less benign force was at work. The old protections of checks
   and balances had gone wrong. Those who dwelt around the
   Galactic Rim became aware of this danger first. Pirate though
   he was, he did all he could to warn those who would listen:
   the fundamental cycle of birth, death and rebirth was being
   threatened by this implosion's increasing rapidity. Everything
   was happening far too quickly. According to those few wise
   creatures who could sense the greater multiverse beyond our
   galaxy, beyond our universe, we were facing nothing less
   than the corruption and utter destruction of everything.
   Cornelius knows that whatever it is which lies at the centre
   of the universe, what we call a super-black hole, something
   unimaginably dense and tinier than an atom, has become
   erratic: the very thing which provided balance to the universe
   was now unbalancing it. Captain Cornelius sought the
   advice of every intellectual he encountered on his voyages,
   frequently making piratical raids on alien fleets crossing
   our Milky Way, not because he was greedy for wealth but
   because he was desperate for information. Few were able to
   offer him a sufficiently satisfactory explanation, even when
   they themselves observed the phenomenon.
   All Captain Cornelius knows concerns a legend - little
   more than a rumour - about a stolen artefact taken from
   what some identify as the Realm of Law. They insist it be
   returned to the heart of the multiverse. If that is not done
   then all living matter, all living things, the very stuff of life,
   will be destroyed as punishment for that theft. There will be
   no regeneration. There will be no multiverse.
   The artefact takes many forms in our side of the universe,
   identified as the Realm of Chaos. Some call it simply the
   Regulator or, colloquially, the Roogalator. Others of a more
   romantic disposition call it the Newtonium Staff or the
   Cosmic Balance; the Balance said to sustain the equilibrium
   of the universe.
   Cornelius has heard that when the universe we know
   vanishes at last it will be into Limbo, where it will not
   regenerate. There will only be death, and those of us who
   remain conscious will remain conscious at that frozen
   moment of death, knowing our fate but never able to change
   it. Time, of which space is a relative dimension, disintegrates
   and intelligent order is lost.
   Captain Cornelius stands on his bridge, his home galaxy
   behind him, its light filling his sails with the solar wind, and
   he stares into the deep, deep darkness ahead of him: the silent
   and near-infinite reaches of intergalactic space, which reflect
   the Dutchman's own desolate, inconsolable heart.
   Other legends say that it is Cornelius himself who stole
   the artefact and is doomed to know the consequences of
   his action but never correct it. He knows guilt without end,
   torment for ever.
   A touch of the wheel, an order to his sailors, and the Paine
   banks slightly against the infinite silence, driven by light,
   into that barely endurable darkness. The heavy tides are
   running. Time and space become erratic, insane. Dark tides
   running, destroying everything we ever valued. A flume of
   thousands of slain suns washes around his hull. Black suns
   collapse and vanish. He must not risk his ship. He must find
   some other way of reaching the centre. Dark tides are eating
   the multiverse.
   In spite of all threats and dangers, Ironface the Dutchman
   is heading for the Hub.
   Chapter 9
   Dancing with the Galaxies
   THERE IS LITTLE MORE alarming, on an ordinary day-to-day level,
   than living and working aboard an old nuke-burning,
   cadmium-dampened space-bucket in which our kind first
   sought to conquer the stars. They make noises whose source
   is untraceable. You see odd things. They seem to have a
   will, even an imagination, of their own. Known as nukers,
   the tramps are largely non-existent these days, but there
   was a time when the galaxy was full of them, pounding
   and battering new routes between the suns and mapping
   not only the systems they found but describing previously
   inconceivable horrors. On board as well as outside...
   Amy had experienced only the sophisticated technologies
   which allowed the TARDIS to manipulate her way through
   time and her many dimensions which is somewhat naively
   called 'space'. She had known not only wonder but also a
   certain security being, as she was, the guest of a Time Lord.
   Now, as she lay in a narrow bunk, having awakened in
   something resembling a glass coffin, she wondered if she
   shouldn't regret her decision to accompany the Doctor on
   this adventure.
   The ship they had picked up from Peers™ was a C-class
   nuker, crewed by as slovenly a bunch of spacerats as ever
   sailed between the stars, travelling from the water world
   of Palahendra to Desiree, the 'rendezvous' world, where
   merchants came to trade and have their ships repaired. The
   cargo would probably be sold to representatives from the
   mining planets of Outer Lavum Hestes where water was
   quite literally worth its weight in platinum. In spite of this,
   most captains would not waste their fuel or their time on
   the water-trade, chiefly because such ships were always in
   danger of attack by pirates who merely wished to restock
   their own supplies and who could not care less whether the
   old crates made it back to a safe berth. Many of the crew
   quite happily moved between work on water-barges and
   pirate ships, since pay and conditions were about the same.
