“Jesus!” he muttered to the woman at the next console as Bogey Two streaked towards Franconia’s stellar Powell limit. “If she doesn’t flip in about fifteen seconds, she’s gonna have fried Fasset drive for lunch.”
“Are we ready, Admiral?”
“As we can be, Governor.” Vice Admiral Horth sat in her command chair, already wearing her headset, and studied her plot. “I wish I knew what she’s up to this time around.”
“It doesn’t really matter, does it, Becky?” Sir Amos Brinkman asked, and Horth shook her head with a sigh.
“No, Amos. I don’t suppose it does,” she said softly.
Megarea murmured hopelessly.
“No!” Alicia DeVries’ contralto was as harsh and gaunt as her face. Cords showed in her throat, and somewhere deep inside she wept for her cruelty to Megarea, but the tears were far away and lost. “Just do it!” she snarled.
“It’s got to be Alley. But how did she get here so soon?”
“I don’t know, Tannis,” Keita replied. “Coming in on that vector after the way she wormholed out. . . . It just doesn’t seem possible. She must have had her drive red-lined all the way here.”
“Should we warn Orbit One?” Ben Belkassem asked quietly.
Keita stood silent for a moment, then shook his head. “No. They already have her course plotted. Nothing we can tell them could change their defensive responses, and the truth would only disorganize their command structure at the critical moment.” He glanced at the lieutenant. “Continue your deceleration, Captain, but have your com section ready. We’ll just barely have the range to reach her when she breaks sublight.”
Ben Belkassem looked up sharply, then glanced at Tannis. The major hunched forward, staring at the plot, and the inspector moved even closer to Keita, pitching his voice too low for her to overhear.
“Do you really think you can talk her out of this, Sir Arthur?”
“Honestly?” Ben Belkassem nodded, and Keita sighed. “Not really. She’s got a damned low opinion of imperial justice—God knows she has a right to it—and from what you’ve told me about her mental state—“ He exhaled sharply. “No, I don’t think I can talk her out of it, but that doesn’t mean I don’t have to try.”
“Here . . . she . . . comes,” Lieutenant Anders whispered. Then, “Turnover! Christ! Look at that decel!”
Megarea whipsawed on the brink of self-destruction as her maltreated Fasset drive took the strain. Her velocity wound down insanely, dropping towards the perimeter of wormhole space, and fittings rattled and banged. Alicia felt the vibration, felt the starship’s pain in her own flesh, and her fixed stare never wavered.
“Bogey Two dropping sublight . . . now,” Tracking reported to PriCon. “Deceleration holding steady at twenty-three-point-five KPS squared.”
Horth nodded and leaned back in her chair, rubbing her chin. Odd. DeVries was piling on an awful lot of negative G for someone in such a big hurry to get here.
Megarea bucketed through space, just below drive overload, and her velocity dropped rapidly. A vector projected itself behind Alicia’s eyes, one that stretched one and a third billion kilometers to a dot invisible with distance, and she smiled a death’s-head smile.
Two starships raced toward one another, converging on the distant spark of Franconia, and a message reached out across the gap between them. Even light seemed to crawl at such a range, but Megarea sped to meet it even as she decelerated. The outer ring of orbital forts brought their fire control on line, searching for her, dueling with her ECM, and the AI noted the changes in their sensors. She was well outside range—for now—but she was committed to enter it, and the upgrades of the last few months would reduce her ECM’s efficiency by at least forty percent.
She considered reporting to Alicia, but there was no point.
“Look! She’s still decelerating!” Tannis Gateau exclaimed. “Maybe we were wrong!
“Maybe we were,” Keita agreed, but he met Ben Belkassem’s eyes behind her and shook his head minutely.
“Admiral Horth, Bogey One is transmitting.”
“Well?” The admiral eyed the com rating narrowly, alerted by something in the man’s voice. “What does he say?”
“We don’t know, ma’am. It’s an awful tight beam and it wasn’t addressed to us—we just caught the edge of the carrier as it went past, and it’s encrypted.”
“Encrypted?” Treadwell’s voice was sharp, and the com rating nodded.
