More of the immense ships—ninety dihar long if they were a har—appeared out of nowhere, materializing like fen fey from the nothingness of space. Scores of them—hundreds!
Roghar babbled away about first-contacts and alien life forms beside him, but even as he gabbled, the co-pilot was spinning the extractor ship and aligning the main engines to kill velocity for rendezvous. Va-Chanak left him to it, and his own mind burned with conflicting impulses. Disbelief. Awe. Wonder and delight that the Mersakah were not alone. Horror that it had been left to him to play ambassador to the future which had suddenly arrived. Concern lest their visitors misinterpret his fumbling efforts. Visions of immortality—and how the dams would react to this—!
Chapter Four
The endless, twenty-meter-wide column of lightning fascinated him. It wasn’t really lightning, but that was how Vlad Chernikov thought of it, though the center of any Terran lightning bolt would be a dead zone beside its titanic density. The force field which channeled it also silenced it and muted its terrible brilliance, but Vlad had received his implants. His sensors felt it, like a tide race of fire, even through the field, and it awed him.
He turned away, folding his hands behind him as he crossed the huge chamber at
This howling chain of power was that more. It was
And with it, the drive worked its sorcery and created the perfectly-opposed, converging gravity masses which forced
Which was as well. Should
Chernikov plugged his neural feed back into the engineering subsection of
Chernikov believed him, and he believed he understood the happiness which suffused the computer net.
So it was good that men had returned to
“Attention on deck,” Dahak intoned as Colin entered the conference room, and he winced almost imperceptibly as his command team rose with punctilious formality. He smoothed his expression and crossed impassively to the head of the crystalline conference table, making yet another mental note to have a heart-to- diode talk with the computer.
Dozens of faces looked back at him from around the table, but at least he’d gotten used to facing so many eyes.
There were a lot of “Fleet Captains” on it, though Dahak’s new protocol demanded that they be addressed in Colin’s presence either as “Commander” or simply by the department they headed, since he was the only “Senior Fleet Captain” and there could be but one captain aboard a warship. The Imperium had used any officer’s full rank and branch, which Colin and his Terra-born found too cumbersome, but Dahak had obstinately resisted Colin’s suggestion that he might be called “Commodore” to ease the problem.
Colin let his eyes sweep over them as he sat and they followed suit. Jiltanith was at his right, as befitted his second-in-command and the officer charged with the organization and day-to-day management of
“Thank you all for coming,” Colin said. “As you know, we’ll be leaving supralight to approach the Sheskar System in approximately twenty-one hours. With luck, that means we’ll soon re-establish contact with the Imperium, but we can’t count on that. We’re going into a totally unknown situation, and I want final readiness estimates from all of my senior department heads—and for all of you to hear them—before we do.”
Heads nodded, and he turned to Jiltanith.
“Would you care to begin with a general overview, XO?” he asked.
“Certes, Captain,” Jiltanith said, and turned confident eyes to her fellows. “Our Dahak hath been a teacher most astute—aye, and a taskmaster of the sternest!” That won a mutter of laughter, for Dahak had driven his new crew so hard ten percent of even his capacity had been committed full-time to their training and neural-feed education. “While ’tis true I would be better pleased with some small time more of practice, yet have our folk learned their duties well, and I say with confidence our officers and crew will do all mortal man may do if called.”