   But this consideration had not been regarded as a
   drawback to the Gentlemen. Their match in Miggea was
   more important than life itself, and Mr and Mrs Banning-
   Cannon, whose considerable luggage was stowed wherever
   it was relatively safe against mould, rust, buckling plates and
   popping rivets, had known nothing about the existence of
   such ships, until the moment they stepped aboard and asked
   where their suite might be. The laughter greeting this request
   was tribute to the many times the story would be told over
   and over again in the disgusting dives and low 'pessy' joints
   scattered across those parts of the galaxy still permitting the
   passage of such vessels as the Kl-32. The best this ship could
   offer by way of luxuries were a working fire extinguisher and
   a couple of toilets which did not threaten to suck you out into
   space whenever you pressed the Flush button.
   Mrs B-C's first action had been to threaten the captain
   and then, when this did not work, to complain to the Doctor,
   accusing him of being in league with the 'scum' to fleece
   them of their hard-won billions. The Doctor had gravely
   promised to register their complaint as soon as they reached
   'civilisation'. Then he had suggested they freeze themselves
   for the duration, which they had declined to do because they
   feared they would be robbed in their sl 
					     					 			eep.
   Their daughter Jane had been perfectly sanguine about
   this method of travel and had used the confined quarters to
   get to know Hari better. Hari had warmed a little but still
   believed that she was playing fast and loose with his and
   Bingo's emotions, though he no longer saw Lord Sherwood
   as his enemy, merely as a fellow dupe of a heartless siren of
   the spaceways.
   With his friend bonding thus, Bingo at least attempted to
   set matters straight but was feeling so guilty about his part in
   making them lose their flight on the Gargantua that it seemed
   obvious to Hari that he was lying, though perhaps for noble
   reasons.
   'Look here, old bean, I never intended to flirt with Flapper,'
   Bingo had begun after their fourth day on board, 'she merely
   suggested that I give her a ride on one of our punts. Her
   object, if you must know—'
   His boyhood chum had responded frostily. 'Oh, I'm well
   aware of her object, old man. I assure you I have no intention
   of stepping between you. Let nobody, I hope, call me a duck
   in the mango. Or do I mean "mangey"?'
   'Hari! You must believe there is nothing between myself
   and Miss Banning-Cannon. My heart, I assure you, belongs
   to quite another person, quite as beautiful - in fact even more
   beautiful - um, no, that sounds wrong - but anyway, another
   equally stunning girl.
   At which Hari had raised a sad, silencing hand. He
   suggested they drop the subject, go into the larboard
   companion way and try those new shots he had been talking
   about long before the Banning-Cannon party had turned up
   on their home planet.
   In the moaning semi-darkness of the companionway,
   the two friends shot and caught 'safety arrows' almost
   automatically, neither able to continue the kind of
   casual conversation which was normal to them in these
   circumstances. Crew members would pause and watch them
   for a moment or two, sometimes commenting on their game
   before continuing about their duties. The steady 'twang' and
   slap of an arrow shot and an arrow whacked was soothing
   as the horrible old tub ploughed through the void at speeds
   once considered impossible, catching the currents of time
   itself and using them as all such ships did, to cross the great
   distances from one star system to another.
   Wandering past the patched conduits and re-riveted plates
   of the bulky tanker, Amy found it hard to get used to the idea
   that this ship operated on technology that had once been
   innovative and magical but was now as outmoded as the first
   aeroplanes seemed to her. She wondered what a person from
   her own time would have thought of the machinery. Perhaps
   they would have dismissed it as magic, some kind of jiggery-
   pokery, an illusion. In spite of her own direct experience, in
   spite of having already seen many strange and wonderful
   things, she still had the occasional feeling of being in some
   sort of Alice in Wonderland dream. She smiled to herself.
   If there was a Queen of Hearts on board then she could be
   heard at this moment up in the control room.
   'I demand to see the captain! Don't be insolent to me, young
   man. I could have you and your entire operation crushed into
   nothing!' Mrs Banning-Cannon had not stopped complaining
   since they had seen the ship drifting in shallow space and
   waiting for their tug. The captain, a ruggedly handsome
   young centaur called N'hn, at least sixteen hands high at his
   withers, had greeted them with a yellow bag of sweets in
   his big hand, his safety harness slung casually around his
   waist and his working overalls undone to the chest. He had
   been amused to see the passengers trooping aboard his ship
   and made a mock bow to Mrs B-C, offering one of his com
   sweets. 'Weren't we at school together?'
   Since then Amy had watched the centaur enjoying himself
   at Mrs Banning-Cannon's expense. What Amy realised and
   Mrs B-C did not was that Captain N'hn had nothing to lose.
