Blegg brought his shuttle in over the cordon, and down, observing autoguns tracking him. Landing, he saw an armoured gravcar and transport speeding over his way, and when he finally stepped from his vessel, troops piled out of the gravcar. It seemed almost as if the attack ship AI had not informed them of his arrival. He learned differently when the ECS commander approached him.
‘Problem?’ Blegg enquired of the woman who stood before him. Her troops headed over to the transport, where they quickly began unloading items strapped to AG pallets.
She nodded slowly. ‘As you came in we got the news: a Prador dreadnought just entered the system.’
Blegg immediately communicated mind-to-mind with the AI of the attack ship far above.
Blegg turned and glanced down the length of his shuttle, sending a command to the onboard computer to open the hold. The ramp door
She turned and led the way to where her troops were now towing the floating pallets over the rough ground. Gesturing to one, on which a bulky object lay shrouded in plastic, she said, ‘We got the pilot—almost intact.’
Blegg eyed the object, then the men who were moving it. ‘How many people do you have here?’
‘Fifty-eight.’
‘What about the rest?’ Blegg gestured to the other pallets.
‘The remains of a particle beam weapon, a thermal generator, a missile launcher and what looks like a Prador biological weapon.’
‘What’s your route out of here?’ Blegg asked.
She pointed back towards the city. ‘Same as everyone else.’
‘Very well. Dump the Prador—we’ve more than enough of their corpses on ice. Dump the launcher and the thermal generator—we already know how they work. You have three xenotechs here with you?’
‘Yes.’
‘I want them with me, along with all their equipment. Load everything else here and order the rest of your people aboard.’
The commander looked suddenly very relieved.
The commander stayed, along with the three xenotechs, one of them towing a floating tool chest while the other two carried tool packs on their backs. Just as the shuttle lifted, Blegg led the way into the dank interior of the scout ship. A single entry tunnel, wide and cavelike enough to permit access for a body considerably larger than any human, led to an oblate sanctum where the Prador first-child had operated the ship’s alien consoles. Ship lice the size of a man’s shoe crawled over ragged stony walls that were coated with pale green blooms of weed. The pit-console projected from the floor like a huge coral, and an array of hexagonal screens formed most of the forward wall.
Standing between console and screens, Blegg pointed to the floor. ‘See this?’ He then traced an outline with the toe of his boot. ‘The memstorage should be right under here. It won’t be booby-trapped, since the Prador are reliant on their encryption—they still haven’t figured out just how easily AIs can break it.’
As one of the techs began slicing through the floor metal with a diamond saw, the commander asked, ‘How do you know this?’
‘I’ve been breaking open these things since the very beginning.’
‘Who are you anyway? No one told me your name.’
‘Horace Blegg.’
Everyone glanced round.
‘You know, there are quite a few people who think you’re a myth.’
‘Keep working,’ Blegg ordered the techs. ‘We don’t have much time.’
They finally levered up a section of the floor to expose a stack of black octohedrons looking like some kind of alien caviar, nesting amid optics and power cables.
‘Just cut all round. You won’t damage anything.’ Blegg turned to the man with the floating tool chest. ‘Dump your tools. We’ll use that’—he pointed to the chest—‘to transport them.’