The Sentinel (The Sentinel Trilogy Book 1) (13 page)

“We need to send someone out,” Tolvern decided. “Do we have anyone out working the hull?”

“No, sir,” Capp told her. “But Carvalho and some of his mates are suited up, ready to fight the buzzards if they knocked a hole in the ship and tried to come in.”

“Good, we’ll send him out.”

“Only, he don’t fancy them spacewalks. Says he feels like he’s falling.”

Capp would know. She and Carvalho were long-time lovers who had hooked up during
Blackbeard
’s foray into piracy during the civil war. Some of the crew they’d hired on in slummocky New Dutch and Ladino ports around the sector had been actual pirates, and a fair number of these had stayed on after the civil war wound down. Half of them were probably suited up in engineering alongside Carvalho, disappointed they hadn’t seen any face-to-face combat with Apex drones.

“All the same,” Tolvern said, “he’s a man who knows how to get things done. I’m sending him out.”

#

Ronaldo Carvalho listened grimly as the head of engineering delivered his orders with a scowl and his silly walrus mustache waggling. What was with that mustache anyway? Didn’t Barker know it was thirty years out of fashion?

While a second man checked the seals on Carvalho’s suit and noted his life support readings, Barker went over a list of obvious stuff, from how the pulse torch worked to warnings about where to run the tether. The armor was so riddled with holes there was a real chance of kicking a sensor or snapping off some other vital piece of equipment.

“Yeah, I got it,” Carvalho said.

“Do you? You don’t look like you’ve got it, you look like you’re barely paying attention.”

“Because you’re wasting my time with all of this trivial stuff. Do you think I am slow because I speak with an accent?”

“Shut up and listen, will you?” Barker said. “The mag clamps should work so long as you keep away from that gash in the deck shield. You’ll want to steer left of the number three tube, as well, and as for the main battery . . .”

Carvalho grunted as Barker droned on. Pompous Royal Navy geezer. These Albion fellows with their stiff necks and their way of looking down on a man with the wrong breeding or from the wrong place. He just wanted to get it over with.

“Now let’s talk about how long you’ve got to get this done,” Barker said.

Listen, pendejo, you think I’m going too slow, you crawl out there yourself. Or better yet, shut your hole and let me get started.
 

Instead of voicing this thought, he said, “I will move as fast as I can, Chief, but I have got to do it safe, right? Don’t want to lose my grip on the ship if these
Chinos
give us a tug with their tether.”

But he’d misjudged where Barker was going.

“You weren’t listening to anything I said, were you? What I’m saying is that you’ve got time. Don’t rush it. The base has neutralized the thrust from our plasma engine, but we’re pushing with auxiliary power, and they can’t haul us in too fast or they’ll yank themselves out of that nice little hiding place they’ve made for themselves. I want to send a piece of that tether down to the lab, and you’re going to cut it off for me.”

Carvalho couldn’t help staring. “You want a piece of their rope?”

“It’s not a bloody rope, you fool, it’s a self-healing carbon nanotube tether. There’s something weird about it.”

“In other words, a
fancy
rope. Sure, I will cut you a piece.” Carvalho patted his “utility” knife, which bore a striking resemblance to a long, curved dagger.

“Look, you can’t just hack off a piece. What do you think is going to happen?”

Carvalho considered. “Well, I suppose with them pulling in one direction and us pulling in the other, if I cut it, the whole thing will vanish at about five hundred times the speed of a cracking whip. If I am holding onto the end, I’ll go with it. I’d probably let go, terrified, and then I’d float away in some random direction, curious about how long my oxygen would last.”

Barker grunted. “I guess you
do
understand.”

“You are far too literal, my friend,” Carvalho said, slapping him on the shoulder with one gloved hand. “But why cannot it be cut say, two feet above the ship? The rest whips away, and I will pry off the end and bring in what is left.”

“I’m pretty sure it has fused with the tyrillium, if Smythe’s readings are correct. Anyway, you don’t want to touch the thing. Use this instead.”

Barker brought out a length of what looked like a short, squat piece of pipe, except that it opened in the center like the vacuum canisters they used to shuttle mail packets around on Carvalho’s home world of Nuevo Tejás.

