreed calmly.
“I don’t like the way they’re sneaking in on us,” Colin muttered, tugging on his nose and frowning at
“Yet bethink thee, my Colin. What other way may they proceed?”
“That’s what bothers me. I’d prefer for them to either rush straight in or run the hell away. That—” Colin gestured at the display “—looks entirely too much like a man who knows what he’s doing.”
Great Lord Tharno frowned over his own read-outs. He saw no sign of any device which might have been used to trap Hothan in n-space, but what he did see disturbed him. The nest-killers were neither running away nor attacking the individual scouts pushing ahead of his main formations. He would have liked to think that indicated irresolution, but no one who had seen the reports of Hothan’s survivors could make that comfortable mistake.
No, these nest-killers knew what they were about, and they had proven they could run away at will. They were
Yet they had come to fight, and the enemy was faster, longer-ranged, and individually far more powerful than any of their own nestlings. If he was prepared to stand, he must be attacked, whatever Tharno suspected. Either that, or they might as well retreat to the Nest right now!
“They are closing their formations, Sire,” Dahak reported, and Colin grunted. He’d already seen it on