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  <description>
    <title-info>
      <genre>sf</genre>
      <author>
        <first-name>S.</first-name>
        <middle-name>K.</middle-name>
        <last-name>Dunstall</last-name>
      </author>
      <book-title>Confluence</book-title>
      <annotation>
        <p>
          <emphasis>The lines. Mysterious yet familiar: the key to controlling every ship in the
galaxy. Once they were thought of as tools, but since linesman Ean Lambert
discovered strange new lines in an alien vessel, they have become so much
more—symbols of a power too great to ignore.</emphasis>
        </p>
        <p>While the Crown Princess of Lancia seeks to share the new technology, her
father, the Emperor, has other plans. His latest political maneuverings seem
to be tilting the balance of control to Lancia’s favor—a move that not all
members of the New Alliance are looking upon favorably.</p>
        <p>As tensions mount, Ean’s former shipmates must unite to avert a disastrous
conflict: the princess working within the tumultuous Alliance, Ean seeking the
help of the impatient alien ships, and Ean’s close friend and bodyguard,
Radko, embarking on a mysterious and perilous mission.</p>
        <p>But the biggest threat comes from an unexpected source. Someone is trying to
take down the New Alliance from within—and will use anything, even the lines
themselves, to ensure its destruction…</p>
      </annotation>
      <date>2016</date>
      <coverpage>
        <image l:href="#cover.jpg"/>
      </coverpage>
      <lang>en</lang>
      <src-lang>en</src-lang>
      <sequence name="Linesman" number="3"/>
    </title-info>
    <document-info>
      <author>
        <first-name>Stas</first-name>
        <last-name>Bushuev</last-name>
        <nickname>Xitsa</nickname>
      </author>
      <program-used>FB Tools, sed, VIM, Far, asciidoc+fb2 backend</program-used>
      <date value="2022-09-15">2022-09-15</date>
      <id>Xitsa-C401-CE89-E019-F669396CC94D</id>
      <version>1.01</version>
      <!-- <history> </history> -->
      <history>
        <p><strong>Version 1.01:</strong> Converted to FictionBook 2 (Xitsa)</p>
        <p>Cover art by Bruce Jensen</p>
        <p>Cover design by Diana Kolsky</p>
      </history>
    </document-info>
  </description>
  <body>
    <section id="_acknowledgments">
      <title>
        <p>ACKNOWLEDGMENTS</p>
      </title>
      <p>Producing a book is not simply writing it. We would like to give a huge
thank-you to and acknowledge, once again, the people who have been
important to our getting this book out there.</p>
      <p>Our agent, Caitlin Blasdell, and our editor, Anne Sowards. Without both
of you, we wouldn’t have this book.</p>
      <p>Bruce Jensen, for another amazing cover.</p>
      <p>All those people at Ace involved in making this book.</p>
      <p>And, of course, copy editor Sara Schwager, who put our commas in the
right places again.</p>
      <p>Our beta readers, Alison, Arthur, and Jenny. Thank you for reading the
book and for your feedback. It was invaluable.</p>
      <p>Dawn, your encouragement and support were timely and appreciated.</p>
      <p>Our family, who are there for us always.</p>
      <p>Helen, you have taken care of our garden so wonderfully and have been
such an ambassador for our little books. Thank you.</p>
      <p>And, of course, you, our readers, who took the time to read our books,
to send us encouraging messages, and to tell us you cared what happened
to these characters we had created.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_new_alliance_department_of_alien_affairs_p_p_list_of_lines_and_their_purposes">
      <title>
        <p>NEW ALLIANCE DEPARTMENT OF ALIEN AFFAIRS</p>
        <p>LIST OF LINES AND THEIR PURPOSES</p>
      </title>
      <p>Line 1 — Health of crew and lines</p>
      <p>Line 2 — Small mechanics 1—air circulation, heating, cooling, power. Overall
comfort and running of a ship.</p>
      <p>Line 3 — Small mechanics 2—tools. Interact individually with other lines for
repair, maintenance, management.</p>
      <p>Line 4 — Gravity</p>
      <p>Line 5 — Communications</p>
      <p>Line 6 — Bose engines (engines with the capacity to take a ship through the
void)</p>
      <p>Line 7 — Allows ships linked by line eleven to move autonomously</p>
      <p>Line 8 — Security</p>
      <p>Line 9 — Takes ship into the void</p>
      <p>Line 10 — Moves ship to a different location in space while in the void</p>
      <p>Line 11 — Links ships together. Allows them to move/behave as a single unit.</p>
      <p>Line 12 — Actual abilities unclear, but known to communicate across all lines
and appears to have some control over other lines</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_one_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER ONE: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Ean Lambert’s quarters on Confluence Station were in the same area as
Jordan Rossi’s, with a brand-new titanium-bialer-alloy door between them
and the rest of the station. The first apartment inside the blocked-off
section had been gutted, and the newly opened space filled with
state-of-the-art surveillance equipment, some of it of human origin,
some salvaged from the damaged alien ships in the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> fleet.</p>
      <p>It had been secure when Rossi was the only linesman here. Now it was
triply secure.</p>
      <p>Ean gave it a cursory glance and turned to the more immediate problem.</p>
      <p>His bodyguard, Radko, had inspected Ean’s apartment with a thoroughness
that bordered on paranoia. That was before she’d dropped the news that
she wasn’t staying.</p>
      <p>“You’re staying with the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>Radko scowled at one of the screens. “It won’t be for long.”</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t know line one on Confluence Station as intimately as he did
the line on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, but he knew Radko, and he could
hear a strong undertone of worry.</p>
      <p>“But why?”</p>
      <p>“Family business,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>Ean knew nothing about her family except that she was a distant relation
of Crown Princess Michelle. “Will you be all right?”</p>
      <p>“I’ll be fine, Ean. So will you.”</p>
      <p>She shouldn’t try to lie when the lines knew her so well. She was
worried about something. And if Radko was worried, so was he.</p>
      <p>The song of Confluence Station changed. Jordan Rossi, Yaolin’s level-ten
linesman, had arrived. This was Rossi’s home, and the lines welcomed
him.</p>
      <p>“Be careful, Ean. Don’t do anything—”</p>
      <p>“Stupid?”</p>
      <p>“Don’t do anything that would upset Vega. At least, not until I get
back.”</p>
      <p>How long would she be away? “I’ll be a model linesman.”</p>
      <p>Ru Li, who—like the rest of Bhaksir’s security team—was pretending to
work at the screens while Ean and Radko talked, snorted. “That will be
the day.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir frowned at him before turning to Radko. “The shuttle is ready to
depart. And Captain Helmo only has a small jump window. We’ll take care
of him for you.”</p>
      <p>Radko nodded and glanced at her comms. “Remember, Ean. Be sensible.”</p>
      <p>She took off at a run.</p>
      <p>Ean looked around. Everyone in Bhaksir’s team pretended to be busy
again. There was an underlying hum of worry from line one. It echoed the
worry from line one on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, for Crown Princess
Michelle was going home on family business, too. Her father, Emperor Yu,
had demanded her presence.</p>
      <p>“Will Radko be all right?”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir shrugged. Ean was glad she hadn’t tried to lie. He was glad,
too, that Rossi halted in the doorway then. It stopped him from asking
what the problem was with Radko’s family. If she’d wanted him to know,
she would have told him.</p>
      <p>“This is cozy,” Rossi said. “I go away for two days, and look what moves
in.”</p>
      <p>Ean ignored him. Through the lines, he saw Radko run onto the shuttle.
