speed so that our speed would not drive me mad. She keeps herself a secret, Tegger. I don’t want the web to hear us.”
They’d propped the web upright against a wall. Tegger looked at the web, propped against a wall with a view of the whole room, and laughed. “If the web is no more than a slice of stone—”
“We will all seem great fools.”
“What does Whisper look like?”
“I never saw. Perhaps a wayspirit with no body at all.”
“What did she teach? No, don’t tell me now. We should sleep.”
“Why did you say we cannot rish? Was it the way they look?”
“No. They’re no stranger than Sand People. My mind saw me in Jennawil’s arms, gasping like a beached fish—”
Warvia laughed deliciously against his ear.
“Then I remembered that they talk with-talk
“We never did that!”
“Tales grow in the telling. They are mighty tellers, the Ghoul empire, and these Spill Mountain People speak their words for them, and you and I destroyed the biggest nest of vampires beneath the Arch.”
“Yes.”
“You were thinking—”
“They are new to this. They have only rished with peoples very like them. Love, would you like to
They slept.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN — LOVECRAFT
The probe tilted over and rose at ten gravities straight up, closing on the rim wall. The blue highlight converged, then went out. The probe coasted, rising.
The Ringworld’s edge was narrow. The probe rose a few hundred feet higher, and arced over. A puff of fusion flame hatted its fall and set it drifting toward the shadowed back of a black wall that seemed to reach to the heavens.
It slowed. Hovered. The probe spat.
A window popped up to overlay the others. It showed the probe hovering on indigo flame; then the probe dropped away and it showed only starlight.
The Hindmost said, “I give you a webeye window beyond the rim wall.”
“We need a view from the underside. Get us that,” Bram commanded.
“Aye aye.” But the Hindmost was doing nothing.
“Hindmost!”
“The probe already has my instructions. Motors off. Rotate. I want a view.”
The probe was turning as it fell. The view turned: black rim wall, sunglare, starscape… a silver thread was shining against the star-spattered black below the falling probe.
“That!” Louis said. “See it? You need a burn or we’ll hit it.”
“Burn, aye aye.” A burst of woodwinds, then, “What is it?”
“Not a spaceport ledge, it’s too narrow.”
They waited through the lightspeed delay. The silver thread was growing larger, clearer. Now it seemed banded, like a silver earthworm. Eleven minutes…
The probe’s spin stopped. Window displays tremored: the probe was thrusting, flaring in X-ray light.
Nova light blasted through the hologram window.
Louis, with his arms thrown over his eyes, heard music from hell, then a voice that had lost all human traits. “My fuel source is destroyed!”
Bram’s voice was cool. “My concern is for the enemy that fired on us.”
“We are challenged! Arm me and send me through!” A bestial bellow, all madness.
“Let me through to my cabin,” the Hindmost pleaded. “I must see what is still working.”
“What could be working? Your probe is destroyed and we are attacked, we are known. Could an invader react so quickly, or was that a protector?”
“The stepping disk at least should be safe.”
Louis opened his eyes. “Why?”
“I’m not a fool!” the Hindmost bleated. “I opened a stepping disk link as we crossed the rim. A plasma blast, kinetic weapons, any threat should go straight through.”
“Straight through to
“I linked it to the stepping disk at the map of Mons Olympus.”
Louis laughed. It was probably too much to hope for, that a thousand Martians were setting a new trap when the stepping disk sprayed star-hot plasma over them, but heyyy…
Big claws closed on his shoulders; warm red meat breathed in his face. “We are at war, Louis Wu! This is not a time for distractions!”
“Dining hall aboard Hidden Patriarch,” Bram said.
“Hindmost, route him there first. Bram, get him some weapons. If we have a working stepping disk on the probe, we should use it.”
Bram said, “Go.”
The Hindmost rattled / chimed / bonged. Acolyte stepped and flicked out. The Hindmost stepped where the granite block had been and was gone, was in his cabin, his tongues licking out at what looked like an alien chess set but must be a virtual keyboard. One head rose to say, “We have a link. The stepping disk still operates.”
“Try the webeye sprayer,” Bram ordered.
“Spray what?”
“Vacuum.”
Eleven minutes later the blacked-out window lit again: a revolving starscape with a slow ripple to it. Louis could picture a webeye falling free through vacuum, spinning a little-was the probe spinning too? — drifting gradually away from the probe. And while the protector was worrying about the Kzin and trying to watch the puppeteer and all
A tiny hologram of glowing sticks rose just above the disk itself-the map of the stepping disk system. A larger display would have given him away, but the Hindmost had fixed that. Louis tapped his changes in quickly and pushed the rim down.
“Do you see?”
“Hindmost, explain to see me how we could have missed
Bram and the Hindmost sure as tanj weren’t watching
As viewed through the free-falling webeye, the silver thread had become a silver ribbon with raised edges, a shallow trough not unlike a miniature of the Ringworld itself. Slender toroids arced over it.
Unmistakably, it was the transport system: the magnetic levitation track that ran along the top of the rim wall for a third of its length. Teela’s repair crew must have led it over the rim wall and down the outside.
Louis said, “Well,
“We should have looked closer,” the Hindmost said.
The silver rail swept past. Now there was only starscape. The fluttering webeye was below the Ringworld floor, falling into the universe.