thousand persons present.'

'Both sides?' asked Wassail, the Dalriada's navigator. Gregg had already been impressed by the way Wassail showed interest in new concepts. Dulcie, the Dalriada's captain, was competent but as dull as his vessel's artificial intelligence.

'This side only,' Ricimer said. 'The community on mirrorside is much smaller and ninety percent of the residents are Molts. On realside, up to a third at any given time are human Federation personnel.'

'One Venerian's worth six of those Fed pussies any day,' Adrien interjected. 'We'll go right through them!'

'We aren't here to fight,' his brother said sharply. 'We're going to take them by surprise, load with chips, and be away before they understand what's happened.'

His lips pursed, then flattened into a smile of sorts. 'Our task is somewhat complicated by the fact that another vessel attacked a freighter as it was starting to land on Umber two weeks ago.'

Ricimer nodded toward John to source the data. 'The attempt was unsuccessful-the attacker pursued into the atmosphere, and guns from the fort drove the hostile vessel off. It was sufficient to alarm the entire region, however. Umber sent couriers to neighboring planets and to Earth itself.'

'A ship from Venus?' asked Bong. He was a younger son, like Gregg, but from an Ishtar City family.

'It was metal-hulled,' Ricimer said. 'In all likelihood Germans from United Europe.'

He turned to face the screen in order to discourage further questions. 'The spaceport is here,' he said, pointing at the lower edge of the developed area.

The port area was bounded by four large water tanks on the right. They held reaction mass brought from Rondelet on purpose-built tankers. Artesian wells supplied the town with drinking water, but such local reserves couldn't match the needs of the thrusters arriving at a major port.

The fort, a circle smaller than those of the water tanks, was sited below the lowest rank of dwellings. Below it in turn were the outlines of six starships, ranging from 20 to about 100 tonnes burden.

The ships, typical of the traffic Umber expected at any given time, were a symptom of a problem with the planning kernel. Its precision was a lie.

The kernel assembled data on Umber from the Halys' navigational files and from interrogations of two of the Fed crewmen. The third, the Rabbit, hadn't said a word from the time he was captured until Ricimer landed him, as promised, back on Rondelet.

The sum of that information was very slight. The kernel fleshed it out according to stored paradigms, creating streets and individual buildings in patterns which fit the specific data. It was easier for humans to visualize acting in a sketched city than in a shading marked developed area, but that very feeling of knowledge had a dangerous side.

'The fort mounts four heavy guns,' Ricimer went on. 'They can be aimed and fired from inside the citadel, but there are no turrets or shields for the loading crews.'

'Molts,' John said.

Ricimer nodded. 'The guns will certainly be manned, though two weeks without further trouble is long enough for some of the increased watchfulness to fade away.

'In the center of the community is a park fifty meters by seventy-five,' Ricimer continued, 'parallel to the Mirror. It's stocked with Terran vegetation, mostly grasses and shrubs. No large trees. The Commandatura faces it.'

He tapped the screen. 'All the colony's control and communications are centered in the Commandatura, and valuables are frequently stored in the vaults in the basement.'

'Chips?' Wassail asked.

'Chips, valuable artifacts,' Ricimer agreed. 'They're brought across the Mirror here'-he indicated the 'eastern' end of town, assuming north was up-'by a sectioned tramway laid through the Mirror. Molts push the cars through from mirrorside and back.'

Guillermo murmured to John, who said, 'No Molts are allowed to live west of the park. They use Rabbits for house servants.' The click he added at the end of the statement was clearly the equivalent of a human spitting.

Piet Ricimer bowed his head, a pause or a silent prayer. 'We'll proceed as follows,' he resumed. 'The Halys will land an hour after full darkness. Mr. Gregg will command.'

Adrien Ricimer jumped to his feet. 'No!' he said. 'Let me lead the attack, Piet! I'm your brother!'

Everyone stared at him. No one spoke. Gregg began to smile, though it wasn't a pleasant expression.

'Adrien,' Piet Ricimer said through dry lips, 'please sit down. You're embarrassing me. You will be my second-in-command for the assault on the Commandatura.'

Adrien's face set itself in a rictus. He hunched back into his seat.

'Stephen,' Ricimer continued, 'you'll have Dole as your bosun-is that satisfactory?'

'Yes.'

'As well as John and four men from the Dalriada. Captain Dulcie, you will provide Mr. Gregg with four of your most trustworthy people. Do you understand?'

'I'll pick the men, sir,' Wassail volunteered. 'You'll want trained gunners?'

Ricimer nodded. 'Yes, that's a good idea. Now, when the Halys has captured the fort. .'

Stephen Gregg's mind wrapped itself in a crackling reverie that smothered the remainder of his friend's words. He would go over the complete plan at leisure. For now, all Gregg could focus on was the initial attack that might be the end of his involvement in the operation, and in life itself.

35

Umber

The Halys lurched into freefall. Dole cursed and reached for the main fuel feed.

'Don't,' Gregg snapped, 'touch that, Mr. Dole.'

The thrusters fired under direction from the artificial intelligence. The vessel yawed violently before she came to balance and resumed a measured descent. John, crewing both sets of attitude controls, didn't move during the commotion.

'Christ's blood, sir!' Dole protested. 'That's rough as a cob. I could do better than that!'

'We're here to look like Feds landing,' Gregg said coolly. 'That's what we're going to do'-he gave Dole a tight smile-'if it kills us. That means we let the AI bring us in, as coarse as it is and as crude as the thrusters it controls.'

Gregg looked at the Molt on the attitude controls. 'Is this how you would have landed if it had been you and your regular captain, John?' he asked.

'Yes,' the alien said.

The Halys' viewscreen was raster-scanned. Synchronous problems divided the display into horizontal thirds, and the image within those segments was bad to begin with. Nor did it help visuals that a windstorm was blowing dust across Umber City as the raiders came in.

The four men from the Dalriada braced themselves against stanchions and tried to keep their cutting bars from flopping. They seemed a solid crew. The three common sailors showed a natural tendency to look to the fourth, a gunner's mate named Stampfer, when orders were given, but they'd showed no signs of deliberately rejecting either Gregg's authority or Dole's.

That was as well for them. Stephen Gregg might not trust himself at piloting a starship, but he could damned well see to it that his orders were obeyed the second time.

The viewscreen's jagged images of sandy soil and the three ships already docked on Umber vanished suddenly in a wash of dust. 'Hang on, boys,' Gregg said. 'Here it comes.'

The thrusters slammed up to three-quarter power. Two of the attitude jets fired, controlling the yaw from the

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