31







The next day, Kris made a trip down to see the pyramid one last time. The pit had been filled in. A 12mm laser antiaircraft rifle had been applied to the door mechanism.

“That puppy will never work again,” Gunny assured Kris. However, the work had been done very judiciously. There were only three 12mm holes drilled into the rock.

What Kris most wanted to see was the stone that now stood filling half the doorway. Tall and well polished on the side that faced out, it had lettering derived from the walls inside behind each of the glass-enclosed figures.

Jacques translated for Kris. “The top phrase says, ‘We came. We looked upon your work. What we see of your false enlightenment disgusts us.’ We used the plural because they seemed to almost always use the singular.”

“The enlightened one kind of thing.”

“Yes, the ‘your false enlightenment’ is singular. That will fit the bill perfectly.”

“I think you’re right. We function as people. He is just one man. If that doesn’t scare them, it sure ought to confuse them.”

“Unless they have no respect for people acting as a group,” Penny said.

“The word must be getting around that you underestimate us at your risk,” Jack said, dryly.

Both Penny and Jacques shrugged.

“They look pretty sunk in their own ways,” Jacques said.

“But you did it this way,” Kris said. “And the lower phrase?”

“We used the simple syllogism you suggested. ‘No hunt us, you will have peace and harmony.’ We liked that line from the creation song last night, and they’d used something like that for the condition they left the dead worlds in. We’ll see how they like that offered to them. The second part goes, ‘Hunt us and we will flood this place with your blood and bury it under your heads.’”

“I don’t think you could make the point any stronger,” Kris said.

“Win, lose, or draw, I think this is the best way to confront them,” Jacques said.

“I agree,” Her Highness, Vice Admiral Kris Longknife said, with finality. “Now, if you’ll give me a moment, I’d like to walk through this chamber of horrors one last time. Jacques, you said the top line behind each victim’s coffin was numbers. I think you said they might be positions on a star chart. Have you had any luck matching them to our map?”

“We have one match, the one you found on your long scout. Unfortunately, one point is kind of hard to use to fix a chart that is undefined to us.”

“I hate to think that finding more murdered worlds might help us.”

They came to the huge chamber and fell silent. Kris again faced the family. Now, knowing what she knew of what they’d likely done to this planet, she felt less sympathy. They might have earned their place here. The ones who deserved her sympathy were the others, murdered with no warning and no idea why this was happening to them.

Despite the pall that swirled around Kris, seeming to demand silence, Kris had to ask one more question of Jacques.

“Of the races entombed here, how many looked sentient?”

“That’s impossible to say, Kris,” Jacques said. “For example, was that big dinosaur thing over there self-aware? Some of the trophies look like they’ve hardly crawled out of the water, but just because we can’t conceive of such animals as sentient doesn’t mean they aren’t.”

“I didn’t ask how many were sentient,” Kris snapped. “Only how many looked it. Don’t you have a guess? Something, say, someone with a high-school level of education might conclude.”

“None of the boffins has a high-school education, Kris.”

Jack coughed softly. “I had a Marine medic, the one who first opened the entrance, go through. Actually, she did it on her own. Took her own pictures. Her best guess, from her tally, is twenty-five to thirty-five percent look aware of what was happening to them.”

“By that estimate,” Kris asked, “how many sentient species did they murder in the last hundred thousand years?”

“Her guess is between one hundred and a hundred and fifty,” Jack said.

“Damn,” was all Kris could say.

“God forgive them,” was Penny’s prayer.

The others stayed mute.

“No more. Not one more, you hear?” Kris said to the dead chamber.

“I think they will hear you very well,” Jacques said.

The next day, the ships’ fuel tanks were all topped off. The last of the scientists were back aboard and happily reviewing their data. None had discovered a word for god or goddess, other than the Sky Gods, but they were all looking now.

With everyone ready, Kris gave the order to the squadron to undock and head out.

That was when the natives flipped out.

“Kris, the natives don’t want to go into the eggs,” Nelly reported as Kris ordered the fleet to two gees.

Kris headed her own egg for the drop bay and found it a madhouse when she rolled in. There were Marines not too subtly trying to get the natives into eggs, and natives scampering around everywhere. A few had even resorted to waving their knives threateningly at the Marines.

“It’s like chasing a bunch of greased pigs,” Gunny reported. “A guy pissed on a corporal who almost caught him.”

That wouldn’t lead to any place good. “Tell your Marines to relax,” Kris said.

