Читаем Between the Strokes of Night полностью

The Planetfest games had provided periods of terror, exhaustion, suspense and near-despair. But there had been nothing to match the sheer frustration of the next twelve hours. By the end of it, Peron had reached an unvoiced decision: if he was to be branded as a troublemaker, he was going to earn his label. He had started out simply wishing to know more about the ship and his environment. That had proved to be far more difficult than he expected. The room he had been assigned opened to a narrow corridor, which soon branched in both directions to larger rooms and other passageways. He had tried each one in turn, making mental notes of any changes of direction.

A pattern quickly emerged. If he went off along the left corridor, he was free to wander as he pleased. He had found a dining area and a library whose terminals ignored his requests for information, but readily provided food or drink. It appeared instantly and mysteriously in front of him the moment that his order was placed through the terminal, and was removed just as promptly when he requested that. He had also met some of the other ship’s complement, all much more friendly than Captain Rinker. There were only three of them. It seemed to Peron a preposterously low number to control such a large structure. But as Olivia Ferranti pointed out to him when his wandering took him past her living quarters, it was more people than were needed. Everything was under automatic control; Captain Rinker alone could handle everything. In fact, the rest of them were making their first trip, and had come from Headquarters to the Cass system for their own reasons (which she refused to discuss). She had even offered something like an apology for Rinker’s behavior.

“He’s unusually valuable. There are not many people who like making these long trips, often with no companions. It takes a special temperament. Captain Rinker likes things neat. He can’t stand the idea that you’ve disturbed the pattern of his life.”

“But Wilmer did that, not me.”

“Maybe. But Wilmer isn’t here, and you are. So you’re getting it.” “And he’s allowed to keep my friends unconscious?”

“He’s the captain. He is in control until we reach Headquarters. Then he’ll have to explain his actions, but he’ll have no trouble doing that — he’s following regulations. And honestly, he’s not harming your friends at all. Now, I have to go. We can talk a little more if you like at the next meal period. Command: Take me to the forward exercise facility.”

And she was gone.

Peron found that he could get as far as the door of the suspense room, but it refused to open for him. And he could issue as many commands as he chose, in any tone of voice, for anything he liked, but they were all ignored.

When he left his room and went off along the right-hand corridor, affairs were even less satisfactory. The left corridor led him to the upper part of the ship, in terms of the effective gravity. The right corridor should then have taken him to the lower part, and it certainly started out that way. But no matter which branch he followed, when he had progressed a certain distance there would be a dizzying flicker — and he would be back in his room, sitting at the desk. Some whole section of the ship, of indeterminate size, was inaccessible to him. After a dozen fruitless attempts, Peron lay on the bed in his room, thinking hard. It was twelve hours since his meeting with Rinker, but he didn’t feel at all tired. Olivia Ferranti had told him to expect little need for sleep. “One fringe benefit of S-space,” she had said. “You’ll find you sleep maybe one hour in twenty.”

He continued to feel physically peculiar, but she had been right on that, too. After a while he simply adjusted to it. He still had the impression that he was moving his body in a world where the laws of mechanics had been slightly modified, but it was a feeling that faded.

“Do you want to join us for dinner?” The voice came suddenly from the terminal next to his bed. It was Garao, another of the ship’s company that he had encountered in his travels around the forward section.

“I don’t think so.” Then he sat up quickly. “No, wait a minute. Yes, I do. I’ll come over.” He didn’t feel hungry — except for more information. And the only way to get that seemed to be from other people. Direct exploration of the ship had been totally unrewarding.

“No need for that,” said Garao. “Hold tight.”

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