The bay doors closed, and air was being pumped out before she’d even
clipped herself in.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Captain Helmo called as soon as Radko was back on her home ship. “We’re
ready to jump, Ean.”</p>
      <p>On board the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, Michelle patted Radko’s shoulder.
Radko tried to smile; couldn’t. Something was seriously wrong, and Ean
had no idea what it was.</p>
      <p>“Ready.” Ean pushed the worry to the back of his mind. Being distracted
when you worked with the lines was a disaster waiting to happen.
“Fergus?” Fergus was on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>“Ready.” Fergus’s line hummed with anticipation.</p>
      <p>At least someone was happy.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> was part of a fleet of six ships, joined
together by the alien ship, <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. Until recently, they’d only been
able to jump the fleet as a single entity. Then they had discovered that
line seven could be used to allow a single ship to move on its own.
They’d tried it before—of course they had—as often as they could get
jumps. But every other time, Ean had been on the ship that had jumped.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>Please let it work.</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p><emphasis>“Of course it will work,”</emphasis> the lines told him.</p>
      <p>Fergus started to sing.</p>
      <p>Ean could see it as clearly as if he were on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.
The ship lines connected. Line seven to every other seven in their
mismatched fleet of six ships and one station. He heard them as song,
saw them as lines of light, different colors for each ship. Every line
had a knot at each end, tying the ships tightly to each other. Ean
smelled fresh bread, tasted it, as the colors ran together and turned
white.</p>
      <p>“Ready, Captain,” Fergus sang.</p>
      <p>“Prepare to jump.” Helmo’s voice was calm although Ean could hear the
nervousness underneath. Helmo always said it wasn’t the jump that
captains worried about; it was coming out the other end.</p>
      <p>Line nine moved the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> into the void, with Fergus’s
line seven linking the fleet ships.</p>
      <p>Line ten came in, and the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> jumped.</p>
      <p>Then they were out of the void. Helmo’s relief swamped the lines
momentarily.</p>
      <p>Ean checked the lines on each ship in the fleet. All were good. All were
strong and straight. The song of the Galactic News ship had changed.
They had a new engineer on that ship. He was surprisingly strong. Ean
hadn’t realized he was a linesman.</p>
      <p>The navigator on duty on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> said, “Confirming
position 33.76785.23.45.” The first digits were the sector—33 was
Lancia.</p>
      <p>It was the first time Ean had been in a different sector from the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> since he’d started working for Lancia.</p>
      <p>Helmo opened the comms to Abram Galenos, and to everyone on ship as
well. “This is Captain Helmo, from the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, calling
Admiral Galenos on Haladea III.”</p>
      <p>“Receiving your call loud and clear, and in real time,” Abram said.</p>
      <p>A spontaneous cheer went up from the listeners. For this was history.
The first time two humans had ever communicated officially in real time
between sectors.</p>
      <p>“Ean?” Helmo asked.</p>
      <p>Ean could hear and see the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> as clearly as if the
ship were nearby rather than half a galaxy away. Michelle and Radko were
entering shuttle bay eight. Vega and two teams entered with them. He
normally knew everything that happened on ship, so why hadn’t he known
about Radko?</p>
      <p>“Ean?”</p>
      <p>He dragged his attention back to his job. “Everything looks normal. Are
you sure you have moved?”</p>
      <p>He didn’t need to ask, for the leaving of the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> was
already causing a flurry on both media ships. The producer on the Blue
Sky Media ship was saying, “Find out where they went,” while Coral Zabi,
the reporter from Galactic News, said, “We’re supposed to be part of the
entourage. They could have told us where they were going.”</p>
      <p>Captain Helmo laughed. “Look at the view from outside this ship, Ean.”
He pushed the view through the comms to Abram, but not to Ean. He knew
Ean would see it, anyway.</p>
      <p>A purple-tinged planet. Lancia.</p>
      <p>The shuttle exited from the ship, and Ean couldn’t see Radko or Michelle
anymore.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Back in the common outer area, Bhaksir’s team were swapping gossip with
Rossi’s bodyguards. Bhaksir glanced at Ean and looked as if she was
going to say something, then thought better of it.</p>
      <p>Ean forced himself to break the awkward silence that had fallen. “We’ve
still got full comms with the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. It’s in real
time.”</p>
      <p>Even if they got nothing more from the eleven-line ships, this one
ability, that of being able to communicate instantaneously between
galactic sectors, would revolutionize trade. Communication within
sectors was instantaneous. But to relay a message to another sector, a
ship had to jump into that sector first. Until now. The companies that
made a fortune providing message ships would lose out, but everyone else
would win.</p>
      <p>“And full comms with Lancia,” Ru Li said. “Look, all the latest shows.”</p>
      <p>“You already have the latest shows.” Ean didn’t watch them; he hadn’t
watched anything from Lancia in ten years, but the crew loved them.
Helmo bought them in batches. They were no more than a week old.</p>
      <p>“But these are happening on air, right now,” Ru Li said. “Look, <emphasis>Cry for
the Stars</emphasis>.” He changed the channel on the largest screen to where a
woman in a scarlet dress was kissing a green-tentacled alien—which
looked nothing like the real aliens. “Happening right now.”</p>
      <p>“Turn it off,” Hana said. “We haven’t seen last week’s episode yet.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang a different channel up for them. This one was a news channel,
with a striking black-haired newswoman with a high-class Lancian accent,
saying, “Her Royal Highness, Crown Princess Michelle, has arrived at
Lancia and is believed to be making for Baoshan Palace to—”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir turned it off.</p>
      <p>No one looked at Ean. What didn’t they want him to know? Never mind. He
could look it up later, in his room. For now, he had work to do.</p>
      <p>He forced himself to stop thinking about what was wrong with Radko—and
maybe Michelle, too—and spent the rest of the afternoon communicating
through the lines with Sale’s team on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, with Abram on
Haladea III, and Captains Helmo, Kari Wang, Wendell, and Gruen on their
respective ships, testing what they could and couldn’t do between
sectors.</p>
      <p>He was so busy trying not to think about Radko that initially he didn’t
notice the activity on the Galactic News ship.</p>
      <p>“Wait,” he said, midsentence, and pushed through images from the media
ship, where people were gathered around the new engineer, who was
gesturing at a screen. “Something’s happening.”</p>
      <p>They were watching a newscast, where the black-haired Lancastrian
reporter was saying, “His Imperial Majesty is hosting a party tonight to
welcome home his daughter, Her Royal Highness, Crown Princess Michelle.
