โRocks! Theyโre throwingย rocksย at us!โ Karst declared incredulously. โTheyโre space-age stone-age!โ
One of the console displays flickered and went out and others began to dot with baleful amber displays.
โKarst, this isnโt a warship,โ Lainโs brittle voice snapped. โTheย Gilgameshย wasnโt designed for any sort of stresses except acceleration and deceleration, certainly not impactโโ
โWe have a hull breach in cargo,โ Alpash reported, sounding as though someone had trampled over his holy places. โInternal doors are โฆโ For a moment, apparently, it wasnโt clear whether they were or werenโt, but then he got out, โSealed off, the sectionโs sealed off. We have โฆ cargo lossโโ
โCargo is already in vacuum, or close to. Exposure shouldnโt cause any harm,โ Vitas broke in.
โWe have damage to forty-nine chambers,โ Alpash told her. โFrom the impact, and from electrical surges resulting from the damage. Forty-nine.โ
For a moment nobody felt up to following that. Half a hundred deaths from a single hit. Trivial, compared to the overall cargo manifest. Horrifying, though, to go behind that word โcargoโ and think about the implications.
โWeโre in orbit, one hundred and eighty kilometres out from the web,โ Karst said. โWe need to fight back. Theyโll be throwing more stones at us.โ
โWill they?โ Holstenโs meagre contribution. โMaybe theyโre reloading.โ
โWhat other damage?โ Vitas asked.
โI โฆ donโt know,โ Alpash admitted. โHull sensors are โฆ unreliable, and some have been lost. I donโt believe any essential systems have been damaged, but there may be weakening of the hull in other areas โฆ our damage-control systems have been refined so as to concentrate on emergencies and critical areas.โ Meaning that they simply hadnโt been able to properly maintain the entire network.
โWe can reposition the lasers,โ Karst stated, as though it was a natural sequitur to what had last been said. Perhaps in Karstโs head it was.
โWe can probably reposition the ship rather more easily,โ Lain told him. โJust turn him round so that the asteroid arrays are aiming towards the web. In orbit, our orientation doesnโt matter.โ
Karst blinked at that, obviously still somewhat married to the idea that the front end should go first, but then he nodded. โWell, letโs start on that, then. How long?โ
โDepends how responsive the systems are. We may need to do some spot repairs.โ
โWe may not haveโโ
โFuck off, Karst. I am literally in the same boat as you. I will do it as fast as it can be done.โ
โWell, right.โ Karst grimaced, apparently remembering that his status as acting commander had been sidelined once they woke up Lain.
The ancient engineer lowered herself in front of one of the working consoles, a handful of her Tribe gathered around her to do her bidding. She looked terribly tired, Holsten thought, and yet there was still an energy to her he recognized. Time had fought with Lain for possession of this bent, fragile body, and so far time had lost.
โWe are simply not going to be able to burn our way to control of the planet,โ Vitas stated.
โSure we are,โ Karst said stubbornly. โSeriously, we can
probably cut across that entire web, just send it fucking off into space like an old โฆ sock or something.โ And then, โShut up, Holsten,โ when the classicist seemed about to take issue with his simile.
โKarst, please check the available power to the asteroid array,โ Vitas said patiently.
Karst scowled. โSo we recharge them.โ
โUsing all the energy that is currently ensuring that systems like life-support or reactor-containment keep working,โ Vitas agreed. โAnd, even if you get it right, what then? What about the planet, Karst?โ
โThe planet?โ He blinked at her.
โYou were planning to just trip down there in a shuttle and plant a flag? Ifย thatโsย what near-orbit looks like, what do you think youโd find on the surface? Youโre going to laser all of that, too, are you? Or will you take a disruptor, or a gun? How many bullets do you have, precisely?โ
โIโve already got the security team and some auxiliaries woken up and armed,โ Karst said stubbornly. โWeโll go down and make a beachhead, establish a base, start pushing out. Weโll burn the fuckers. What else can we do? Nobody said it was going to be easy. Nobody said it would happen overnight.โ
โWell, it might come to that,โ Vitas conceded. โAnd if it does, I shall stay up here and coordinate the assault, and good luck to you. However, I hope there will be a more efficient way to dispose of our pest problem. Lain, Iโll need at least one of the workshops up and running at my direction, and access to all the old filesโanything weโve still got regarding Earth.โ
โWhatโs the plan?โ Lain asked without looking back at her.
โBrew up a present for the s-s-โฆ for them, below.โ This time Vitasโs stutter was clear enough that everyone noticed it. โI donโt think it should be impossible to put together some sort of toxin that will target arthropods, something to eat away at their exoskeletons or their respiratory system, but that wonโt
have any ill effect on us. After all, assuming theyโre derived from actual Earth spiders, theyโre essentially a completely different form of life to us. Theyโre not like us at all, in any way.โ
Holsten, listening, heard too much emphasis on those words. He thought of broken messages in Imperial C. Had it been Kern herself, or something just parroting Kernโs words?
