Page 5 of Islands in the Sky


  on, in human measurement, for seven hundred yahrens. His first-brain,

  replacing the rudimentary one that trained and educated him in his early

  years, had been awarded him at the proper ceremony marking his passing

  from childhood to maturity. First-brains were the basic guidance system

  of both the Cylon citizen and centurion. Since the first-brain's

  activities concentrated on perceptions related to information gathering

  and efficient performance in whatever job had been assigned the

  individual Cylon at the maturity ceremony, only the simple interpretive

  powers were implanted in it. In Imperious Leader's case, his childhood

  achievements, especially the physical ones, had qualified him for the

  coveted job of centurion. Even better, he had quickly ascended to

  fighter pilot status and won the name that would have been (loosely)

  translated into Colonial Standard as "Ace of Aces." As a result of his

  mastery of warfare techniques, he had been award his second-brain much

  earlier than his peers. The second-brain gave him the abilities

  necessary for Cylon officers, particularly the gift of analyzing and

  interpreting information. When the second-brain operated in conjunction

  with the first-brain integrally, as it always did for Imperious Leader,

  one rose to the level of executive officer. He had become one of the

  youngest executive officers in the history of his race. He knew now

  that, if he removed his helmet and let his many eyes survey the officers

  surrounding the pedestal, he would be besieged by keen memories of

  himself doing their jobs, interpreting and filtering data for previous

  Imperious Leaders.

  When the most recent Imperious Leader had reached the end of his

  reign (each Leader held power for a specific term; about three-quarters

  of a century in the time of Man, although the Cylons used no such

  constricting measurements of linear time), he dictated his selection as

  successor. Whatever his choice, no grumbling would have been heard from

  the Cylon executive officers because there was no aspiration to power.

  Cylons believed that the decrees of their superiors at any level or in

  any position originated in a master plan known completely only to the

  Imperious Leader. For them it was only logical, since Imperious Leaders

  were the only Cylons with a third-brain and therefore the only Cylons in

  possession of all information.

  Even though he displayed his reaction to none of his fellow

  officers, the present Imperious Leader had been mildly surprised when his

  predecessor had selected him. The awarding of leadership generally went

  to one of the officers senior in command experience. He had served long

  and well, but did not consider himself eligible for the supreme echelon

  until the next time of selection. However, with the same stoicism with

  which he would have reconciled himself to death in battle, he accepted

  the awarding of the third-brain. As soon as it had been implanted, he

  understood why his predecessor, who now communicated with him

  telepathically, had chosen him. Besides being part of that telepathic

  network connecting the few third-brain holders who had not as yet

  selected their time of death, he now possessed, according to Cylon

  belief, the capability of limitless wisdom. While the second-brain had

  allowed him a substantial amount of understanding about what happened,

  why it happened, and how it happened, the third-brain allowed him to

  transcend the tyranny of mere facts, to rise above the limitations of

  trivial speculation, insight, and idea. With the third-brain he could

  connect his first-brain information and second-brain interpretations of

  the information to a vast accumulation of knowledge going bac in time

  very nearly to the beginning of the Cylon culture. He discovered that

  not every Cylon could admit the third-brain into his body and, in fact,

  most of his compatriots would have involuntarily regjected it. For that

  reason primarily, the selection of successor to Imperious Leader was

  always carried out with extreme care. Tests at the implanting of the

  first-brain indicated the few Cylons who had third-brain potential.

  Those who qualified were kept under intense scrutiny during the ensuing

  years. Some were weeded out when certain character instabilities emerged

  in difficult test situations, while others were merely killed in the

  war---a high number, since third-brain qualifiers tended to take high

  risks in warfare. By the time the present Imperious Leader rose to the

  executive staff, he was one of only six survivors eligible for

  third-brain implantation. The final selection was made by the Cylon in

  command, advised by all the former living Imperious Leaders, supplemented

  by analyses based upon memories of dead Leaders whos brains were

  preserved in the historical tanks. When he had awakened from the

  third-brain implantation, knowing immediately why he was the choice, he

  agreed thoroughly with that decision.

  All of this, plus the entire history and accumulated knowledge of

  the Cylon race, was his in an instant.

  Now he reviewed the progress of his scrupulously deisgned

  diversionary battle tactic against the Colonial Fleet, and he looked

  ahead to the main plan that was about to commence. The enemy was sure to

  be routed. His victory over the humans would assure his place in Cylon

  history. He could expect to hand over command to a successor in the far

  future, with satisfaction, knowing he would continue to be an influential

  Leader, even in voluntary stasis.

  His base ship now approached the main target, the most important of

  the twelve targets to which he had deployed the massive forces under his

  command. He wished to supervise personally the destruction of the planet

  Caprica. His spy network had informed him that it was the home planet of

  his chief human enemy, Adama, and he wanted the pleasure of causing its

  destruction for himself.