There are rumors that an announcement will be made tonight.”</p>
      <p>“I tell you, this is real-time,” the engineer said. The linesman. “The
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> only arrived there today.” He waved his comms at
the man Ean recognized as the producer. “Call someone you know in the
newsroom at Lancia.”</p>
      <p>“What? I haven’t got time, Christian.”</p>
      <p>“Do it, Coop. This is important.”</p>
      <p>The producer took out his comms. “You’d better have a point to all
this.”</p>
      <p>“Trust me. You’ll be sorry if you don’t hear this. What’s the lag?”</p>
      <p>“To Lancia? Anything up to an hour.”</p>
      <p>Ships couldn’t communicate between sectors in real time. Or they hadn’t
been able to before today. Other ships would record the message, then
relay it after they jumped. A regular message ship jumped between the
Lancian sector and the Haladean sector nowadays, but it only jumped
every hour. In less-traveled sectors, the messages could take days, or
even weeks.</p>
      <p>The producer called up the Galactic News office on Lancia.</p>
      <p>“This is Bob Cooper. Can I talk to Harper Fuji?”</p>
      <p>The answer was immediate. “Coop. Haven’t heard from you in months. So
they let your ship tag along with the royal yacht, did they?”</p>
      <p>“I told you.” Christian slapped his comms triumphantly into the palm of
his other hand. “We’re in real time.”</p>
      <p>Cooper looked at his comms. “Where are you, Harper?”</p>
      <p>“Where? Baoshan, of course. Covering the party tonight. If you’re down
on planet, let’s meet for drinks.”</p>
      <p>Baoshan was the capital city of Lancia.</p>
      <p>Cooper looked at his comms as if it were about to bite him.</p>
      <p>“Ean.” Bhaksir waved a hand close to his face, then stepped back quickly
as he focused on her. “Admiral Galenos is talking to you.”</p>
      <p>“Sorry.” He forced himself to concentrate on his comms. “Abram?”</p>
      <p>“Can you turn instantaneous communication off for the media ships?”</p>
      <p>The media ships were part of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>’s fleet. “No.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir leaned over and said into Ean’s comms, “Begging your pardon,
Admiral, but we’re also receiving and broadcasting real time on
Confluence Station. We’ve already discovered we can get broadcasts from
Lancia here.”</p>
      <p>Abram blew out his breath. “Right. In that case, we might postpone these
experiments for half an hour while I prepare a press release. I’ll call
you when we’re done, Ean.”</p>
      <p>He signed off.</p>
      <p>When Ean turned away, Jordan Rossi was leaning in the doorway, arms
crossed, amusement leaking through his lines.</p>
      <p>“Lambert strikes again.” He waited expectantly, then looked around as he
was ignored. “What? No defense? Where’s Radko?”</p>
      <p>“On leave,” Ean said, and tried to make it neutral, but Bhaksir said, at
the same time, “Mind your own business, Rossi,” and Ean heard the
interest quicken in Rossi’s lines.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Abram’s press release was a brief, recorded vid pushed out to all media
outlets.</p>
      <p>“The New Alliance confirms that initial tests of the new
intersector-communications device have been successful. You might
experience small pockets of extended communication over the next few
days as we continue these experiments. If you require further
information, please contact Spacer Grieve at the Department of Alien
Affairs.”</p>
      <p>As press releases went, it was almost a nonevent. Definitely not worth
half an hour’s delay in testing. Although… they had put Grieve onto
answering any questions, and Grieve wasn’t someone you wasted on simple
inquiries. Ean would have liked to talk it over with Radko, but Radko
wasn’t here.</p>
      <p>When Sale and her team arrived back from the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> that evening,
they sat down to a shared meal. Rossi joined them, and Ean got the
feeling he was glad of the company.</p>
      <p>Group Leader Sale was Bhaksir’s boss. Bhaksir’s whole team—Radko was
part of Bhaksir’s team—were assigned to mind Ean, while Sale, and Sale’s
other team, led by Team Leader Craik, spent most of its time working on
the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, the other eleven ship. They knew more about the ship
now than Ean did.</p>
      <p>“We found the hospital today,” Sale said. “At least, it’s similar to the
area on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> that Captain Kari Wang thinks is the hospital.
Except that it’s ten times the size.”</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> was four times the size of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. It had a fleet
of 128 ships in tow and was the size of a small city.</p>
      <p>Craik slid in beside Sale. “Not that we planned on going into that
section at all. We were supposed to finish mapping sector three first.
This is two floors down and a quarter of the ship across.”</p>
      <p>“So how did you find it, then?” Ean asked. These were trained soldiers.
If they were supposed to map sector three, that’s what they would do.</p>
      <p>“We got a wild-card day.”</p>
      <p>“Wild-card day?” Bhaksir asked. Ean was glad she was as mystified as he
was.</p>
      <p>Sale said, “People get bored doing the same thing day after day. So we
decided to do a random exploration.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“She decided,”</emphasis> came unbidden into Ean’s mind, the thought tinged with
satisfaction. <emphasis>“Showing, showing.”</emphasis> The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>“What made you choose that particular corridor, Sale? Out of all of
them?”</p>
      <p>She shrugged.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“We showed.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p><emphasis>“Nice work,”</emphasis> Ean said, but he didn’t push Sale. She could deny it as
much as she liked, but he’d ask again later, when there were fewer
people around. Had the ship just shown a nonlinesman where to go? If so,
how had the lines known she wanted the hospital?</p>
      <p>Sale scowled. “We’ve already got what feels like a hundred scientists
and medical experts wanting access to it.” She scowled again. “I don’t
know how they find out so fast. This is supposed to be a top secret
mission. Thank the lines Galenos insists we leave as much as we can on
the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> untouched, that any experiments we do come from the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. Kari Wang can deal with the requests.”</p>
      <p>Selma Kari Wang, the captain of the other eleven-line ship, didn’t
suffer fools. When Sale had a ship of her own—and Ean was sure that one
day she would, for she would make a good ship captain—she would be a lot
like Kari Wang.</p>
      <p>“Do you want me to—” Not that he was sure what he could do, short of
asking Abram to say something, and Sale would be horrified if he did
that.</p>
      <p>“Thanks, Ean, but no. I’m just sounding off. Admiral Galenos keeps them
off our back.” She scooped up grains and beans from her plate, paused.
“Speaking of experiments, after the press release, we all took half an
hour to call up family.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir had let her team do the same.</p>
      <p>“It was instantaneous. Like they were right next door. And clear as
clear. If I didn’t know, and you’d just told me we were in another
sector, I wouldn’t have believed you.” Sale spooned the beans into her
mouth and choked. “What is this stuff?”</p>
      <p>The kitchen staff on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> cooked for royalty and
her guests. Even Ean had to admit that Ru Li and Hana, who’d been on
mess duty, were not in their class.</p>
      <p>“Borrow one of the chefs from Lady Lyan’s ship.” Rossi glanced Ean’s
way. “After all, we do have a level-twelve linesman on board.”</p>
      <p>Ru Li filled Rossi’s wineglass. “Another glass of this will make the
food taste better.”</p>
      <p>They had Lancian wine. An entire pallet of it. Ean had seen it
delivered. He’d wondered at the time how much wine Helmo thought he and
Rossi would drink. Ean looked at his own glass, shook his head when Ru
Li offered to refill it for him.</p>
      <p>Sale leaned back. “So, how do we think this instantaneous communication
works?”</p>
      <p>“I would have thought it obvious,” Rossi said. “Lines do communicate
instantly within a sector, after all. If line seven links the lines
through the void, then there is effectively no void for those ships.”</p>
      <p>“So what makes a sector, then?” Sale asked. “And how can linked ships
communicate through them?”</p>
      <p>Back when humans had first left Earth, they had divided space into
radial sections, 360 of them, one degree each, radiating out from a
nominated central position on Old Earth. But after they’d discovered the
lines, the old measurements had been replaced by sectors, which was an
area of space in which line ships had instant communication.</p>
      <p>The sectors were constant, but different sizes. There was no known
mathematical theorem that could calculate why each sector was the size
it was. The smallest was the Grent Anomaly, less than a light-year in
area. One of the largest was the Lancian sector, which was how—back when
the New Alliance had been the Alliance—Lancia had gained so much power.</p>
      <p>Rossi said, “Sweetheart, if we knew how linked ships communicated
through sectors, human ships would have been doing it years ago.” He
paused. “One might surmise that the fleet model—multiple ships common to
a line eleven, with the sevens keeping individual ships linked—was the
default model for alien ship movement.”</p>
      <p>Say what you might about Jordan Rossi, he was a linesman at heart, and
he was serious about line business.</p>
      <p>Some of that respect must have leaked through the lines, for Rossi lost
track of what he was saying momentarily and looked at Ean strangely,
before continuing, “Especially given the way the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> is so ready to
integrate any and every full set of lines it can. One might say that the
only line that doesn’t provide added value to standard ship travel is
line twelve.”</p>
      <p>Ean ignored that.</p>
      <p>Rossi looked around. “Where <emphasis>is</emphasis> Radko again?”</p>
      <p>Ean ignored that, too. As did everyone else.</p>
      <p>“Imagine,” Sale said. “Instant communication everywhere in the galaxy.
