The
“As good as it gets,” he said. “If the exit sequence is wrong, a few millimeters a second won’t make any difference at all. We’ll be in limbo. Whenever you are ready.”
Julian Graves was at an observation window. He was staring not at the nearby pearly radiance of the Bose node, but far off to where Iceworld, invisible to all sensors, orbited its dark primary.
“I wish we could have had word from Professor Lang before we left,” he said. “We have received nothing—not even their signal beacon.”
“Whenever you are ready.”
“I heard you.” Graves sighed. “Go ahead. After three days of silence, another minute is unlikely to make a difference. And the
Torran Veck guided the
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Until he ran into Sinara Bellstock on his way into the
Louis listened, at first with interest and then with horror, as Sinara explained.
“Martial arts, of course. We have experience in every known form of weapon. I received the maximum possible class grade for the use of projectile devices. Our work was done in every environment you can imagine—free-fall, high gravity, low gravity, dense atmosphere, poisonous atmosphere, hard vacuum, and intense radiation fields. I trained on frozen ice caps of water and solid nitrogen, and deep in oceans of water and liquid methane.”
“Hold on a minute. Are you saying you were taken to planets with all of these?”
“Not exactly. We operated in simulated setups. I mean, our budget was generous, but there were limits. It was all right, though, the training facility on Persephone can mimic any place you care to mention.”
There were places Nenda didn’t care to mention or ever think about again. He asked, “What about aliens? Were you trained to deal with aliens?”
“Naturally. We expected that we would have to work with any clade, in any part of the spiral arm. I mean our own spiral arm, of course—no one ever thought we would be sent to the Sag Arm. But we are ready for anything. Did I mention that I had long sessions in unarmed combat?” Sinara gave Louis an enigmatic smile. “Those were with humans as well as aliens. If you would like to test me out, maybe you and I could try a tussle—sometime when we have more privacy.”
Was that what it sounded like? Nenda plowed on. “So, for instance, you could tackle somebody like At there?”
He gestured to Atvar H’sial. The Cecropian was sitting at the other side of the
“Well, tackle is probably the right word.” Sinara eyed the hulking alien. “She’s huge, isn’t she? I never met one before, but I know from the simulations that a Cecropian is very strong. I’d do well to hold my own with her.”
“Right. Hold your own. And how about that lot?” Nenda’s jerk of the thumb included J’merlia, Kallik, and Archimedes, huddled together in a strange heap at the end of the cabin that led to the ship’s main galley.
“As I understand it, a Lo’tfian won’t fight, no matter what you do to him. We didn’t have training experience with a simulated Zardalu, because we were told that they had been extinct for thousands of years. I certainly never expected to meet one.” Sinara frowned, as though a suspicion that her training might have been less than complete had crossed her mind. “I was supposed to fight a Hymenopt, though. It seemed unfair, they’re so little and cuddly. I heard that the poor things used to be hunted for their fur. Is that true?”
“The Hymantel, you mean? It’s tough and water-resistant, and it insulates against heat and cold. Yes, people wanted to make clothes out of them, so they used to hunt Hymenopts. At least, they tried to. I never saw anybody wearing a Hymantel. But did you fight one?”
“Yes. I had to, it was part of the course.”
“And how did it go?”
“Oh, I beat it. Rather easily, as a matter of fact. They are not nearly as formidable as some people will tell you.”
Lightning reactions, acute vision, impenetrable hide, poison sting.
“A