“We always believed them to be balance aids,” Parker said. “It would appear low gravity has encouraged their reuse.”
Her sensors swept over the breeder. It was about ten per cent smaller than Confederation breeders, although it appeared fatter.
A smattering of the scales on its sienna-coloured hide had turned pale grey, and there were small lumps on its leg muscles.
Its breathing seemed to be mildly erratic, almost as if it was wheezing. When she checked the soldiers, they had similar blemishes.
Two of them were also running a temperature.
“They haven’t come through the isolation as well as the Mosdva,” she said.
“Small population base,” Ashly said. “They’ll be running into inbreeding problems. Couple that with the kind of medical difficulties
which you get from exposure to freefall, and they’ll probably have a high number of invalid eggs. Considering they don’t have
a research base to examine and counter the problems, they’ve done well to survive this long.”
The last tube opened out into the rotating airlock. It was a layout remarkably similar to the one in Tanjuntic-RI, a long
cylindrical chamber with three large airlock hatches at the far end leading into Lalarin-MG and a pressure seal halfway along.
A low rumbling sound vibrated through the atmosphere as the giant cylinder revolved.
The flightship design was carried over on the other side of the airlock. A waiting freight lift was flanked by archways leading
directly onto spiral ramps.
Everyone crowded into the lift together, and it started to descend. Gravity built slowly, causing trouble for the three Mosdva.
They had to remove their spacesuits entirely to free their hindlimbs, allowing them to stand on them and their midlimbs. It
wasn’t easy; their club-like hind feet were evolving away from dexterity, while their midhands were almost too delicate to
carry half of their body weight. When the lift reached the base of the cylinder, gravity was fifteen per cent Earth standard.
The Tyrathca were perfectly comfortable with it; Ione reprogrammed her suit actuators to take it into account, making sure
the serjeants didn’t go power leaping and compensating for the coriolis factor. Quantook-LOU staggered slowly, moving his
limbs with painful unfamiliarity. His two bodyguards were a little better off; they had prosthetic midlimbs to take the weight.
Servo mechanisms whined loudly with their every movement. Ione wondered what kind of strain weight was putting on their organs
and heart.
The lift doors opened, revealing the interior of the cylinder. Ione had to bring more filters on line to compensate for the
glare.
Lalarin-MG was a single open space enclosed by a cyclorama of aluminium alloy. The floors were fully occupied by rank after
rank of buildings, the standard tapering towers of all Tyrathca settlements. Here, though, they were built out of some jet-black
composite; thick pipes and knobbly segments of equipment protruded from the walls, as if they were machines rather than residences.
Countering that impression were lush vines with broad, droopy emerald and lavender leaves that scaled the walls, sprouting
rings of large hemispherical turquoise and gold flowers. Thin strata of mist drifted up from the grid of streets, merging
together into an unwavering pearl-grey haze as they curved their way towards the axis. Every rooftop supported a battery of
brilliant lights which shone directly upwards, their broad beams intersecting within the haze and diffusing slightly before
they illuminated the section of floor directly overhead.
The cylinder’s sheer endwalls were simple circles of moss, broken into an elaborate tessellation pattern by structural reinforcement
ribs and interconnecting spars. A slender axial gantry ran the length of the cylinder. With one interruption.
“Oh my God,” Ione said. “Can everybody see that?”
“We see it,” Syrinx said.
In the absolute centre of the cylinder, suspended from its tips by the axial gantry, was an effigy of the Sleeping God. From
tip to tip it measured two hundred metres, giving it a diameter of a hundred and fifty at the flared central disk. Originally
the surface had been given a polished metallic sheen, now it was streaked by thick runnels of algae, with tufts of sickly
brown fungi sprouting from pocks and cracks. Both spires were mottled by encrustations of lichen.
The Mosdva paid it no attention as they walked painfully along the narrow streets between the towers. Humidity was high. Every
surface was beaded with condensation, horizontal ledges and pipes dripped constantly. The eternal background pattering sounded
like a gentle rainfall.
Tyrathca breeders (always in pairs, Ione noticed) crowded every intersection along the street, chittering among themselves
as the procession made their way into the cylinder. There were few vassal castes in evidence, and most of those were soldiers.