Carvalho eyed it doubtfully. “And that is going to do the job?”

“Haven’t you used this before? It’s for cutting off pieces of tyrillium for testing in the lab.”

Carvalho took it and turned it over in his hand. “Oh, yeah. Seen it, never used it.”

“It’s easy enough to operate, just don’t get your hand caught inside if you know what’s good for you.”

Barker spent a minute showing Carvalho how to use it, and for once, the Ladino was glad to hear it spelled out in detail. Up until the chief started repeating himself.

“We are wasting time,” Carvalho said. “I want to get out there.”

“Again, there’s no rush. You have an hour. Maybe a little longer. Tell me if you need more time, and I’ll let you know how we’re holding up.”

An hour sounded like plenty, Carvalho thought as he entered the airlock a few minutes later. But when the outer doors opened, and he stared into the vacuum, he froze in place. There it was, the endless void, the stars, bright and immobile against the sky. He couldn’t get over how they sat like sharp pinpricks of light no matter how many times he looked at them—they didn’t look like the glittering stars one saw from the surface of a planet, shimmering through an atmosphere.

Barker’s voice came over the com. “You’re still tethered to the airlock. Is everything okay?”

“Yeah, it is all good,” he lied. “I am getting my bearings is all.”

“Fine, fine. I’ll leave you to your work. I’m here if you need me.”

That was a relief. Last thing he needed was Barker looking over his shoulder the whole time, giving instructions step by step.
No, no, the left foot. The LEFT!
 

Carvalho chuckled, and this steadied his nerves. He took a deep breath, willed his pounding heart to stop trying to hammer its way through his chest, and reached to untether the suit. Almost too late he remembered to activate the mag boots first. He muttered an oath in Ladino, the one about dogs and cats doing unnatural things to each other.

“What’s that?” Barker asked.

“Talking to myself. I will stop now.”

And by “stop,” he meant turn off the outgoing com so nobody else could hear him cursing to himself or crying for his mama.

Mag boots activated, he untethered and clomped out of the airlock. The Kettle lay to his right. It ate up a quarter of the sky, a coppery, glowing ball, but wasn’t the most impressive object in view. Even more dramatic was the ice field that swept from horizon to horizon like a rainbow of diamonds, bisecting the wider, but less bright Milky Way to form a giant, glowing cross. The ice field reflected against the surface of HMS
Blackbeard
, which looked midnight blue beneath its light, except where the more orange light of the planet pooled in the holes formed in the pitted tyrillium armor.

Blackbeard
was a Punisher-class cruiser, 489 feet from her engines to the tip of her deck gun, and in the docks looked like a long, sleek predator of the deep.

Now she was a mess. Carvalho hadn’t seen a surface so pockmarked since the faces of the whores of San Pablo. He made his way slowly over the surface of
Blackbeard
, an eye out for the gashes and other obstacles Barker had warned him about. The canister floated on a cord next to his utility belt, reminding him of his purpose.

It felt as though the ship were lying motionless, but that was all illusion because there was nothing close enough to measure himself against. In reality, the
Chinos
were dragging the ship toward their base. Better them than Apex, he supposed, but if he were the captain, he’d fire a couple of missiles down their gullet to let them know not to mess with the Royal Navy.

Carvalho made his way midway down the hull, where he came upon a streak of black shadow that emerged next to a damaged torpedo tube. The shadow stretched like a thin, never-ending string from the ship hull toward the gleaming swath of ice crystals arcing overhead. It was wider up close than it appeared from a distance, but was still no thicker than a pencil. Impressive feat, hauling in a five-hundred-foot warship, struggling like the universe’s largest fish on a line, without snapping.

Capp’s voice came through the com. “You all right, luv?”

After several minutes of hearing nothing but his own breathing and the soothing murmur of his life support systems, her rough York accent jolted him.

He flicked on his com so she could hear him. “I was until you startled me. Now I am floating free. I think I have damaged my thrusters—dammit, no way to get back home. Nice going, Capp, now I am going to die.”