  It was odd, he thought, how dealing strategically with humans as

  enemies for so long had forced him often to think like a human being.

  His predecessor had warned him that it would be necessary to utilize a

  portion of the massive third-brain for the contemplation of human ideas,

  in order to coutner the enemy's moves in battle. He could not deny that

  the ability to copy human thought processes had been invaluable in

  fighting this stubborn, irrational race that was the enemy, but he had

  never liked the times when he had to engage that part of his brain which

  contained the essence of human knowledge, the clumsy stronghold of

  unreason that housed human philosophies. Even now, as an image of the

  present state of Caprica was transmitted to him from several sources, he

  could not help seeing the coming annihilation of the humans in their own

  terms. Good and evil, that was the kind of concern that perplexed

  single-brained, inefficient human minds. If one of them had his

  abilities and could penetrate the limitless dimensions of the Cylon three

  brains, the human perceiver would have been appalled that such simple

&nbsp
; dichotomies as good and evil just didn't exist for the Cylons. What was

  essential to all Cylons was preserving the Natural Order of the Universe,

  and they were relentless guardians of that order. For that reason the

  humans had to be exterminated. Their adventuresome ways and overriding

  need to explore areas where their mere presence threatened universal

  order had irretrievably destined them for elimination at Cylon hands.

  Imperious Leader believed peace must be returned to the universe. The

  humans' unfortunate tendency toward independent thought and action could

  no longer be allowed to disturb the inhabitants of worlds whome they

  visited without invitations.

  Good and evil! He detested the human portion of his mind for

  forcing him to consider that subject. He envisioned the deaths he would

  cause, the cities he would demolish, the worlds he would reduce to

  rubble---and saw that from the human viewpoint all of this necessary

  warfare was evil! The Cylons were evil. He was evil. He detested the

  very concept of evil, as much as he despised the concept of good. They

  were not opposites, and they were not mutually exclusive. Even most

  humans knew that. First-brain Cylons sensibly accepted the consequences

  of warfare as essential, and neither mourned their own deaths nor felt

  triumph in killing humans. Nevertheless, before initiating the

  destruction of Caprica, Imperious Leader found it necessary to disengage

  all his human philosophies, so that he could concentrate on strategy.

  Two Centurions strode toward him, stopped before the pedestal, and

  formally communicated the request to attack, a ritual that went back to

  days when the Empire was ruled by Imperious Families.

  "By your command," the first officer said.

  "Speak," said Imperious Leader.

  "All base ships are now in range to attack the Colonies," the second

  Centurion said.

  As the ritual demanded, the leader removed the communications helmet

  and stared at his minions, his many eyes glowing with a rare moment of

  elation.

  "Yes," he said. "The final annihilation of the alien pest, the life

  form known as Man. Let the attack begin."

  The two Centurions made perfunctory bows and rejoined the spider web

  of fellow executive officers. Even before they regained position and

  Imperious Leader had redonned his helmet, large apertures had opened all

  around the main circle of each Cylon base ship. Cylon warships emerged

  in precise sequence from each aperture and flew to their pre-battle

  positions, where they formed a twelve-tiered, coruscating wall that, when

  fully constructed, divided into waves, each of which had a Colony as its

  eventual target.

  *****

  No other Colonial Fleet battlestar had been able to launch full

  contingents of fighting craft in time. The Cylon attackers now picked

  off easily the ships, sitting ducks, that were catapulted out. Adama

  realized with mixed sadness and anger that only the Galactica's fighters

  were left to lead the fight against the immense attacking force.

  Outnumbered, they alternatively dodged and flew at Cylon fighters. Laser

  cannons fired and cross-fired, their radiant, thin lines chaging to

  spectacular eruptions of yellow and red flame when they foud their

  targets. As usual, Fleet warships fought with more skill and better

  accuracy, but the overwhelming odds of this battle---this treacherous

  ambush---seemed to be working against them, and Adama experienced a sharp

  pain in his gut each time Cylon fire destroyed one of his ships. The

  Fleet would lose many pilots today, perhaps all of them. They had

  already lost Zac. Adama told himself to stop thiking of his son's death.

  He must stop thinking of it. It had been painful enough to watch it

  happen while he stood helplessly by, watching it on a screen like one of

  the entertainment cassettes he often watched in his quarters. There

  would be more pain later, but now, like all commanders who had tragically

  lost sons in battle, going back in time through the many devastating wars

  the race had endured, Adama had to keep his mind on his duties.

  Apollo rushed onto the bridge, and Adama hastened to his side. The

  young man was out of breath and he spoke ina staccato fashion:

  "Cylons...ambush...they ambushed us...had to leave Zac...no other

  option...had to lave...didn't want to, but had to...he's disabled...I'm

  going to go back and lead him in."

