“I know. It never seems to work out that way. So I guess we’ll all be going to Miranda.”
Glenna motioned to Nenda and patted the bench at her side. Her negligee had opened at the bottom, to reveal an inordinate length of smooth white leg.
“Louis, you don’t mean
“You mean you’d rather stay on Xerarchos?”
She patted his arm. “Silly man. Of course I won’t stay
“I’ve seen worse.”
“Not with me you haven’t. Now, you say you must go to Miranda. And Miranda is just one Bose transition away from Sentinel Gate. You can drop me off on the way.”
“But what will you do on Sentinel Gate?”
“I’ll take my old job. I was a Senior Information Specialist.”
“You told me you hated it.”
“Oh, it wasn’t all that bad, just a bit boring. It will only be until you come back, you know. And there was the occasional diversion.”
Nenda knew all this. Glenna had once explained it to him, and anyway, he could be thought of as a beneficiary of her policy.
He nodded. He didn’t resent the proposal that she should not go with him to Miranda. A woman with real nerve was something to be admired.
He thought of asking, “We’ll wait for each other, won’t we?” then changed his mind. There were some things so stupid, you ought not even to think them. Instead he said, “That’s it, then. Sentinel Gate for you, and the two of us will have a good time on the way. An’ after that, At and me will see what Miranda has to offer.”
“Maybe fame and fortune, Louis. When I was growing up, my house-uncle always told me that every trouble could be thought of as an opportunity.”
An opportunity, in Nenda’s experience, to find even more trouble. But negative thinking never got you far.
He slipped his arm through Glenna’s and they stood up together. Miranda was well-known as one of the richest worlds in the spiral arm. Maybe he and Atvar H’sial would find a chance to skim a little off the top.
CHAPTER THREE
As always, travel through the Bose Network induced a faint sense of hallucination. There was something unnatural about an instantaneous jump of a hundred or a thousand lightyears, and even the best human brain apparently needed a few seconds to orient itself to its body’s new circumstances.
Darya Lang stood with her eyes closed. Five seconds ago she had stood at the Bose transition point closest to Sentinel Gate, near the outer limit of Fourth Alliance territory. When she opened her eyes, the sight that met them would be of Miranda and Miranda Port , six hundred and twenty lightyears away.
A blink. And there it was, although the sight failed to do justice to the reality. The Shroud hanging by the disk of the planet was too far away for Darya to make out details, but the countless flyspecks within the gauzy web must be spacecraft: starships of all sizes and types, more than a million of them netted and warehoused in the Shroud: the biggest collection in the spiral arm, everything from Primavera body form-fits to the monstrous Tantalus orbital forts.
She was to be allowed little time for sightseeing. Already a hand clutched at her arm.
“Professor Darya Lang?”
She turned. “That’s me.”
“Finally, you are here. I am an assistant to Councilor Graves.” The man was polite and nondescript, but he did not release his hold on Darya’s arm. “If you would come with me. Today’s meeting is already in progress and may be close to its conclusion.”
A meeting
The puzzles had started in Darya’s study at the Artifact Research Institute on Sentinel Gate. Twilight was approaching, and the first nightsingers could be heard through the open window when Professor Merada ambled in.
His visit was not expected, but it was also not surprising. Merada was a stickler for accuracy and formality in every element of analysis and reporting, but he felt that research work done under his auspices thrived best in an informal atmosphere. Putting it another way, he felt free to butt in wherever and whenever he liked.
Darya lifted her head from her notes. She had been collating reports of the final days of the Builder artifact known as Maelstrom, but now she was down to the hearsay and rumors, and this was a logical stopping-point to ease off for the day.