Farmers tended the curtains of vines with slow arthritic movements, training new shoots up the trellis and picking the ripe
clusters of dark purple fruit.
As they walked slowly through the buildings, her impressions of Lalarin-MG clarified. The interior of the cylinder had the
same pattern of lethargic decay that was present across all of Tojolt-HI. Some buildings were in good repair; one or two were
actually new, their siege of vines barely reaching up to the first floor windows. But for every new one, four were disused.
Even the equipment on the walls of the occupied towers was allowed to fail; magnetic and infrared sensors revealed the casings
were inert, sharing the ambient temperature.
“They’re on the border between stability and stagnation,” she said. “And edging over the wrong way.”
“It’s the biological aspect,” Ashly said. “It has to be. It’s the one negative factor at work here. They need to interbreed,
inject some vitality back into the family bloodlines. They’ll die out for sure otherwise.”
They finally came out on an annular plaza directly underneath the Sleeping God effigy. It was paved with slabs of aluminium
coated with a rough layer of quartz for traction. Overhead, long ribbons of algae dangled from the effigy’s rim, as if it
had been given a raggedy skirt. Water showered down from the fringes, falling in a wide curve to sprinkle the whole plaza.
Tyrathca breeders were lined up along the edge of the aluminium slabs, sheltered from the drizzle. They were sitting on their
hindquarters, antennae rising high from the shaggy manes running down their spines.
The soldier caste guard all halted at a single piping command from the breeder. Quantook-LOU immediately sank down so his
lower belly was resting on the slabs. His breathing was coming very fast.
A breeder rose from the row of Tyrathca and came over to stand in front of the serjeants. An old one, Ione guessed. Its hide
was covered in white and grey patches, rheumy fluid leaked from its eyes, and it seemed to have some trouble focusing.
“I am Baulona-PWM, my family regulates electronics throughout Lalarin-MG. The Mosdva I know of. You I do not.”
“We are humans.”
“The Mosdva distributor of resources claims you have travelled from the other side of the nebula to visit Mastrit-PJ.”
“We have.”
“Did the Sleeping God send you?”
“It did not.”
Baulona-PWM tilted its head back against the soft warm rain, and let out a soft keening. The other Tyrathca around the plaza
followed suit. A mournful chorus of dismay.
“Do humans know of the Sleeping God?”
“We do.”
“Have you seen it?”
“No.”
“We have called to the Sleeping God for its aid since before the separation agreement. We called when the Mosdva began the
slaughter of our clans. We called when we were herded into our enclaves. We have called to it continuously for every moment
since. There is always one of us here to call. The clan riding in Swantic-LI said it sees the universe. They said it is our
ally. Why then does it not answer?”
“The Sleeping God is a long way from Mastrit-PJ. It might take a considerable time for it to arrive to help.”
“You bring us nothing new.”
Quantook-LOU straightened his midlimbs, rising off his belly to look from the serjeants to Baulona-PWM. “What is this Sleeping
God?”
The old breeder hooted loudly. “One day you will know. The Sleeping God is our ally, not yours.”
“I am here to make new allies. Humans have changed our agreements. They have come here in a ship that travels faster than
light.”
Baulona-PWM’s head pushed forward to within ten centimetres of the first serjeant. “The Sleeping God knows how to travel faster
than light. How can you do this without its help?”
Ione used the general communication band to say: “I think we should avoid anything that sounds like blasphemy at this point.
Suggestions?”
“Tell them it was a gift from our God,” Syrinx said. “They can hardly argue with that.”
“I don’t want to put any pressure on,” Joshua said, “but we haven’t got much time until that sunscoop ship rendezvous. And
those trains are still closing on you. If it looks like Quantook-LOU can’t swing a deal, then we’ll just have to deal with
the Tyrathca directly.”
“Understood,” Ione said. “The faster-than-light drive was given to us by our God,” she told the old Tyrathca breeder.
“You have a God?”
“Yes.”
“Where is it?”
“We don’t know. It visited our world a long time ago, and hasn’t yet returned.”
“The humans will give me the faster-than-light drive,” Quantook-LOU said. “It will provide the Mosdva dominions with fresh
resources. We will build new diskcities. We will be able to leave Mastrit-PJ as the Tyrathca did.”
“Give us the drive,” Baulona-PWM said.