“Yes, sir. We’re working on it, but it’s going to take time. It’s imperial in origin, but we’ve never seen anything quite like it.”
“And it’s being sent to the alpha synth?” Horth pressed.
“Yes, ma’am.”
The admiral nodded, then watched Brinkman and Treadwell exchange glances and wondered just what the hell was going on.
Only three of the outer forts could range on Megarea, but SLAMs streaked out from them, and a low, harsh growl quivered in Alicia’s throat as she watched their deadly sparkles come. They were beautiful, their threat lost in the elemental splendor of destruction, and part of her wanted to reach out and embrace their glory. But she couldn’t. She must dance with them, avoiding them, cutting through them to reach the object of her hate.
She watched Megarea flirt with death, trolling the SLAMs off course with her electronic wiles, flipping aside to evade the ones she could not enmesh, and the AI’s pain was a knife in her own heart. Yet she was beyond pain. Pain only fed her hunger, whatever its source.
Tisiphone stood silent and helpless in Alicia’s mind. It was all she could do to keep Alicia’s blind savagery from dragging Megarea under and clouding the lightning-fast reflexes which kept them both alive.
She’d never guessed what she was creating, never imagined the monster she’d spawned. She’d seen the power of Alicia DeVries’s mind without recognizing the controls which kept that power in check, and only now had she begun to understand fully what she had done.
She had shattered those controls. The compassion and mercy she’d feared no longer existed, only the red, ravening hunger. Yet terrible as that might be, there was worse. She had found the hole Alicia had gnawed through the wall about her inner rage, and she could not close it. Somehow, without even realizing it was possible, Alicia had reached beyond herself. She’d followed Tisiphone’s connection to the Fury’s own rage, her own destruction, and made that incalculable power hers as well.
For the first time in millennia, Tisiphone faced another as powerful as herself, a mortal mind which had stolen the power of the Furies themselves, and that power had driven it mad.
Vice Admiral Rebecca Horth sat silently, lips pressed firmly together, as the renegade alpha synth evaded her SLAMs. More forts were firing now, and some of them, at least, were coming closer . . . but not close enough.
She checked the converging vectors again and frowned. The dispatch boat would pass within a few thousand kilometers of Soissons on its course to meet the alpha synth, but if the alpha synth maintained its present deceleration, it would pass well behind the planet when it crossed Soissons’s orbit. Which made no sense, unless . . .
She stiffened in her chair and started punching new numbers into Tracking’s extrapolations, and her face paled.
Ben Belkassem stood silent, chewing the inside of his lip raw, and smelled the tension about him. The dispatch boat’s velocity was down to seventy-two percent of light-speed, but Alicia’s more powerful drive had Megarea down to barely .88 C despite her far shorter deceleration period.
No one spoke, and he wondered if Keita suspected what he did. Probably. Did Tannis? He glanced at the major’s white, strained features and looked away. She might not admit it to herself, but she must be beginning to.
He returned his gaze to the plot. Thank God he’d left Megarea the O Branch codes. At least they could talk to each other without Defense Command—and Treadwell— listening in.
“What the—?” Lieutenant Ande
rs twitched in surprise and looked up at his supervisor. “Sir, Bogey Two’s just made a second turnover! She’s stopped decelerating and started accelerating again.” Emotionless computers considered the changed data, and Anders gasped. “Oh my God—she’s on a collision course for Orbit One!”
Tannis groaned as Megarea turned end-for-end and aligned her Fasset drive on the point in space Orbit One would reach in forty-two minutes and sixteen seconds. It turned the drive into a shield against the heavier fire of the inner fortress ring—and at the moment she reached Orbit One, the alpha synth would have regained virtually all the velocity she’d lost. Alicia would be moving at .985 C when she rammed.
Fifty-seven minutes after it had been sent, Keita’s desperate message converged with Megarea’s receivers.
Alicia looked up incuriously as a com screen blinked to life. She recognized the face, but the person who had known and respected—even loved—that man was dead, and the powerful voice meant less than the brutal vibration lashing Megarea’s over-stressed hull.