What a shake-up that would be.”</p>
      <p>“Especially for Gate Union,” Rossi said. “If you had instant
communication, you could automate the jump process.”</p>
      <p>Gate Union’s main advantage in the war at present was that they
controlled the jumps. Would that mean the end of war?</p>
      <p>Except the New Alliance only had two elevens, and Ean, to link the ships
together.</p>
      <p>Sale’s and Bhaksir’s comms sounded then, along with that of the senior
of Rossi’s two bodyguards.</p>
      <p>“Heart attack.” Bhaksir looked at her comms as if she didn’t believe it.
She looked at Rossi, then Ean. “But there’s been no—”</p>
      <p>No strong line-eleven activity, she meant. Ean might not have reacted,
but Rossi would, for he was easily overcome when line eleven was strong.</p>
      <p>“I’ll check it out,” Sale said. “Craik, Losan, with me. Ean, watch us in
case it’s a setup.”</p>
      <p>They left at a fast walk.</p>
      <p>Ean sang to lines eight and five, and asked them to track Sale through
the station. He put it onto the closest screen. “Where’s she going?”</p>
      <p>“Station manager’s office,” Bhaksir said. “Apparently, the station
manager has had a heart attack.”</p>
      <p>The station manager was the equivalent of a ship captain. If he’d had a
heart attack, wouldn’t the lines have registered something? A little
distress, maybe. If Captain Helmo had a heart attack, the lines on the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> would go crazy. If someone had attacked the
station manager—which was why Sale was checking it out—wouldn’t the
lines have reacted?</p>
      <p>Ean sang up the station manager’s office on another screen. The room was
filled with paramedics, along with an older, tired-looking man who was
speaking to one of them, and a distressed younger man.</p>
      <p>“Station staff,” Bhaksir said. “The older man works directly for
Patten.”</p>
      <p>Patten was the station manager.</p>
      <p>“The younger one is new. Also works for Patten. Nothing untoward.”
Bhaksir called up Sale. “Looks clear so far.”</p>
      <p>Rossi snickered. “Nothing untoward. You people take your job so
seriously.”</p>
      <p>Maybe one day, a heart attack could simply be a heart attack instead of
paranoia. Until then? Ean watched as Sale, Craik, and Losan entered the
already overcrowded office.</p>
      <p>Why hadn’t the lines become distressed?</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_two_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWO: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>The Radko estate looked the same as Radko remembered it. Kilometers of
vineyards, deepening now into purple as the leaves darkened for autumn.
She hadn’t told Ean that most of the wine he drank on the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis> came from her family winery.</p>
      <p>Golden Lake, named for its color, sat like a massive gem in the heart of
the estate. Hectares of trees and gardens set around smaller lakes made
a gracious panorama as the car flew in. The morning sun caught the rose
quartz and mica in the granite of the stone blocks of the house, making
it sparkle and glow.</p>
      <p>It had been afternoon when she’d left Confluence Station. Radko sighed.
On top of everything else, it was going to be a long day.</p>
      <p>She received three messages from her mother in the time it took to walk
from the parking station to her apartment, and another one as she
dropped her kit onto a shelf in the nearly empty wardrobe room. This
time, Hua Radko leaned on the signal until her daughter answered.</p>
      <p>“Mother.”</p>
      <p>“You’re late.”</p>
      <p>She wasn’t. She was seventeen minutes earlier than she’d told them she’d
be, but there was no point saying that. “When you’re traveling with
Michelle, you travel on Michelle’s time.”</p>
      <p>“I suppose you can’t argue that. Although you’d think she’d try to be on
time for her own father.”</p>
      <p>“Are we going to hold this whole conversation through the comms?” Radko
asked. Her mother was perfectly capable of doing that though her
apartment was just down the corridor from Radko’s. “Why don’t I come and
talk face-to-face?”</p>
      <p>She dropped her comms back into her pocket and moved swiftly down the
corridor to her mother’s claustrophobic quarters. Hua Radko had
collected jeweled eggs all her life. The heavy black timber cupboards
that were de rigueur for displaying them lined the walls. That, combined
with the individual display lights to show off each egg, always made
Radko think of a cave alight with phosphorescent growth.</p>
      <p>Her mother hadn’t changed. A tall, elderly woman who held herself as
straight as a soldier on parade, Hua must have spent time in the
military; for how else could she hold that posture so long? Radko had
never asked, for her mother didn’t encourage personal questions. They’d
never been close.</p>
      <p>The long entertaining room was crowded with people. That was normal. Hua
entertained as much as her sister Jai—the Emperor’s mother—did.</p>
      <p>There were new faces. After years serving under Abram Galenos, checking
out potential threats to the Crown Princess of Lancia, Radko recognized
many of them.</p>
      <p>Prominent among them was Tiana Chen, a minor functionary in the
Emperor’s outer circle. She didn’t have much influence with the Emperor
himself, but she had a knack of ferreting out secrets from those who did
and using those secrets to control them. She had no reason to associate
herself with an out-of-favor branch of the Yu family like the Radkos.
Nor did Ethan Saylor, the slender youth sitting beside her, whose family
were part of the Emperor’s inner circle.</p>
      <p>Saylor leaned his head close to Chen’s, curled his lip, and said in an
undertone meant to be heard. “Look what just walked in.”</p>
      <p>Chen rapped his fingers with her comms and said something too low to
hear. Given Chen’s lower standing in court, an action like that should
have been social suicide. Instead, Saylor scowled at Radko, as if she
were to blame for the reprimand.</p>
      <p>Radko moved around to get close enough to hear them.</p>
      <p>Both of them fell silent.</p>
      <p>Her time in the fleet had made her suspicious of everyone. She had to
remember that people behaved strangely without ulterior motives.</p>
      <p>Hua saw her then. “Surely you could have changed out of that dreadful
outfit before you came to me.” If her mother had been given to
histrionics, she would have put her hand to her forehead in an overt
display of the hopelessness of the task.</p>
      <p>Out of the corner of her eye, Radko saw Saylor nod. Chen rapped his
fingers again.</p>
      <p>Hua beckoned two of the guests toward her with an imperious snap.
