Was the sun starting to roil? Hed burn his eyes out if he looked hard. There must be a way to dim the glass, right? And Tunesmith would have the meteor defense going. Louis zigzagged his path a bit, and studied the controls. Here?
It didnt just darken the view; it was light-amplification too. He turned it very dark, and looked up.
A solar prominence was reaching out and out.
Louis jogged the ship at high gees. The ground flared below him. He could see the beam tracking and avoid it, even guide it a little to miss a populated spill mountain, and then he was off the Ringworld and dropping, easing back and under the Ringworld floor.
He had to follow the arc halfway around, three hundred million miles. Now the nontrivial danger was alien ships. Louis zigged along the magnet grid, accelerating hard, hearing a
Something flashed on the Ringworlds underside. Louis zagged almost into another flash. Maybe hed started a war himself.
Tunesmiths Meteor Reweaving System had closed Fist-of-God. Louis came up around the rim instead. He made for the Map of Mars, a little over half a million miles away. The sun was roiling again.
A spark struck upward: a launch from Mons Olympus. Louis slid the sunfish ship beneath the path of the meteor package, just for a moment. Tunesmith wouldnt have set the meteor defense to fire on those! He slowed, descended through the crater, and set the ship to hover.
He crawled halfway out of the cabin and shouted down. 'Hindmost! Close it!'
The craters lid began to close.
Louis began to play with the sunfish ships controls. The docs Intensive Care Cavity rose, twirled in the air, and settled a bit jerkily into the bay in
Then a tank Louis had identified earlier.
The puppeteer was shouting something. ' — tied down?'
Louis settled the tank in with the rest of the doc. He brought the sunfish ship down and got out.
The Hindmost came trotting up. He asked, 'How will you tie these components against shock of takeoff?'
'Tunesmith was using a tank of foam plastic. Lets set it going and close the ship up, then board.'
The tank was spraying foam plastic as Louis closed the lid on it. Hed taken the pilots seat without comment. Hey, it was built for humans. The Hindmost asked, 'Shouldnt we open the crater again?'
'Hindmost, lets try something else.' He activated the hyperdrive. The cavern disappeared. The Q2 ship launched itself straight down into a boil of colors.
Map of Earth. Shortly after nightfall Acolyte begged audience with Chmeee.
One of the guards said, 'Play elsewhere, child. Your father is busy.' And grinned.
'I bear a message from Tunesmith.'
'An odd name.'
'Chmeee will know it. Tunesmith who lives under the Map of Mars.'
The guard was bored, and he toyed with Acolyte a bit longer. Then he went into the tent. When he came out, he asked, 'How did it come, this message?'
'There were flashes of light from the mountains to starboard.'
Acolyte was allowed entrance. He groveled before his father, who asked, 'Is this the Tunesmith who wants to give me the Map of Earth? Ive heard nothing since you delivered his message.'
'He says you may take the Map yourself, after the other prides have gone mad.'
It had gone quiet: Chmeees courtiers were paying attention.
Chmeee asked, 'Mad?' and studied his son, whose subservience seemed laid over a whiplash eagerness. 'Lecture me, then.'
'Tunesmith instructs us to hide ourselves from the sky for two full days. We must be under a roof or tent, all of us, even females and kits. We should sleep if we can. We must all be under cover, or blindfolded, before shadow reveals the sun.'
'So soon? How shall I manage that?'
Acolyte dared to grin. 'What would Louis Wu say?'
' Thats why I get the big money. What is to happen to the sky?'
'That was not told. You have seen ships leaving tracks of light across the sky. You have heard talk of the Fringe War. I watched it in Tunesmiths Meteor Defense Room. It is told that Tunesmith will end the war.'
Chmeee nodded. 'Are you ready to run? It is well.' His voice rose to a bellow. 'All in my hearing, you are each an emissary to my far provinces! Divide the contents of my kitchen to feed yourselves. Go where I send you. Carry a blindfold ready to use. You will know when to use it. Fools will go blind or mad.
'You are each more valuable than those you will speak to, and you will be under cover before the shadow square passes. Two days hidden, or answer to me. The rest of us may conquer the Map of Earth if we so choose.'
The boy Kazarp was gazing open-mouthed at the sky. Shadow had covered the sun, but the shadow squares were glittering in a way hed never seen. Presently he raised his instrument and began to play.
Over the music he heard a stealthy shift in posture, too close for any stranger, and he said, 'I knew you were there.'
'Dont turn around. I am become Vashneesht.'
His father had disappeared falans ago, and now this: a thing out of fantasy, awesome and terrible. Kazarp didnt turn. 'Father? Does mother know?'
'You must tell her. Tell her gently. Then tell her she must hide from the sky for two days, and you too, for fear of going mad. Spread the word. A burrow would be better than a roof. Afterward there is a world of mad folk to care for, and far more feasting than our folk will ever want.'
'Will you stay?'
'Not now. I will visit when I can.'
He was moving away from the sun and straight into the thickest gathering of Fringe War ships. Not that that mattered. Those ships were all in Einstein space, this close to a large mass. Louis was flying blind, of course, through hyperspace. What he hoped was that this faster ship would outrun the eaters.
The puppeteer was wound into a tight knot.
How fast would
Eleven hours later, Louis knew that even protectors could grow tired. He could ignore that, and hunger and thirst, and pain in guts and joints, headache and sinus ache, that properly belong only to an aging savage. It didnt matter. Hed got clear of the Ringworld. Of thirty trillion Ringworld hominids, a fat percentage would survive. Wembleth and Roxanny and their child were lost in noise. If Tunesmith worked out what they truly were, he wouldnt even search. With luck, though, hed think Louis had taken Wembleth to the stars.
Winning could compensate for a lot of pain.
The window was the floor, and it would darken, light-amplify, record and display recordings, or zoom. Louis watched flow patterns of colored light, and a dark comma zipping past.
He saw the view change. The window wasnt there: his eyes slid around it.
Louis looked at the mass detector. There should have been lines of light crawling toward him. Nothing showed. It was just doped crystal.