“Don’t be an arse,” she said cheerfully. “Barker told me not to bug you, but you’ve been out twenty minutes already and those Chinese fellows are still reeling us in. So if you wouldn’t mind getting to it already, we’d be appreciative down here.”

Had it been twenty minutes already? These grav boots made slow going.

“I am fine.”

“I’m sure you are, luv. Once you finish wetting yourself inside that suit.”

“Hardly. If you want to know the truth, I am admiring the view.”

“Get us out of here, and I’ll show you a view that will make you forget the stars.”

“Is this an open channel?” he asked.

“I hope so! Make ’em all jealous. Tolvern is sending me off shift for some sleep as soon as we’re cut loose. But I don’t feel like sleeping. You know what I’m talking about, my
bandido
.”

Carvalho grinned. The woman was insatiable. Well, it was good motivation to stop wasting time and get this dumb thing over with.

He reached the tether. Even up close, it was as black as background space, only visible from the lack of stars in a straight line out from the ship. He turned on his helmet light, but even this didn’t penetrate the strange substance. He wanted to grab the thing, feel if it was soft or hard as steel, but Barker’s last words had been a firm warning. They didn’t know what it was, and he might just grab it to find out he no longer had fingers on that hand.

Oh, and a severed pressure suit. He’d only feel the pain of the severed fingers for an instant before he was extruded out the end of his open glove and into the vacuum of space.

Barker must have been tracking his progress, because he started speaking through the com link. A bunch of unnecessary instructions. Carvalho turned the volume way down so he could keep working.

He took a moment to tether himself to a perforated piece of the port-side armor, and tested it by releasing his boots and pushing gently against the hull. There was a terrifying moment as he floated away, and he almost thumbed on the thrusters to bring him back to the ship. Then his cord caught, and he hauled himself back in and reattached the mag boots.

“Here I go,” he said, turning up the volume again.

“You’re strapped down?” Barker asked. “There is going to be a hell of a recoil.”

“Of course.”

Carvalho unclipped the canister from his belt, opened it, and eased it against the line hauling them into the base. Being careful not to let his suit brush against that deadly, pencil-thin shadow, he reached over the top and closed the canister with what felt like a snap, though of course there was no sound. Nothing happened.

In order to bite through the ultra-dense, yet absorbent armor, the canister had two heat-treated tyrillium blades. When the canister closed, motors in the canister forced them together at high pressure to make the cut. It had closed without difficulty, but the pencil of shadow passed right through it. The other end did not snap off under pressure as Carvalho had expected. Whatever it was kept its pull right through the canister.

He eased it away, but still the shadow didn’t disappear. For a moment, he thought it must have passed right through the canister, and he’d come away with nothing, but there was a hole in the pencil-line: a five-foot piece was attached to the ship, then there was a gap of about eighteen inches through which he could see stars, and then the rest of the tether disappeared into the void. The two pieces were drifting away from each other, inch by inch. Shouldn’t the auxiliary power already be forcing them farther apart?

It only lasted a moment, and then the outer line snaked out and connected with the small piece still attached to the ship. They were fully tethered once more. Carvalho looked down at the canister in frustration. Should he attach it to his belt or try again? He wanted to hurl it into space in frustration.

“What’s going on out there?” Barker asked. “Why haven’t you cut the line?”

“I did,” he said. “Or tried to.”

“Well try again, why don’t you? They’re still hauling us in.”

Carvalho explained what had happened. This brought a series of oaths over the com. The chief’s voice vanished from the line, and Captain Tolvern’s appeared in its place a few seconds later.

“That’s it, Corporal,” she said. “Quit screwing around and get back in here.”

“I think I have a sample,” Carvalho said. “That is something, no?”

“They’re hauling our sorry butts in for interrogation. Or worse. I don’t think the composition of their tether is really a top priority at the moment. You tried to cut us loose, you failed. Good effort, no one’s blaming you, but it’s time to get in here.”

“The canister cut through the tether,” he said. “It made a hole. I saw it. Then it reformed. All we need is to cut a bigger piece. If we bring someone else out to join me, or get me a longer line and two canisters, I’ll float out and make
two
cuts. Maybe if they’re separated—”

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