“Alley, I know what you’re doing,” the voice said, “but you don’t have to. We have independent confirmation, Alley; we know who you’re after, and I swear we’ll get him. You’ve done enough—now you have to break off.” Sir Arthur Keita’s eyes pled with her from the screen and his voice was raw with pain yet soft. “Please, Alley. Break off. You don’t have to kill nine thousand people. Don’t turn yourself into the very thing you hate.
It was Megarea’s pleading mental voice.
“It doesn’t matter! They knew about Watts and let the bastard live!”
Alicia only snarled in response. She turned her eyes from the screen where Keita’s face still begged her to relent. She closed her ears to his voice, and deep at her very core, where even she could no longer hear it, a lost soul sobbed in torment. She locked her attention on Orbit One, ignoring the SLAMs still flashing towards her. All that mattered was that distant sphere of battle steel. Her smoking bloodlust craved the destruction to come— and the last, dying fragment of the person she once had been embraced it as her only escape from what she had become.
“She’s not breaking off,” Tannis whispered, and Keita nodded. Ten minutes had passed since Alicia must have received their message, and Megarea held her course unflinchingly. He glanced at the plot. The dispatch boat had crossed Soisson’s orbit eleven minutes ago, and the range to Megarea had fallen to thirty light-minutes. The handful of warships in the system were converging on the alpha synth, but none of them could reach her in time.
He closed his eyes, then turned to the dispatch boat’s commander.
“I need two volunteers. One in the engine room and one on the helm. Put the rest of your people into your shuttle and get out of here.”
The lieutenant looked up in confusion, but Ben Belkassem understood.
“I’m a pretty fair helmsman, Sir Arthur,” he said.
“What—?” Tannis broke off, eyes widening, and stared mutely at Keita. The brigadier gazed back, sad eyes unflinching, and she bit her lip.
“Go with them, Tannis,” he said gently.
“No. Let me talk to her! I can stop her—I know I can!”
“There’s no time . . . and there’s only one shuttle. If you don’t leave now, you can’t leave at all.”
“I know,” she said, and he started to make it an order, then sighed.
“Admiral, that dispatch boat’s shuttle just separated.” Admiral Horth tore herself away from the intensifying fire ripping ineffectually towards the alpha synth and checked her plot as the shuttle arced away from the dispatch boat’s base course. It was fourteen light-minutes from Soissons, still streaking for the far side of nowhere at sixty-five percent of light-speed, and no shuttle could kill that kind of velocity. Which meant its crew must be counting on someone else’s picking them up . . . and must have a very urgent reason for abandoning ship.
The dispatch boat’s vector curved very slightly, and Horth swallowed in sudden understanding. Its course had been roughly convergent with the alpha synth’s from the start; now the match was perfect, and the dispatch boat was no longer decelerating.
A blue dot swelled ahead of Megarea on Alicia’s mental plot, far larger and more powerful than any SLAM. Her nostrils flared and she bared her teeth as hate boiled within her. She knew what it had to be—and that, unlike a SLAM, it possessed onboard seeking capability.
She hunched down in her command chair, eyes bloodshot and wild, but her course never deviated. She would reach Treadwell or die trying, and dying would be a triumph in itself.
Sir Arthur Keita glanced at the chronometer. Ben Belkassem had the helm. The dispatch boat’s skipper had taken over Engineering, and Tannis manned the communications console. No one else was aboard, and they had eight-point-nine minutes—under seven, given relativity’s dictates—to live. It seemed unfair, somehow, to be robbed of those few, precious seconds by Einstein’s ancient equations, but he pushed the thought aside.
“Talk to her, Tannis,” he said softly.
“Alley—it’s Tannis, Alley.”
Alicia’s eyes jerked back to the com, and her wrath faltered. A strange sound hung in the air, and she realized it was herself, the unbroken, animal snarl of her rage. She sucked in breath, frowning in slow, painful confusion as she peered at the screen. Tannis? What was Tannis doing here?
