'Battle stations!' Djan screamed. 'Man all weapons!'
Feet pounded the decks as the crew hurried to obey. Teldin moved farther forward, getting out of the way of the gunners who began to prepare the twin ballistae.
The first mate turned to Teldin. 'Captain… ?'
'Bring us around,' the Cloakmaster answered after a moment's thought. 'Bring the bow toward it.'
Djan paused, then nodded and relayed the order through the speaking tube to the helmsman. Teldin could understand the first mate's hesitation. Normally, aligning the bow with an approaching vessel would allow the squid ship's main weapon-its forward catapult-to come to bear, but it would limit the ship's maneuverability if it needed to escape. The half-elf had realized, however, that the Cloakmaster's unusual control over the
'And get Beth-Abz up on deck,' Teldin added, 'just in case.'
The bearing to the knife-edged metal ship began to change as the squid ship's bow came around. As Teldin watched, the strange vessel maneuvered, too-much smoother than he'd seen any other ship change course-to keep its own bow pointing directly at the
Djan had brought the Cloakmaster's spyglass to bear on the vessel. Now he lowered it, his expression one of profound puzzlement. 'No obvious weapons,' he said quietly. 'And no portholes, no hatches, no way of getting in or seeing out.' He shook his head. I've never seen anything even vaguely like this.'
Teldin stared at the strange ship. Now no more than half a league off, it had started to decelerate again, slowing its silent approach. Its mirror finish reflected the yellow light of the fire ring and the ruddy red of the planet below. It gleamed in the firelight, occasionally flashing with almost intolerable brightness as the light reflected off facets on its surface.
What are you? Teldin thought fiercely. What?
Then, suddenly, thoughts and images blasted into his mind. He clutched at his head with both hands, as though to keep his skull from splitting under their ferocious impact. His stomach knotted, and he almost doubled over with the pain of it.
Through the bolts of agony that still lanced through his body, Teldin felt Djan's supporting hand on his shoulder. He looked into his friend's concerned face. 'What is it?' the half-elf asked. 'What's wrong?'
Teldin took a deep breath, tried to force his pounding heart to slow. 'It's talking to me,' he whispered.
'What is?'
Only as the words emerged from his lips did Teldin recognize the truth. 'The ship.' He pointed with a trembling finger. 'That ship.'
The titanic voice boomed again into his brain.
'The ship,' Teldin breathed again. 'It's alive, but that means it's not a ship.'
'What?' Djan shook his head in disbelief. 'What?'
'I'm bringing us in closer,' the Cloakmaster told him, struggling to keep his voice firm and under control.
'You're doing what?'
'Bringing us closer,' Teldin repeated. 'Get Dranigor to release the helm.'
He could see conflicting emotions warring across his friend's face. Concern, fear, denial… But, then, finally, he saw Djan's expression settle into one of acceptance. Without another word to the Cloakmaster, he crossed to the speaking tube and issued the order to the helmsman.
Teldin extended his will, focused it through the ultimate helm, and exerted it upon the ship. The
Filtered through the expanded perception of the helm, the metal ship-being's mental voice didn't seem as 'loud' or overwhelming.
Teldin shook his head, confounded. The words were clear, but the meaning was the exact opposite. The statement about his species, his 'primitive form'… Perhaps a creature of living metal might consider a human primitive. He could almost understand that. But what was that about injury? Teldin wasn't injured. And he certainly wasn't suffering from any kind of 'infestation.'
Djan was by his side, his eyes full of questions.
'It's speaking to me through the cloak,' Teldin explained quietly, 'like the People did on Nex. It's alive, Djan! It has a mind.' Like the
He turned his attention back to the metal being. It had stopped and was now hanging in space less than a league ahead of the
'I am Teldin Moore,' he said softly, focusing the meaning of his words through the cloak, 'captain of the
Teldin shook his head again. They were talking, he and this metallic creature, but he wasn't convinced they were really communicating. 'Captain,' he tried again, it means the person in command of the ship, the ship we name the
'No.' Teldin forced himself to think things through. Obviously the cloak wasn't translating as well as it usually did. Probably the mind of this great shiplike creature was too alien for easy communication. 'The ship that we call the
Teldin rubbed a trembling hand across his eyes. 'I don't know what in the hells it's talking about,' he told Djan tiredly. 'And it doesn't know what I'm talking about. It can see the ship, and it 'hears' my thoughts, but…'
And then realization flooded through the Cloakmaster's mind, it thinks it's talking to the ship,' he said to Djan. 'It thinks
He grabbed the rail with both hands, poured all his concentration into the link with the huge creature. 'Zat,' he said, 'I am not what you see, or what you think you're seeing.
'We are all alive,' he pressed on forcefully, 'we all have minds, like you do. The ship isn't alive. It has no mind. It's nothing more than'-he groped for words-'than a box of wood in which we live.'
A wordless blast of shock, tinged with horror, flooded through the telepathic link, powerful enough to make Teldin sway dizzily.
He put those questions aside for the moment. 'Why would I lie to you?' he asked firmly. 'What possible