“The drive is mine,” Quantook-LOU said. “If you want it, you will mediate with me. That is why I have come to you.”
“What do you want from Lalarin-MG?”
“All data and records on the Tyrathca flightships.”
Baulona-PWM hooted sharply. The soldiers shuffled round, agitated.
“You would know where our new worlds are,” Baulona-PWM said. “You would destroy all Tyrathca. We know the Mosdva. We never
forget.”
“Neither do we,” Quantook-LOU hooted back. “That is why we must mediate now. If not, then Mosdva and Tyrathca will wage war
again. You know this. Humans say they will help neither of us unless we have a new arrangement that will prevent war.”
“Smart argument,” Ione said to the others. “I think I can see where he’s taking it.”
“What is the new arrangement?” Baulona-PWM asked.
“The humans do not want war in this part of the galaxy. If we are to have the faster-than-light drive, then Mosdva must not
use it to fly to stars with Tyrathca worlds. We must know where they are to avoid this.”
“That’s the condition we make for giving you the drive,” Ione said. “We know of your history, and the conflict between you.
We will not permit that conflict to begin again and engulf other species. There is room in this galaxy for the Mosdva and
Tyrathca to exist peacefully. It will be like the separation agreement you have here, but on a much larger scale.”
“We have our weapons to make the Mosdva obey the separation agreement here,” responded Baulona-PWM. “What will make them obey
after you give them the faster-than-light drive, and they know where our new planets are? With this drive they will leave
Tojolt-HI. Our weapons will mean nothing. They will destroy all Tyrathca at Mastrit-PJ. They will destroy all Tyrathca new
worlds.”
“You destroy,” Quantook-LOU said. “We build.”
“Mosdva do not keep agreements. You send your soldiers against Lalarin-MG. They are here now. We will use our weapons against
all of Tojolt-HI.”
“Can you confirm this?” Ione asked the
Lady Mac
’s crew.
“We’re picking up some Mosdva movement on the darkside,” Joshua said. “Looks like they’re infiltrating the tubes around the
edge of the knot.”
“How many?”
“Several hundred. It’s a large infrared signature.”
“Are these the ones from the trains?”
“No. The first train won’t be there for another fifteen to twenty minutes.”
“They are not Anthi-CL soldiers,” Quantook-LOU said. “They are from the dominions who would use the human’s drive for themselves.
I will mediate with Tyrathca, I will make agreements with Tyrathca. They will not. Give me the information. Once I have the
drive, they will have to retreat from Lalarin-MG.”
“Make them retreat now,” Baulona-PWM said. “When they are gone, I will mediate with you.”
“I cannot mediate with the other dominions until I have the information.”
“I will not give you the information until you mediate.”
On the
Lady Mac
’s bridge Joshua banged a fist into his couch cushioning. “Jesus! What is wrong with these people.”
“Twenty thousand years of hatred and strife has become hereditary in both of them,” Samuel said. “They can’t trust each other,
not any more.”
“Then we’re going to have to break the deadlock.”
“We’re about out of time on that front,” Liol said. “The sunscoop has just reduced its deceleration thrust.”
“Oh shit,” Joshua mumbled. He knew what that meant. The flight computer datavised the huge ship’s new trajectory into his
neural nanonics. With a reduced thrust the sunscoop wouldn’t have nullified its velocity in time to stop beside the
Lady Mac
, twenty kilometres above Tojolt-HI’s sunside. According to the new vector, it would end up one kilometre above the darkside
of the knot which contained Lalarin-MG. And as it was approaching the knot drive first, its fusion plume would slice clean
through the Tyrathca enclave, vaporizing the entire structure. It was also due to pass uncomfortably close to
Lady Mac
.
“I think we’re going to have to take a more active interest,” Joshua told the bridge crew. He aligned
Lady Mac
’s main dish on the sunscoop. “Attention sunscoop ship. Your present course will result in the destruction of Lalarin-MG.
Members of my crew are currently inside this dominion. Increase your deceleration thrust immediately.”
“Josh, it’s over four kilometres across,” Liol said. “That’s not a ship, it’s a mountain. Even if you nuke it, the debris
will still rip this section of Tojolt-HI to pieces. In fact you’ll probably do more damage that way.”