“Messire Zheng, Messire Tse. Do what you can.”</p>
      <p>Tse and Zheng circled Radko.</p>
      <p>“At least she has the family looks,” Tse murmured.</p>
      <p>“But her hair,” Zheng said. “What a disaster.”</p>
      <p>Hua beckoned again. “Messire Coles.”</p>
      <p>Pieter Coles had been doing the hair for the Radko family ever since
Radko could remember. He’d been the first and only person to cut her
hair until she’d left to join the fleet. He’d been simply “Pieter” back
then. Messire was an old term, once used for a master of a craft but now
mostly fallen out of favor. Maybe it was coming back into fashion, for
Ean’s voice coach insisted on the title “Messire” Gospetto, as well.</p>
      <p>It wasn’t hard to tell what the other two were, with their striking
outfits and their comms extended to full slate mode. Clothes designers.</p>
      <p>Radko stood patiently while the designers made their sketches. She’d
done this often enough as a child to know they would have come in with
their designs mostly complete. After all, what designer threw something
together in half an hour when it would be worn to an audience with the
Emperor of Lancia? This part of the designing was for show.</p>
      <p>“So excited to be a guest of honor at tonight’s party,” Hua said. “And
Michelle will be there. I haven’t seen her in… oh, I forget how long.”</p>
      <p>Radko could have told her mother that Hua had last seen her grandniece
287 days prior, at a function held the day before Michelle had left to
supposedly investigate the confluence. She didn’t. Instead, she stood
silent and thought about her own upcoming meeting.</p>
      <p>Emperor Yu had a habit of springing nasty surprises when he called a
member of his family in for a royal audience, and Radko’s invitation had
come separate from Michelle’s, which meant the Emperor had plans for
both of them.</p>
      <p>She didn’t know which was worse. Worrying about what the Emperor wanted
or worrying about what might happen to Ean while she wasn’t there to
protect him.</p>
      <p>“Dress her to show how important her family is,” Hua said to the
designers. “After all, she is the Emperor’s cousin.”</p>
      <p>A cousin the Emperor didn’t remember existed most of the time.</p>
      <p>Radko’s oldest niece, Claudette, drifted over to talk to Chen and
Saylor. Claudette was two years older than Radko. Hua hadn’t wanted a
second child—after all, Henri was happily married and already producing
grandchildren. But Hua’s nephew, Yu, insisted the family bloodline be
carried by more than a single child. And who would argue with Yu, then
newly ascended to the Lancian throne?</p>
      <p>Saylor couldn’t hide his boredom although the occasional glare from Chen
kept his acidic comments under control.</p>
      <p>What had happened in the Radko family that made Chen desperate to stay
on their side?</p>
      <p>“Take off your jacket,” Tse commanded. “I need to see your arms.”</p>
      <p>Radko did so.</p>
      <p>Tse clapped her hand to her forehead. “Look at them. They’re… hard.”</p>
      <p>“And she has no chest at all,” Zheng said. “Or nothing to speak of.”</p>
      <p>Radko couldn’t tell if they were acting for their audience or genuinely
upset. “Muscle tone never hurt anyone.” If they wanted curves, they
wouldn’t get them from a Lancastrian soldier, especially not someone who
worked for Abram Galenos.</p>
      <p>Commodore Vega now, for Galenos had been promoted to admiral.</p>
      <p>Zheng walked around Radko. “I could make her arms a feature. It would be
unusual.”</p>
      <p>“No,” Hua said, and her horror wasn’t faked. “It would be a show of
strength. We don’t want to challenge anyone. Cover them. Cover them
now,” and she picked up Radko’s jacket and thrust it at her. “I don’t
ever want to see them again.”</p>
      <p>Radko pulled on her jacket. She recognized genuine fear when she saw it.
Had her mother always been so scared of the Emperor?</p>
      <p>“Messires Zheng and Tse will come up with two designs each,” her mother
said. “You must choose one of them. While it’s being made up, I’ll send
Messire Coles in to attend your hair. In the meantime, do us all a favor
and go and wash and change.”</p>
      <p>“I wouldn’t mind some sleep.” Radko was a soldier. She could nap when
she needed to. “It’s evening where I’ve come from.”</p>
      <p>“You won’t have time,” her mother said.</p>
      <p>Radko thought she might snatch a nap, anyway.</p>
      <p>Claudette caught up with her outside the apartment. “Take the Tse
outfit. Grandmama has promised that the designer you don’t choose can
design my dress, and I already know what I want.”</p>
      <p>Radko’s childhood had been made up of bargains and counterbargains like
these. “Make sure Tse designs me something I want to wear, then. I don’t
plan on looking stupid because you want the other designer.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll find a way to send Tse along to your apartment,” Claudette said.</p>
      <p>Radko missed her uniform already, and she was still wearing it.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>“I want a dress I can move in,” Radko told Tse, when she was alone in
her quarters with the designer. “And I want hidden strength.” She was a
soldier. She was dangerous. Emperor Yu would do well to remember that.
Then she remembered her mother’s obvious terror. “Maybe not the
strength.” She didn’t want anything to reflect back negatively on her
family.</p>
      <p>“Clothes you can move in are not fashionable.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll take a Zheng design then.”</p>
      <p>“Your niece wants the Zheng outfit.” Tse took out her comms and extended
it to a full drawing slate. “I can’t design a new dress in half an
hour.” She paused, and looked at Radko. “You seem naïve—unusual for
someone of your position—but your mother is a good customer of mine, so
I’ll give you some advice for free. Don’t antagonize Emperor Yu. I’ve
seen other people try it, like young Ethan Saylor back in your mother’s
rooms. It gets you nowhere except out, and if your family want to retain
any position they have, they would then have to disown you.”</p>
      <p>“Is that what Saylor’s family did?”</p>
      <p>Tse cocked her head to one side and studied Radko, then the design on
her slate. She didn’t answer.</p>
      <p>Radko looked at the design. A sheath dress, so tight she’d have to
mince. “I can’t wear that. I need to move when I want to.”</p>
      <p>“I’m thinking.” Tse changed the image. The new design was much better.
