She felt then that this ship was taking her into the pit. Closer and closer to awful threat.
No thoughts of exterminating this foe. Not since the Scattering magnified human population had that been possible. A flaw in Honored Matre schemes.
The high-pitched beep and flashing orange light that signaled arrival brought her out of repose. She struggled from her sling straps and, with Tam, Dortujla, and Suipol close behind, followed a guide to the transport lock where a longrange lighter clung to its shiptit. Odrade looked at the lighter visible in bulkhead scanners. Incredibly small!
“It’ll only be nineteen hours,” Duncan had said. “But that’s as close as we dare bring the no-ship. They’re sure to have foldspace sensors close around Junction.”
Bell, for once, had agreed.
There were guide arrows at the lock. Odrade led the way. They went through a small tube in free-fall. She found herself in a surprisingly rich cabin. Suipol, tumbling behind, recognized it and went up a notch in Odrade’s estimation.
“This was a smuggler ship.”
One person awaited them. Male by his smell but an opaque pilot’s hood bristling with connectors concealed his face.
“Everyone strap in.”
Male voice within that instrumentation.
Odrade slipped into a seat behind a landing port and found the lumpy protrusions that unreeled into web harness. She heard the others obeying the pilot’s command.
“All secure? Stay strapped in unless I say otherwise.” His voice came from a floating speaker behind his seat at the drive console.
The umbilicus went “Bap!” Odrade felt gentle motions, but the view in the relay beside her showed the no-ship receding at a remarkable rate. It winked out of existence.
The lighter had surprising speed. Scanners reported planetary stations and transition barriers at eighteen-plus hours but winking dots identifying them were visible only because they had been enhanced. A window in the scanner said the stations would be naked-eye visible in a little more than twelve of those hours.
The sense of motion ceased abruptly and Odrade no longer felt the acceleration her eyes reported.
She watched sensor contacts begin within the hour and gave silent thanks for Idaho’s astuteness.
Junction’s defensive pattern was apparent even without scanner analysis. Overlapping planes! Just as Teg predicted. With knowledge of how barriers were spaced, Teg’s people could weave another globe around the planet.
Were Honored Matres so confident of overwhelming power that they ignored elementary precautions?