   The centaur knew how to make his ship work and how to
   find a crew for her. He had fought off many pirate attacks.
   Most importantly, nobody else wanted his job. He drew some
   satisfaction from that. It gave him a power the terraform
   heiress could neither imagine nor ever desire.
   Amy sneaked past them and carried on to one of the ship's
   observation ports. Space was dark and silent; the nearest
   spread of stars was a blur of silver in the faraway arm of a
   galactic spiral. She had no idea where they were and didn't
   much care. Some of the other passengers were nervous. One
   or two were positively frightened, but Amy, who in the
   TARDIS had never been able to look through an observation
   port of this kind and see the reality of size and distance, was
   far too fascinated to know even a shred of fear. After all, she
   knew what it was to hang in space with only the Doctor's
   hand keeping her from drifting off into the intergalactic
   void.
   But now, watching, she observed something she had never
   expected to see. A swirl of darkness, like a smoke cloud
   millions of miles across, was obscuring her view of those
   distant suns, as if a great seven-fingered hand had reached
   up, then turned and dissolved into streamers of thick, dark
   gas. Those faraway stars which lay within the mass's coiling
   compass were behaving like nothing she had ever seen.
   Flickering, revolving, merging, separating, they performed
   what looked to her like a kind of vast cosmic dance. The dark
   streamers flowed amongst them, bringing them together,
   drawing them apart, a magnificent formal parade of countless
   suns moving to some unheard melody. Was this a common
   phenomenon, something nobody had bothered to tell her
   about because they were all so familiar with it?
   Amy craned to see more. She had been told to look out
   for the so-called Great Refiguration or the Conjunction of the
   Million Spheres, when far more than that number of stars
   and their satellite planets joined to perform a stately, galaxy-
   wide pavane, behaving like sentient beings as they moved
   in a series of complex diagrams heralding, it was said, the
   rebirth of a universe. Everything in existence vectored to
   that moment when the composition of Creation changed, so
   some mysterious alien had once told her. She had no idea
   what he meant. She enjoyed her own thrilling discovery of
   new colours, the extraordinary distances covered by patterns
   made by the sinuous black smoke.
   She felt the tanker quiver and become still, quiver again,
   grow still again. Was it, too, yearning to join the mighty
   formation as it changed then changed once more as if shaken
   in some titanic kaleidoscope?
   Surely she was not the only witness? She turned and ran
   back down a narrow corridor festooned with pipes and
   wires which had come loose from their moorings. The ship
   continued its subtle, almost sensual shuddering, and if any
   o 
					     					 			f the regular crew were aware of it they gave no sign. Not
   until the corridor opened up into a wider gangway did she
   know that she was not the only observer. The captain, N'hn,
   his huge, healthy equine body as full of delicate tensions as
   his ship, stood beside the Doctor, staring through a long slot,
   watching the streaming galactic smoke and the shimmering,
   pirouetting stars.
   'What is it?' she asked. 'Is it normal?'
   'It depends what you mean by normal,' murmured the big
   centaur.
   The Doctor was rubbing his face, his brows drawn in an
   attempt to remember something. 'I've never seen it this close
   inside the Rim. Why would it be speeding up now? This isn't
   the moment. It's not time to change.'
   How old he looks now, Amy thought, and felt guilty.
   'We've become used to it,' the Doctor went on. 'The
   phenomenon which was most people's only proof of the
   existence of a multiverse? Dark force! The dark tides! They
   told of worlds beyond the arras of "space". That's what
   we're seeing, much closer inside the Rim than anyone's ever
   reported. Usually you need an OPR telescope to watch this.'
   'Doctor! What is it?'
   He turned at the sound of her voice. He still looked vague,
   thoughtful. 'Oh, hello, Amy. Yes. You're watching what's
   sometimes called the Dance of the Planets, but this is a Dark
   Forces manifestation.'
   'Dark Forces? You're not talking about Lucifer and the
   armies of Hell are you?'
   He laughed. 'I hope not. This is something that was
   discovered in your own time - roughly - and was used to
   prove the existence of a largely invisible multiverse. They
   called those streamers "dark flow". Now they're known
   as dark tides. They're moved by gravity, like ocean tides.
   They seemed to come from nowhere and move at millions
   of miles an hour, dragging whole galaxies with them. We
   are all so delicately, so vulnerably connected.' He shivered. A
   momentary chill.
   Amy shook her head. 'I've no idea what you're on about.
   As usual.'
   The Doctor pulled a face. But it sagged into a lazy smile.
   'Never mind. Think of it as a gravitational pull, only from
   outside your galaxy. So strong that it's tugging galaxies
   away while our black holes pull in the other direction. People
   started to call them "the black winds", which is a bit poetic
   but you get the idea.'