“I’m on the dispatch boat ahead of you, Alley,” Tannis said, and Alicia’s heart spasmed. Tears gleamed on Tannis’s face and hung in her soft voice, and a tattered fragment of the old Alicia writhed under them. “Uncle Arthur’s with me, Sarge—and Ben Belkassem. We . . . can’t let you do this.”
Alicia tried to speak, tried to scream at Tannis to get out of her path, to let her by to rend and destroy, to run for her own life, but nothing came out, and Tannis went on speaking as the hurtling vessels raced together at a closing speed one and a half times that of light.
“Please, Alley,” Tannis begged. “We know the truth. Uncle Arthur knows. We’ve brought the warrants with us. We’ll get him, Alley—I swear we will. Don’t do this. Don’t make us kill you.”
Agony stabbed Alicia. She wanted to tell Tannis it was all right, that she had to be killed. Death didn’t twist her with anguish and startle tears back into her glaring eyes at last. It was Tannis’s voice, Tannis’s sorrow, and knowing the only way that unarmed dispatch boat could kill her.
“Please,” she whispered to the bulkheads. “Oh, please, Tannis. Not you, too.” But her transmitter was dead; only Megarea and Tisiphone heard her anguish, and Tannis drew a deep breath on her com screen.
“All right, Alley,” she whispered. “At least it won’t be a stranger.”
Alicia DeVries staggered up out of her command chair and pounded the com with her bare fists. Shattered plastic slashed her hands bloody, and her animal shriek of loss drowned even the howl of Megarea’s tortured drive. She ripped the unit from the console and hurled it to the deck, but she couldn’t kill the memory, couldn’t stop it, couldn’t stop knowing who she was about to kill, and hatred and loss and grief were an agony not even death could quench.
“She’s not going to break off,” Keita whispered through bloodless lips, and Tannis sobbed silently in agreement.
Ben Belkassem only nodded and adjusted his course slightly.
The being called Tisiphone had no eyes. She had never wept, for she had never known sorrow, or compassion, or love. Those things were alien to her, no part of the thing she had been created to be.
Until now.
She felt Megarea’s frantic grief beyond the barrier she held between Alicia’s madness and the AI, felt it like a pale, anemic shadow of Alicia’s agony. The agony she had created. The torment she had inflicted upon an innocent. Only the tiniest shadow of Alicia DeVries survived, and the fault was hers. She had reduced the greatest wa
rrior she had ever known to a hate-maddened animal who could be stopped only by death, and—far, far worse than that—Alicia knew what had happened. Somewhere deep inside, she stared in horror at the thing she had become and begged to die.
Tisiphone looked upon the work of her hands and recoiled in horror. She’d been corrupted, she realized. She’d broken Alicia DeVries, shattered her concepts of justice and mercy, of compassion and honor, and even as she stripped them from her victim, they had infected her. She’d seen herself in Alicia from the outset; now she had perfected the Fury in Alicia, but she had become something else, and what she saw appalled her.
She fought against the paralysis of her own self-disgust. Alicia’s bottomless hate and hunger hissed and crackled before her, and she feared them. She, who had never known fear, knew terror as she confronted her equal. It would be so easy to hold her hand, to wait out the last fleeting minutes and let death separate her from that seething well of power, for Alicia DeVries was a Fury, fit to destroy even an immortal.
But Tisiphone had learned too much, changed too fundamentally. It was her fault, she’d told Alicia, and hers the price to pay.
She paused for one blazing second, drawing in her power, and attacked.
Alicia DeVries howled and lurched to her feet, pounding her head with clenched, bloody fists. She staggered, writhing in her agony, and rebounded from the uncaring battle steel of a bulkhead. She went back to her knees, beating her face against the padded deck sole in a blind, demented frenzy, and chaos raged behind her eyes.
The blood-red ferocity of her madness shuddered as Tisiphone drove into it, and thunderbolts of raw, unfocused power flayed the Fury with spikes of agony she had never been meant to know. Fury opposed Fury, clawing and gouging, and there was no mercy in Alicia. She lashed out, frantic to kill, to destroy, to avenge all her loss and torment and suffering even if she must drown a universe in blood, and Tisiphone screamed in soundless pain under the avalanche of hate.