  "I'm afraid that won't be possible," Adama said. His mind raced,

  searching for a way to tell Apollo of Zac's death. The two brothers had

  been devoted to each other and there seemed no gentle way to break the

  news.

  "Father," Apollo said, his voice awash in desperation, "I left

  him---just hanging there--his ship was damaged---I didn't know what else

  to do. I've made my report---if I don't go back..."

  Suddenly, staring into his father's eyes, Apollo perceived their sad

  message.

  "No!" he said in a weak voice. Tigh came to his side and spoke.

  "Captain Apollo, Zac's ship was destroyed just short of the Fleet.

  I'm sorry."

  "But...but...I left him."

  "You had no choice," Adama said gently.

  Apollo turned away, his face pale. Adama recalled the times when

  Apollo, as a child, had shown such excruciating pain. He wished he could

  take the man into his arms as he had once embraced a crying boy. But

  Apollo would, he knew, brush off any sympathetic touch at this moment,

  and Adama knew enough to let his son come to terms with his own pain.

  Telling Apollo again that he had no choice, the commander quickly scanned

  the screens of the communications panel and ordered Tigh to report.

  "Captain," Tigh said, "we have to know how many base ships we're

  dealing with."

  "No base ships," Apollo replied, some strength coming back into his

  voice as he went into warrior mode. "Only Raiders. Thousands of

  Raiders. I saw them hovering over Cimtar."

  "That can't be, Captain," Tigh said. "Fighters couldn't function

  this far from Cylon without base ships. They don't have the fuel."

  "No base ships!" Apollo shouted angrily. "Just fighters. Fighters

  lined up from here to Hades. I saw them. Maybe a thousand, maybe more."

  "How do you explain that, Apollo?" Adama said, forcing his voice to

  remain normal in order to quell his son's natural anger."

  "I can't explain it," Apollo said, his voice calming. "We picked up

  an empty tanker on our scanners. My guess is the Cylons used it to

  refuel for the attack. They flew to the tanker from wherever their base

  ships are right now."

  Adama's brow furled as he digested the information Apollo was

  providing. It was just the data he needed, it shed light on the elusive

  riddle of this sudden ambush and the fake peace conference. The thought

  that had been nagging him ever since the alert had been sounded came into

  the forefront of his mind. Tigh was speaking.

  "Why operate so far from Cylon with
out base ships when it isn't

  necessary. They would've been out of our range at the old moon."

  "Because," Adama said, "the base ships are needed---someplace else!

  Get me the president! Now!"

  The president's blood-drained face flashed onto the proper screen

  before the echo from Adama's shouted command had faded form the bridge.

  Behind Arcon, fire raged on the Atlantia's bridge. Arcon was

  frightened---Adama hadn't seen a look like that on his face since that

  day at the Academy when they sweated out the senior finals.

  "Mr. President," Adama said, striving to control his voice. "I

  request permission to leave the Fleet."

  "No!" Arcon screamed hysterically. "That's an act of cowardice,

  Adama. You know better than that!"

  "Arcon! I've reason to suspect that our home planets may face

  imminent attack."

  The president, his eyes clouding with desperation, moved out of view

  for a moment. The Atlantia's camera readjusted, caught the broken man

  leaning against a wall.

  "No, I say!" Archon bleated. "You are in error. You must be.

  It's---impossible---I couldn't have been that wrong. Not that wrong."

  "Arcon, this is no time to debate the..."

  "Silence, Adama! Don't you...can't you...I've led the human race,

  the entire human race, to ruin."

  "Stop feeling sorry for yourself, man! We've got to act! Now!"

  "I can't----can't act---can't even think straight---cant..."

  "Arcon, you didn't lead us to this disaster, but we were led all the

  same."

  "Led---by whom?"

  "Baltar! I must have been Baltar!"

  "No, Commander, that couldn't be. I don't believe it. I won't..."

  A deafening explosion drowned out the rest of Arcon's sentence. The

  camera, blown off its moorings, momentarily caught a picture of a section

  of the command bridge being ripped open, then engulfing flame rushing

  across, then nothing. Adama shifted his attention to the starfield,

  where he could see the flagship crusing in the distance. Fires could be

  seen blazing inside it. Suddenly, with a burst of blinding light, it

  blew apart, disintegrated into thousands of pieces. After a moment,

  there was emptiness where the Atlantia had once been.

  Activity on the Galactica's bridge had come to a standstill, as the

  crew looked on in stunned silence. However, Cylon warships closed in on

  their own ship now, and there was little time for reverent silence. Tigh

  now stood beside Adama, the inevitable printouts in his hands.

  Look sir, our long-range scanners have picked up Cylon base ships

  here, here, and here. That puts them well within range---striking

  range---of the planets Virgon, Sagitara, and..."

 
Paul Robison, Jr's Novels