“This I designed for the Crown Princess herself. All designers do, you
know. In case they are ever asked. Not that we’re ever likely to, of
course—Her Royal Highness has her own designers. But we all have half a
design ready to build on. A classic, just in case.”</p>
      <p>Tse modified the design and held up the final image. Tight-fitting
leggings with a swirling, full-length tunic over the top. The tunic had
side slits that went up to the waist. “You’ll be able to run in this.”</p>
      <p>Not without pulling it up, but at least you <emphasis>could</emphasis> pull it up. If she
was desperate, Radko could fling the cloth over her shoulders.</p>
      <p>“The beauty in this is the cloth it’s made from,” Tse said. “It took me
five years to come up with the design. But a soldier like you wouldn’t
appreciate the finer things in life.”</p>
      <p>“Even soldiers like to dress well.”</p>
      <p>Tse sniffed. “I’d believe that more if you’d stopped to change before
you went to your mother’s rooms.” She held up the design.</p>
      <p>Radko nodded approval.</p>
      <p>Afterward, Tse lingered.</p>
      <p>“Is there something else?”</p>
      <p>Tse still hesitated. Finally, she said, “Your mother is one of my best
clients. I hope whatever you’re involved in doesn’t endanger her.”</p>
      <p>“What I’m involved in?” How much did Tse know about Radko’s job? How
much did she know about Ean?</p>
      <p>“Your mother has a lot of new friends. All acquired after we heard you
were coming home.”</p>
      <p>Radko had only been summoned ten days ago.</p>
      <p>“You don’t need friends like Tiana Chen or Ethan Saylor. They’ll discard
you as soon as you’ve finished being useful. As will their mentor,
Sattur Dow.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you,” Radko said. Her mother knew better than she did what a
minefield Lancian politics could be. She would know this already.</p>
      <p>The swirling design on the outfit Tse produced reminded Radko of the
creation scene on the wall in the large crew room on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>Pieter waited with his gels and brushes. “I hardly know what to do with
it,” he said. “The dress takes over.”</p>
      <p>“What about an electrostatic halo,” Radko suggested. If she was to wear
an outfit based on an alien design, she might as well wear her hair the
way it often was when she was around lines.</p>
      <p>“It’s plain,” Pieter said, doubtfully, when he was done. “But it’s
striking enough, I suppose.”</p>
      <p>It felt like home. “I’m used to its being like this.”</p>
      <p>Pieter looked appalled. “Isn’t it dangerous to be close to so much
static all the time?”</p>
      <p>Radko smiled, thinking of Ean, who could throw a man across a shuttle
bay with the help of the lines. “Of course it’s dangerous.” But
perfectly safe, too.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Hua Radko kept up a constant, strained chatter in the aircar on the way
to Baoshan. Radko thought the chatter covered nervousness and a bit of
one-upmanship.</p>
      <p>There were six of them in the car. Radko, her mother, Claudette, Tiana
Chen, Ethan Saylor, and another close friend of her mother’s, who’d been
around seemingly forever.</p>
      <p>“It will be nice to see Michelle again,” Hua said. A subtle reminder to
people like Chen and Saylor that Michelle was a relation. “<emphasis>She</emphasis> dresses
so beautifully.”</p>
      <p>Her mother hadn’t commented on Radko’s dress. Claudette hadn’t either,
but Radko had seen the expression on her niece’s face. Tse had gotten
herself another client out of this and probably started a new fashion.</p>
      <p>“You work with Her Royal Highness,” Chen said to Radko. “You must see
her every day.”</p>
      <p>“No.” If Chen thought Radko had easy access to the Crown Princess, it
was time to disabuse her. “I’m part of a team. We have other duties as
well.” She could get to Michelle more easily than most of her team
could, through Ean, but that was none of Chen’s business.</p>
      <p>“Like guarding the linesmen on the alien ships,” Saylor said.</p>
      <p>That wasn’t general knowledge. “Occasionally,” Radko said. “Her Royal
Highness has a linesman on her staff.” That was known.</p>
      <p>It was night on Confluence Station. Ean would be in bed.</p>
      <p>“And we’ll have access to that linesman.” Saylor rubbed his hands
together. “Imagine. We’ll own the universe.”</p>
      <p>Lancia was never going to get free access to Ean. Not without Michelle
as intermediary. Nor without Radko at Ean’s back to protect him. Yet
most Lancastrians assumed that because Ean was Lancastrian, they had an
advantage over the other worlds. Radko wouldn’t have thought anything
more about his comment except that Chen jabbed her fan into Saylor’s leg
as he opened his mouth to speak again.</p>
      <p>It was supposed to be unobtrusive, but any trained observer would have
picked it up.</p>
      <p>Why did Chen want Saylor to shut up?</p>
      <p>“Have you ever been on one of the alien ships?” Chen asked, in what
Radko thought was a deliberate attempt to change the conversation.</p>
      <p>“Captain Helmo arranged for the crew of the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> to
see the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.” She’d been plenty of times before that visit, of
course, and afterward, but she knew how to deflect this conversation.
“We wore suits and UV goggles. You couldn’t see much.”</p>
      <p>“Suits?” Chen asked. “So the air isn’t breathable?”</p>
      <p>Radko shrugged, like a junior guard who didn’t know much about the
atmosphere on the spaceship and didn’t much care. “Orders,” she said.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> was fully oxygenated now, not a trace of alien atmosphere
left. The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> only had oxygen to the small area between the
regular shuttle bay they used and the bridge, plus a few other areas
they had explored thoroughly.</p>
      <p>“What was it like?” Chen asked. “The ship, I mean.”</p>
      <p>Everyone was interested in the ship. “Big,” Radko said. “You walk a long
way to get anywhere. There wasn’t much to see, really.”</p>
      <p>“And the equipment?”</p>
      <p>Radko shrugged. “It was alien.”</p>
      <p>“But linesmen can read the boards?”</p>
      <p>Chen seemed to know a lot about the alien ships. The question made Radko
uneasy.</p>
      <p>“That’s the theory.” It was common knowledge that linesmen were required
for the alien ships.</p>
      <p>Hua Radko said, “We’ve a Lancastrian in charge of the project, but what
have we seen? No alien technology. Not using the ships to attack Gate
Union. When does Lancia get some benefit from this?”</p>
      <p>Civilians always expected things to happen immediately. And to happen
solely for their own world’s benefit. “One ship has been crewed.” Or
partly crewed, anyway. “These things take time.”</p>
      <p>“We’ve been at war months. We should have blasted Gate Union out of
space by now. We’ve seen what the ships can do.”</p>
      <p>“Maybe the New Alliance is preventing Lancia from acting.” Chen watched
Radko carefully, as she added, “After all, Galenos has only recently
been promoted to admiral. Maybe he finds himself outclassed.”</p>
      <p>No one had ever accused Abram Galenos of being outclassed before. He’d
worked with the admirals on Lancia as an equal, even when he’d only been
a commodore.</p>
      <p>It was time Radko started shutting Chen down. She laughed. “I doubt it.
I’ve seen some of the trials. The ship is dangerous. The New Alliance
doesn’t want civilian casualties. They’ll bring the ship out when they
need it.”</p>
      <p>They landed then, to her relief, for she didn’t want to spend hours
talking about the alien ships. Not with these people.</p>
      <p>They waited in a private room off the public concourse of the palace.
Radko saw four cameras. The people who were watching them would be part
of her own unit. The Royal Guard.</p>
      <p>The Royal Guard was split into three branches. The largest was the
division that dealt with the security for the Emperor himself and was
headed by Commodore Sergey Bach. As a child, Radko had been scared of
him. Thinking about it now, she realized it was her mother’s fear, for
her mother had impressed on her early that Bach had the power to kill
them if they so much as looked at Yu the wrong way.</p>
      <p>Her mother must be terrified of Emperor Yu.</p>
      <p>The Crown Princess’s division was headed by the recently appointed Jiang
Vega.</p>
      <p>The third division, the group that looked after other members of the
royal family, was run by Captain Ah Ning, who answered to Commodore
Bach.</p>
      <p>Finally, it was time.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Emperor Yu was a striking man, genetically tweaked to be handsome and
powerful. He was approaching sixty years of age but looked half that.
