didn't go through, places where there was a lot of floating weeds or icebergs; it couldn't exactly manoeuvre out of the way so it had to be able to destroy anything in its path, and have the firepower to do it. The
'What if this ship hits the wall while we're on board?' Dorolow said. Kraiklyn smiled at her.
'We're not blind, are we? We know where the wall is and we know where… we'll be able to
'We taking the
'Not over the top. The Orbital's got just enough mass to make the warp a tricky proposition, and the fusions would get zapped by the Hub auto-defences; they'd think our motors were meteorites or something. No — we'll leave the
'What do we do after we get this laser, if we get it?' Yalson said. Kraiklyn frowned briefly. He shrugged.
'Probably the best thing is to head for the capital. Its called Evanauth… a port where they used to build the Megaships. It's on the land, of course…' He smiled, looking at some of the others.
'Yeah,' Yalson said. 'But what do we do once we get there?'
'Well…' Kraiklyn looked hard at the woman. Horza kicked her heel with his toe. Yalson glared round at the Changer while Kraiklyn spoke. 'We might be able to use the port facilities — in space, that is, on the underside of Evanauth — to mount the laser. But anyway, I'm sure the Culture will be prompt, so we might even just go to sample the last days of one of the most interesting combined ports of call in the galaxy. And its last nights, I might add.' Kraiklyn looked at several of the others, and there was some laughter and a few remarks. He stopped smiling and looked at Yalson again. 'So it could be quite interesting, don't you think?'
'Yeah. All right. You're the boss, Kraiklyn.' Yalson grinned, then put her head down. Under her breath, to Horza, she hissed, 'Guess where the Damage game is?'
'Won't this big seaship go right through the wall and wreck the Orbital anyway, before the Culture does anything?' Aviger was saying. Kraiklyn smiled condescendingly and shook his head.
'I think you'll find the Edgewalls are up to it.'
'Ho! I hope so!' Aviger laughed.
'Well, don't worry about it,' Kraiklyn reassured him. 'Now, somebody give Wubslin a hand to run a final check on the shuttle. I'm going up to the bridge to make sure Mipp knows what to do. We'll be setting off in about ten minutes.' Kraiklyn stepped back and into his suit, gathering it up and putting his arms into the sleeves. He fastened the main chest latches, picked up his helmet and nodded to the Company as he walked by them and up the steps out of the hangar.
'Were you trying to annoy him?' Horza asked Yalson. She turned to the Changer.
'Ah, I just wanted to give him a hint that I could see through him; he doesn't fool me.'
Wubslin and Aviger were checking the shuttle. Lamm was fiddling with his laser. Jandraligeli stood with arms crossed, his back resting against the hangar bulkhead near the door, eyes raised to the ceiling lights, a bored expression on his face. Neisin was talking quietly to Dorolow, who saw the small man as a possible convert to the Circle of Flame.
'You reckon Evanauth is where this Damage game's going to be?' Horza asked. He was smiling. Yalson's face looked very small inside the big, still open neck of her suit, and very serious.
'Yes I do. That devious bastard probably invented the whole goddamn op on this Megaboat thing. He's never told
'You,' Horza laughed. 'So what if he wants to go and playa game of Damage? You keep saying it's his ship and he's the boss and all that crap, but you won't let the poor guy have a bit of fun.'
'So why doesn't he admit it?' Yalson nodded sharply at Horza. 'Because he doesn't want to share any of his winnings, that's why. The rule is we divide
'Well, I can see his point if that's what it is,' Horza said reasonably. 'If he wins in a Damage game it's all his own work; nothing to do with us.'
'That's
'OK,' Horza said, grinning. 'So when you bet on me to win my fight with Zallin, why didn't you give all your winnings right back again?'
'That's different-' Yalson said in exasperation. But she was interrupted.
'Hey, hey!' Lenipobra came bounding down the steps into the hangar as Horza was about to say something. Both he and Yalson turned to the younger man as he skipped up to them, fastening his suit gloves to the cuffs. 'D- d-did you see that message earlier?' He looked excited and didn't seem to be able to keep still; he kept rubbing his gloved hands together and shuffling his feet. 'Novagrade g-gridfire! Wow! What a spectacle! I
'The weaponry of the end of the universe, and this young idiot is practically coming in his pants.'
'Aw, you're just a spoilsport, Ligeli,' Lenipobra said to the Mondlidician, stopping dancing and dropping his punching arms to turn away and slouch off towards the shuttle. As he passed Yalson and Horza he muttered, 'Yalson, what the hell is C–CAM anyway?'
'Collapsed Anti-Matter, kid.' Yalson smiled as Lenipobra kept on walking. Horza laughed soundlessly as the young man's head nodded inside the open neck of his suit. He walked into the open rear of the shuttle.
The
On a small screen, fitted at one end of the shuttle's main compartment since its last outing, the suited figures could watch the seemingly endless curve of ultradense base material stretching off into the dark distance, lit by starlight. It was like flying upside-down over a planet made of metal; and of all the sights the galaxy held which were the result of conscious effort, it was one bested for what the Culture would call
The shuttle crossed a thousand kilometres of the smooth undersurface. Then suddenly above it there was a wedge of darkness, a slant of something which looked even smoother than the base material, but which was clear, transparent and angling out from the base itself and slicing into space like the edge of a crystal knife for two thousand kilometres: the Edgewall. This was the wall bordered by sea, on the far side of the Orbital from the thread of land they had seen on their approach in the
'God, that thing's big,' Neisin whispered. The shuttle continued to rise, and above it there appeared through the wall a glow of light, a shining expanse of blue.