In the end, he supposed, it didnโt matter. Genocide was genocide. He thought of the Old Empire, which had been so civilized that it had in the end poisoned its own homeworld.ย And here we are, about to start ripping pieces of the ecosystem out of this new one.
Nobody was paying attention to him, especially as he wasnโt voicing any of these thoughts that entered his head, so he found a console that looked halfway operational and got into the comms system.
As he had expected, there was a great deal of broad-frequency radio activity issuing from the planet. The destruction of the Sentry Habitat meant that nothing was coming to them now as clearlyโpossibly it had been merely a powerful transmitter for the planet, at the end. But the green world itself was alive with urgent, incomprehensible messages.
He wanted to think of something wonderful, then: some perfect message that would somehow bring comprehension in its wake, open a dialogue, give everyone options. The cruel arithmetic of Vitasโs prisoners locked him down, though.ย We couldnโt trust them. They couldnโt trust us. Mutual attempts at destruction are the only logical result.ย He thought of human dreamsโboth Old Empire and newโof contacting some extra-terrestrial intelligence such as nobody had ever truly encountered.ย Why? Why would we ever want to? Weโd never be able to communicate, and even if we could, weโd still be those same two prisoners forced to trustโand riskโor to damn the other in trying to save slightly more of our own hides.
Then there came a new transmission, from the planet direct to the ship, fainter than before, but then it was not using the satellite as a relay any more. One word in Imperial C, but absolutely clear in its meaning.
Missed.
Holsten stared, opened his mouth two or three times, about to draw someoneโs attention, then sent a simple message back on the same frequency.
Doctor Avrana Kern?
I told you to stay away, came the immediate, baleful response.
Holsten worked swiftly, aware that he was negotiating now not for theย Gilgameshย but as Earthโs last classicist in the face of raw history.ย We have no option. We need to get off the ship. We need a world.
I sent you to a world, ungrateful apes.ย The transmission came from the planet, pulsing strongly out of the general riot of signals.
Uninhabitable, he sent.ย Doctor Kern, you are human. We are human. We are all the humans there are left. Please let us land. We have no other choice. We cannot turn back.
Humanity is overrated, came Kernโs dark reply.ย And, besides, do you think that I am making the decisions? Iโm only an advisor, and they didnโt likeย myย preferred solution to the problem that is you. They have their own ways of dealing with trouble. Go away.
Doctor Kern, we are not bluffing, we really have no option. But it was just like before: he was not getting through.ย Can I talk to Eliza please?
If there was anything left that was Eliza and not me youโve just destroyed it, Kern responded.ย Goodbye, monkeys.
Holsten sent further transmissions, several times over, but Kern was apparently done with talking. He could hear the womanโs contemptuous voice as he read through the
impeccable Imperial C, but he was far more shaken with the ancient entityโs suggestion that the creatures on the planet would not be held back even by her.ย Where has her experiment taken her?
He glanced about him. Vitas had gone now, heading off for her workshop and her chemicals, ready to sterilize as much of the planet as was necessary so that her species could find a home there. Holsten wasnโt sure how much would be left of what made the place attractive for habitation, after she was finished.ย But what other choice have we? Die in space and leave the place to the bugs and to Kern?
โWeโre still losing hull sensors,โ Alpash noticed. โThe impacts may have caused more damage than we thought.โ He sounded genuinely worried, and that was a disease that others caught off him almost immediately.
โHow can we still be losing them?โ Lain demanded, still concentrating on her own work.
โI donโt know.โ
โIโm sending out a drone, then. Letโs take a look,โ Karst stated. โHere.โ After some fumbling, he got the droneโs-eye-view up on one of the screens as it manoeuvred somewhat shakily out of its bay and coasted off down the great curving landscape of the shipโs hull. โFuck me, this is patched to buggery,โ he commented.
โMostly from what we installed after the terraform station,โ Lain confirmed. โLots of opening her up and closing her back down to get new stuff in, or to effect repairs โฆโ Her voice trailed off. โWhat was that?โ
โWhat now? I didnโt seeโโ Karst started. โSomething moved,โ Alpash confirmed. โDonโt be stupid โฆโ
Holsten stared, seeing the lumpy, antennae-spiked landscape pass. Then, at the corner of the screen, there was a flurry of furtive, scuttling movement.
โTheyโre here,โ he tried to say, but his throat was dry, his voice just a whisper.
โThereโs nothing out there,โ Karst was saying. But Holsten was thinking,ย Was that some kind of thread drifting from that antenna? Why are the hull sensors going down, one by one? What is that I see moving โฆ?
โOh, fuck.โ Karst suddenly sounded older than Lain. โFuck fuck fuck.โ
In the droneโs sight, a half-dozen grey, scrabbling forms passed swiftly over the hull, running with slightly exaggerated sureness out in the freezing, airless void, even leaping forwards, catching themselves with lines, leaving a tracery of discarded threads latticing theย Gilgameshโs exterior.
โWhat are they doing?โ Alpash asked hollowly. Lainโs voice, at least, was steady. โTrying to get in.โ