Two Royal Guards stood inside the door, on either side, another two on
either side of the throne, and two more partway between, close to where
the visitors would stand when they had their audience.</p>
      <p>Aside from the throne, there was only one other seat in the room, a long
chair placed at right angles to the throne. The seat was already
occupied by Sattur Dow, a close friend of Emperor Yu’s.</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow’s presence was worrying.</p>
      <p>Radko bowed low and held the bow for as long as protocol demanded, and a
bit longer. After all, she didn’t plan on disgracing her family.</p>
      <p>She kept her face expressionless. “Your Imperial Majesty.”</p>
      <p>He said nothing.</p>
      <p>The Emperor was famous for keeping his visitors waiting. Sometimes, he’d
make the visitor wait ten or fifteen minutes before he spoke.</p>
      <p>Radko knew how to deal with that. She stood at ease, hands behind her
back, and stared ahead as if she were at parade assembly. She could
stand that way for hours. Although she would have preferred better shoes
to do it in.</p>
      <p>Maybe it worked, for the Emperor broke the silence in less than two
minutes. “Cousin.” Or maybe the short time was for Sattur Dow’s benefit.</p>
      <p>“Cousin.” Radko bowed again.</p>
      <p>Emperor Yu steepled his hands. She couldn’t tell what he was thinking.
“I trust you are well.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you, I am. And yourself, likewise?” Dow hadn’t been introduced
yet, so she didn’t inquire after his health.</p>
      <p>“Of course,” the Emperor said, as if there was never any doubt. “I hear
you are protecting my daughter.”</p>
      <p>“It is an honor to serve as one of Her Royal Highness’s guards.”</p>
      <p>“Yet you are not guarding my daughter at all.”</p>
      <p>“I beg your pardon?”</p>
      <p>“You are bodyguard to Linesman Lambert.”</p>
      <p>“Who is a member of Her Royal Highness’s staff, and Her Royal Highness
herself has requested that protection.” Was this what he had called her
home for? To reprimand her?</p>
      <p>“You spend a lot of time on the alien ships.”</p>
      <p>He’d better not ask her to spy for him because this conversation was
going straight back to Vega and Galenos. “I have spent some time on the
alien ships, yes.”</p>
      <p>The Emperor smiled. “You see,” he said to Sattur Dow. “I promise, and I
deliver.”</p>
      <p>Saylor and Chen’s belief that they would soon get access to a linesman
suddenly made sense. Especially given Tse’s earlier comment about their
mentor being Sattur Dow.</p>
      <p>That was going straight back to Vega and Galenos as well.</p>
      <p>“But I have been remiss, cousin,” Emperor Yu said. “I summoned you here
for a reason. Please allow me to introduce your future husband, Sattur
Dow.”</p>
      <p>It wasn’t a surprise. The Emperor didn’t invite relatives like her to
the Imperial Palace for any other reason. Most of the family members
Radko had grown up with had already received their summonses. Radko
fully expected that when the time came, she would do her duty as well.</p>
      <p>She went down on one knee and bowed deep—partly in acquiescence, partly
to hide her dismay.</p>
      <p>“My cousin accompanies the linesman to every function,” Emperor Yu said,
above her head to Sattur Dow. “You will have ample opportunity to speak
with him.”</p>
      <p>How did Dow did think he was going to get access to the functions Ean
attended?</p>
      <p>“My cousin is a dutiful soldier. She is also a dutiful employee of the
Crown.” He directed the next words to Radko. “Cousin, you will take
every opportunity to allow your new husband to speak to your charge.”</p>
      <p>Never. If she allowed Dow access to Ean, she was failing her job. She
wasn’t going to be Yu’s pawn. But the Emperor had given her an order. If
she refused, it was treason, and he had every right to kill her.</p>
      <p>If she was going to die, she’d do it her way.</p>
      <p>Radko looked up. “I wish you had spoken to me earlier, in private,
Cousin.” Not the Imperial form of address, for this had to sound
personal, not professional.</p>
      <p>It <emphasis>was</emphasis> personal.</p>
      <p>It was also her job—her right—to protect Ean. Giving Sattur Dow access
wasn’t protecting him.</p>
      <p>She stood, breathing deep to stop the tremble that threatened, and bowed
to Sattur Dow. Lower than she might have otherwise. “No insult intended,
Merchant Dow, but I have a career, a life. It doesn’t include a
partner.” It might have included a partner, but not the one Yu was
proposing.</p>
      <p>Emperor Yu’s expression didn’t change, but his voice was cold when he
said, “You insult me with your rudeness.”</p>
      <p>“You insult both of us by not discussing this with me privately first.”
She bowed to Sattur Dow again and hid her icy hands in the folds of
material.</p>
      <p>The stance of the guards changed subtly. None of them had moved, but
Radko could see they were ready. She couldn’t take on six guards on her
own. Not Royal Guards. Right now, she would have liked Ean and line
eight backing her up.</p>
      <p>“You forget yourself, cousin,” Emperor Yu said.</p>
      <p>“No. You forget <emphasis>yourself</emphasis>, Cousin. There is nothing in the laws of
Lancia that says another Lancastrian must marry a person of the
Emperor’s choosing.” If she had to make such a futile stand, she might
as well do it properly. “The only reason other members of the family
have done so is because you are head of our family and have arranged the
marriage.”</p>
      <p>And because they were scared of him.</p>
      <p>He was about to kill her, and she couldn’t do anything about that. Not
that he’d kill her himself; he wouldn’t soil his hands. One of those
guards standing tense with their hands near their weapons would do the
deed.</p>
      <p>She hoped Ean’s new bodyguard would look after him properly.</p>
      <p>The Emperor looked at the guard to Radko’s left.</p>
      <p>Radko looked at him, too. He’d better look her in the eye while he shot
her.</p>
      <p>“Wait.” Sattur Dow spoke with such urgency that the guard paused at his
command. How much power did Dow have?</p>
      <p>Emperor Yu’s eyes narrowed. He shifted his cold gaze from Radko to
Sattur Dow, and maybe, just for a moment, Dow remembered how easy it was
to fall out of favor with the ruler of Lancia. At least, Radko hoped he
did.</p>
      <p>“I will not have my orders challenged.”</p>
      <p>“Your cousin is emotional and overwrought.” Dow held Yu’s gaze. “If we
give her time to reconsider, I’m sure she’ll come around.”</p>
      <p>The Emperor’s face darkened into a scowl.</p>
      <p>“I have already made <emphasis>plans</emphasis>,” Sattur Dow said. “The wedding. Our
future. I would hate to see them <emphasis>ruined</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>The emphasis was so slight that if she hadn’t been listening for it,
Radko wouldn’t have heard it.</p>
      <p>“Plans. Of course.” Emperor Yu waved dismissively at Radko. “Get out of
my sight before I change my mind.”</p>
      <p>She bowed to Dow, ignored the Emperor altogether, and kept her back
straight as she walked to the door.</p>
      <p>“And cousin.”</p>
      <p>Radko looked back.</p>
      <p>“Prepare for your wedding.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_three_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER THREE: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>A whump in the walls and the sudden movement of the station jerked Ean
out of a restless sleep. The wee-wah of a hull-breach alert brought him
upright hurriedly, only to fly out of bed as something hit the station
with enough force to turn it.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“What’s happening?”</emphasis> he sang to the lines.</p>
      <p>Line eight came in strong. <emphasis>“A ship. Firing at us.”</emphasis></p>
      <p><emphasis>“Which ship?”</emphasis> Ean made for the cupboard containing his space suit, the
location of which Radko had ensured he knew before she left. As he
pulled it on—it still took fifteen seconds—two suited guards burst in.