“Stand down, Marines,” Gunny ordered in that quiet voice that can resonate around the walls of drop bays, hearts, and souls.

“Captain Drago, hold at one gee for a few minutes,” Kris ordered.

“As you will, Admiral, but we’ve laid in a fast trip back home. If we make it just like Nelly thinks we can, we’ll be home in three jumps. It will take some slowing down in Alwa System, but it will be fast and no one in between any the wiser.”

“I understand, Captain. I just need some honey to make things go a bit easier here in the drop bay for our local hires.”

“Waiting on your word.”

Kris motored her egg to the center of the drop bay. “Gunny, have your Marines stand clear of the walls. Nelly, stand by to shrink the bay to Condition Baker, if you will.”

Gunny got a big grin on his face and ordered his Marines into the center of the room. His grin proved contagious as the troopers jogged in from the bulkheads.

The natives eyed what was going on. Some of them edged in closer. Others looked no more willing to get close to the Marines.

“Nelly, execute Condition Baker for the docking bay.”

The drop bay was quite spacious. It had to be with four longboats, the admiral’s barge, and the captain’s gig strung out along its walls.

Suddenly, the bay was a whole lot smaller. The boats were much closer, the distance across the bay a lot less.

Several natives found themselves pushed rather unceremoniously along by the closing walls. Though they looked surprised and not at all happy, none appeared injured.

~We are going for a walk among the stars,~ Kris said in a firm voice. ~It will taste better if you sit in one of these.~

Kris waved at the forty eggs. They’d been parked in a triple line along the center of the deck. On Gunny’s orders, the Marines got in theirs.

“Captain, you may go to 1.5 gees when you want,” Kris said.

“Going to 1.5 gees now. I’m taking the ship to Condition Baker.”

“We’re already at Baker down here.”

“Oh, I bet that was fun.”

“No one was hurt,” Kris said.

The natives’ eyes got wide as their weight went up fifty percent.

~It is better to put these on,~ Kris repeated, waving casually at the unoccupied eggs.

The graybeard got in one. His eyes did go wide as it eased the acceleration on him. ~Good. Son, get in one. Get the boy in one.~

The lad who’d caused all this was looking much better. He scampered into a high-gee cart and relaxed into its cushioned embrace. ~Good. Good good,~ he said.

“Captain Drago, would you care to go to two gees.”

“With pleasure.”

The acceleration went up, as did the apparent weight of the natives still on their feet in the drop bay.

That was enough for most of them. They were into the eggs in a wink. The one holdout was the old bald woman. She clung to her staff.

I BET SHE CAN’T TAKE THE STAFF INTO THE ACCELERATION CART, Nelly said.

I WON’T TAKE THAT BET.

Kris motored over to the practice equipment lockers and pulled a puggle stick out of its space. NELLY, RIG A PLACE ON MY CART FOR THE STICK.

It was done.

Kris motored over to the last unused egg. “Nelly, rig her egg to have a place for her stick. Open a hole so she can place it standing up.”

Nelly did it.

Kris pointed to the hole, then to the stick, and waved the woman to the egg.

For a stubborn moment, the woman stood firm in her place. NELLY, TELL CAPTAIN DRAGO TO ADD A QUARTER GEE.

The woman sighed and began to make her way to the egg.

“Captain Drago, you may drop the extra quarter gee.”

“It is done.”

Kris turned her egg to face Gunny. “See to it that the natives all learn how to drink from the water line. Can you make sure that Cookie knows they are down here and gets them something to eat that isn’t too unfamiliar to them?”

“Will do, Admiral.”

Kris surveyed the situation and found it good.

A few minutes later, she motored onto the bridge. “I hope I didn’t cause you any trouble,” she told Captain Drago.

“Nope, no bother at all. How are our passengers?”

“In their eggs, surrounded by Marines, and trying to adjust to star walking.”

“I like the idea of their being surrounded by Marines. I’d hate to have to chase them down at high gees.”

“It shouldn’t happen. What’s our course?”

“Nelly has drawn us a very fast course back to Alwa. We will come flying into the system at a high speed, but it shouldn’t be a problem. No one uses the Alpha Jump, and we’ll have one of the gas giants capture us. It may involve some 3.5-gee deceleration, but what’s a little gee among friends?”

“Let’s get home. I have a lot to report.”

“Report to Alwa or report to the king?” Captain Drago asked.

“That is something I will use this short trip to meditate on,” Kris said, and guided her egg into her day quarters.

Загрузка...