What?
She was routing all that into storage, so why had her aug brought that one to her attention? A quick search rendered the answer to her: this was no proverb, but part of the nonsense verse penned by Edward Lear, the one Iversus Skaidon, the inventor of runcible technology, had so loved.
Why, why that?
THE MOON
THE MOON
THEY DANCED BY THE LIGHT OF THE MOON.
Hand in hand.
A shiver ran through her as she clearly visualized Jebel Krong standing haloed by Trajeen, Vina speeding over above him.
The moon.
Was she just imagining things? Groping desperately? This must be madness. But… Jebel intended to install an aug on George… would there be enough of the AI left? And those proverbs, didn't they make a weird distorted kind of sense?
Moria sat back, seemingly paralysed by the enormity of what she was thinking. Then, after a long pause, she sent the instruction to start up the positioning drives again, to speed the runcible back on its way towards Trajeen.
"Thank you, thank you so much," Jebel said, his words directed out into space to a Polity dreadnought captain called Tomalon. The news had only just reached him and at first he found it difficult to credit, but the cheering from his Avalonians seemed to drive it home. TheOccam Razor—there a name to go down in history. A Polity ship had actually destroyed one of those fuckers. But Jebel's good mood rapidly faded. Apparently theOccam Razor,though still in pursuit, was severely damaged. And with Jebel's Prador ship still on the way, that victory brought no respite at all. Then other recently received information surfaced in his mind.
I guess, Cirrella, you were lucky.
The news only recently reached Jebel an hour before that about theOccam Razor, though it had been known after the questioning of the survivors fromAvalon Station. The AFs best estimate of those taken aboard the Prador ship stood at around seven hundred, and Jebel wished he possessed less imagination, less of a clear vision of what might be happening to them, still happening to them. He supposed their number would be much depleted now, if any remained alive at all. Rescue was of course impossible, but now there seemed some small possibility of an ending.
Jebel up-close-and-personal Krong.
He had killed so many of them that way, sticking mines on their carapaces and blowing the bastards to bouillabaisse. In the beginning, every death brought some satisfaction, but as the war progressed and he came to realise that Prador adults cared very little about the deaths of their numerous children, his feelings of satisfaction diminished. And alwaysthe ship remained, with Immanence still comfortably ensconced aboard it.
This time, by mining the Boh runcible, maybe Jebel could get to the Prador captain,really plant an explosive on a carapace where it would hurt, for Immanence would certainly try to seize that runcible first. Or was he kidding himself? Wouldn't the Prador captain expect something like this, wouldn't he send his children to scour the Boh runcible first? Jebel frowned. Damn he wanted to go out there, just to get close to the ship, just to have the opportunity, no matter how small to—
"What is it, Urbanus?" He turned as the Golem entered the lounge.
"We are under power—the positioning drives have been restarted."
"What?" Jebel felt a flash of irritation. "Well turn them off again and cut the power supply."
"We can't. It seems they were reinstated by executive order."
It took Jebel a moment to absorb that. "Moria Salem?"
"She is the only one who could do that, unless the override came from one of the planetary AIs. One of them is presently trying to extract information from George, and it tells me no such override has been initiated."
"Bring her here—she's got some explaining to do."
"There's no need for that." Moria strode into the room.
Jebel assessed her. He had rather liked her forthright attitude and hardheaded approach to the situation they faced. He rather liked her. But now he could see she was frightened and rather less sure of herself.
She turned to Urbanus. "Have you fitted George with an aug?"
Urbanus glanced towards Jebel, who inclined his head slightly.
"I have. George is currently linked to one of the planetary AIs."
"Have you discovered anything?" She nervously rubbed her hands together and could not conceal her disappointment when the Golem shook his head. Now she turned towards Jebel. "I think I understand it all now, but it's a matter of positioning and… this Conlan."
"Woman, you had better start making sense sometime soon or you will be joining him in his cell."
"I'm presuming Conlan possessed some means of communicating with the Prador ship when it arrives?"
"He was to use his aug to make com connection on the back of the U-space link to Boh—the runcible control signal. He's generously given me the code he intended to use, and when the Prador ship does arrive he will be informing them that he has complete control of the two runcibles. I'm hoping this will make them less diligent in searching for any nasty surprises on the Boh runcible."
"Good, that's exactly what I want."
"I won't warn you again." Jebel tried to keep it under control, but felt himself close to losing his temper. Moria seemed oblivious to this—off somewhere in her own mind.
"Positioning. You told me an ECS dreadnought is pursuing the Prador ship?"
Jebel stared down at the floor, took a deep breath and tried to find some calm within himself. "It is," he said tightly, "though it is severely damaged and I doubt it will be up to much."
"And how soon after the Prador ship will it arrive?"
"Almost on top of it, I'm told."
"It is damaged… but it should possess sufficient armament to destroy the Boh runcible?"
"Yes, but we'll be mining that, so there will be no need."
"And I should be able to communicate with that ship from here?"
"Yes…if I give you the required frequency and codes, which I have no intention of doing until you start making sense. I've no intention—"
Jebel gaped at the apparition that now appeared in the doorway: George, with a smear of blood behind his newly installed aug, which stood open, the optic connection dangling.
Moria turned. "You know, don't you? You realised," she said.
George replied emphatically, "When one door shuts, another door opens." Then added, "Faith will move mountains."
Moria whirled back to Jebel. "That confirms it for me, do you agree?"
"Agree withwhat!" Jebel bellowed.
"Oh yes," Moria said, and told him
After availing himself of the meagre facilities, which were substantially better than those in his prior accommodation, Conlan paced the small cabin, then paused when he felt that weird shifting telling him the ship was just surfacing from U-space. A short in-system jump, then. In his estimation that meant their destination could only be one place: the Boh runcible. He considered what that might mean, but could come up with no sensible answer, so he sat down and waited. Within a few minutes the door to his cabin opened and Jebel Krong entered.
"Ah, you are considerably more sweet-smelling than when last we met," said Krong.
"Besides that," said Conlan, "and the fact that I am aboard this ship and still breathing, I rather suspect you want something from me."
The expression on Jebel's face told Conlan that only what the man wanted prevented him from beating Conlan to a pulp. And as Conlan was well aware, Jebel Krong could easily do just that.
"As you've probably guessed, we've just arrived at the Boh runcible. Urbanus and Lindy will shortly be suiting up to conceal CTD mines throughout the structure. You and I will be going down there, where you will key in with your aug to the U-space connection. When the Prador vessel arrives you will tell its captain precisely what I instruct you to tell him."