Brahms heard shouts; clubs whistled overhead as they flew past them, only to bounce off the far wall. To her credit, Winkowski followed along, adapting without the slightest idea of what Brahms was trying to do. The two of them slammed against the inner wall of the spoke-shaft elevator. Brahms’s wrist stung from the impact, probably sprained. He hit the elevator door control and watched the people boiling toward him, shouting and cursing. The last thing he heard was Allen Terachyk ordering the others to stop.
“Where’s he going to hide, anyway?” Terachyk yelled.
They would figure it out sooner or later.
Chapter 67
ORBITECH 1—Day 72
When the rescue crew hauled Ramis into the
He was numb with shock at what he had seen.
The rescue team had hauled the remnants of the
Ramis had arrived too late.
As he had approached the sail-creature mosaic, he had seen that it was severed in half, with one huge section cut off from its controls and drifting away on a new orbit. He had seen
They had planned a beautiful maneuver, jettisoning the dead sail-creatures and slipping gracefully into position at the center of the Lagrange well. But now the mosaic was ruined.
The rescue crew from
The rescue team assisted them into the shuttle bay. Dobo chattered over the suit radio, directing the salvage crew to hurry with the dormant sail-creature nymphs. Ramis moved without enthusiasm, feeling as if the world had fallen away from him.
As they floated across the threshold into the docking bay, he saw the hulk of a weird-looking vessel moored to one bulkhead. The yo-yo had arrived intact from
All the colonies had found ways to tie each other together, even without the safety net of Earth. Seeing the
Sandovaal would have complained about how clunky it looked.
After the shuttle bay had filled with air, medics appeared, checking him and Dobo. Someone twisted Ramis’s helmet off. He felt detached, and let them do what they wanted. Several people came forward in greeting, but they moved in a haphazard group, without the formal control Ramis had expected. He recognized Allen Terachyk and a man who looked like Duncan McLaris from the ConComm broadcasts, but he did not see Director Brahms among them.
Before the men could say anything, the PA clicked and a voice came over. “We’ve located the director. I think someone official should come and deal with this. Mr. Terachyk?”
In the lab room, the black technician looked baffled. He shrugged, looking up at Terachyk and McLaris. “Seems like he did everything right.”
Nancy Winkowski stood huddled in a self-protective stance. Her wide eyes harbored an amazed expression, tinged with a bit of defiance. “He made me help him. I did the best I could.”
They stared down at Brahms in the sleepfreeze chamber.
The director lay motionless, with a serene and empty expression. Through the curved glass of the cubicle, he seemed to be deep in the sleep of exhaustion.
Terachyk looked upset. “That bastard!”
McLaris allowed himself a smile, which he covered before anyone else could see.
Terachyk glared at the motionless face behind the glass and slapped his hand on the surface. “He thinks we’ll forget about it if he hides his head under the covers!”
“Stop that, Allen!” McLaris spoke sharply. He picked up the d-cube left lying on the surface of the chamber. “Let’s listen to what he had to say.”
Nancy Winkowski turned away, as if she didn’t want to hear Brahms’s words again. McLaris stared at the d-cube, sighed, then walked to the reader in the lab room. He pushed the cube in and stood back, pursing his lips. They all turned toward the small holomonitor.
Brahms appeared, looking haggard, but with an odd inner peace behind his expression. Off to the edge of the image, McLaris could make out a blurry figure that must have been Winkowski.