Hana and Gossamer.</p>
      <p>Hana checked his suit.</p>
      <p>He only half noticed, sorting through the images from the exterior of
the station, trying to match them to the sound of the ship the lines had
sent him. That one. A freighter, the type that delivered the station
supplies every three days. He listened to the lines, heard the damage to
lines two and three, watched the bulwarks slam shut, heard the station
chatter through line five.</p>
      <p>“… Exploded in the shuttle bay.”</p>
      <p>“We’re under attack,” Ean said. “Something in the shuttle bay exploded.”
The external air lock had bowed out, but inside was a gaping hole that
went for half a corridor. The inner air lock must have been open.</p>
      <p>The station rocked again. There was another soft whump along the walls.
“That’s a bomb,” Gossamer said. He pushed Ean out into the central area.</p>
      <p>In the central room, Sale was trying to pull up screens. Nothing. She
pounded on a panel in frustration. “We put in state-of-the-art
equipment, and it doesn’t work.”</p>
      <p>“That’s because the lines are down, sweetheart.” Rossi was still pulling
on his suit.</p>
      <p>“What? All of them?”</p>
      <p>They wouldn’t have air in this part of the station if that were the
case.</p>
      <p>“No,” Ean said. “Where the damage is.” He was already singing to the
damaged lines. Line six, first, because it was more damaged than the
others. Why did everyone try to damage line six? Because they controlled
the engines, he supposed, but there were other ways to disable a ship.</p>
      <p>“What’s happening?” Sale demanded of him.</p>
      <p>What did she need to know? What would Abram or Michelle, or even Radko,
want to know? “There’s a freighter firing at us.”</p>
      <p>“Show me.”</p>
      <p>He sang up the station control center and the call going out right now.
“Emergency. Emergency. Confluence Station is under attack.” He routed
lines farther, to the other ships in the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet, and only
realized he’d sent the signal to all of them—the media ships
included—when he saw the flurry of activity it caused.</p>
      <p>Another bomb hit jerked him off his feet. Ean stayed on the floor. More
damaged lines. He sang them straight, aware of Rossi singing with him.</p>
      <p>Sale opened the comms to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>, the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>, the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. And to Abram—still pulling on his shirt—on
Haladea III. “Are you getting this?”</p>
      <p>“Affirmative,” Wendell said. “The attacker is an unmarked merchant
freighter but those weapons are military grade. Could have come from
anywhere. We’ll be an hour reaching you.” The ships—except the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> — were already moving. The <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> had six bombs,
the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> none. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> was the only ship that could save them.</p>
      <p>“The freighter will be ready for us,” Kari Wang, captain of the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, said. “As soon as we get close they’ll jump. Meantime, they’ll
do as much damage as they can.”</p>
      <p>“Who let them get that close?” Captain Gruen demanded.</p>
      <p>“No idea,” Sale said. “How heavily armed is their ship?” She scowled at
the screen, then turned to look behind her. “Ean.” She was beside him in
an instant. “Do you need oxygen? What’s wrong with you? Why didn’t any
of you notice?”</p>
      <p>“Nothing’s wrong.” Ean got to his feet. “I’m fine, Sale.”</p>
      <p>“What are you doing down there, then?”</p>
      <p>“I fell.” The recoil as another bomb hit the station knocked him down
again. “You wanted something.”</p>
      <p>“I want to see that ship. I want to see their specs.”</p>
      <p>He had no idea what she meant, and Radko wasn’t here to translate. He
guessed, and pulled a feed from one of the cameras on the bridge of the
attacking freighter.</p>
      <p>He’d prevented a nonfleet ship from using weapons once before, hadn’t
he? But that had been by stopping the order going out through line five
rather than by stopping the actual firing of the weapon.</p>
      <p>Sale tapped a board on the image he’d put up for her. “Give me a
close-up of that.”</p>
      <p>He zoomed in. It looked like the weapons board on the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis>. The stats looked the same, too, with everything green and the
bars high.</p>
      <p>“Shit. There’ll be nothing left of us in an hour.”</p>
      <p>Dead bodies lay everywhere on the station. People in the outer sections
crowded into the inner sections, trampling the slow and the weak.</p>
      <p>Another explosion, this one from a slightly different place. The
freighter was moving down the side of the station, planting minibombs as
it went. Ean pulled the feed tracking the freighter from an external
camera on the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>Sale pounded the board. “We’re a sitting target, and we can’t do a
thing.”</p>
      <p>“Isn’t the station armed?” Ean asked.</p>
      <p>“No.” Sale looked away from the bodies. “Let’s get you to a shuttle,
Ean.” Her voice was bleak, full of the horror of walking away from all
this. “You, too,” to Rossi.</p>
      <p>They couldn’t walk away and leave a station full of people to their
fate.</p>
      <p>“Can’t we do something?” Ean asked.</p>
      <p>“Our job is to protect you. Not them. Let’s move, Ean. Before they clog
the shuttle bays in their panic.”</p>
      <p>“Too late for that.” Ru Li indicated the shuttle bays on the side of the
station opposite the freighter. The passageways were jammed with people
headed for the shuttles.</p>
      <p>“Where’s the station manager?” Sale demanded. “He should be stopping
this.”</p>
      <p>“In hospital, sweetheart.” Rossi had stayed calm and immovable
throughout. Did he ever panic? “He had a heart attack last night.
Remember.”</p>
      <p>How convenient was that heart attack now?</p>
      <p>“What about his second then?”</p>
      <p>“Fighting fires,” Ean said, and he meant it literally, for the older man
who’d been present in the stationmaster’s office last night was using a
fire extinguisher to put out an electrical fire. “What can we do, Sale?”</p>
      <p>“Get you to safety.”</p>
      <p>That wasn’t what Ean had meant.</p>
      <p>“The shuttles are too dangerous,” Bhaksir said.</p>
      <p>Leaving by shuttle was only going to save those on the shuttle. There
were two thousand people on Confluence Station. Ean looked around for
inspiration. The station was part of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet. Could the lines
do something?</p>
      <p>“Are they shooting at shuttles, or just at the ship?” Sale asked.</p>
      <p>“The ship, but they’re not dodging the shuttles either.”</p>
      <p>Another explosion spun them in a crazy circle until line
four—gravity—kicked in.</p>
      <p>Sale looked at the screens. “They’ve another layer of station to destroy
before they get here. Ready some lifepods for the linesmen.” She turned
to Ean and Rossi. “You two do what you can to disrupt them in the
meantime.”</p>
      <p>“I hate to point out the obvious,” Rossi said, “but mere tens need to be
closer to the lines to do much.”</p>
      <p>“Ean then. I don’t care what you do. Put static in the lines for all I
care. Blast them with noise at full volume. Anything to distract them.”</p>
      <p>Noise might be a deterrent. Ean chose someone having hysterics and
forwarded it through to the freighter. He pushed the volume up on the
comms and continued to keep it up.</p>
      <p>As a deterrent, it worked for about two minutes.</p>
      <p>He had to hold them off for an hour, and according to Kari Wang, the
freighter would jump before their own ships got close enough to attack,
anyway.</p>
      <p>He couldn’t hold them off for that long.</p>
      <p>How did he reduce the time for a ship to get there, to fight them? There
was only one way that he could think of. Through the void.</p>
      <p>The only fully armed ships were the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> and the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, and the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> was not around.</p>
      <p>Ean sang to the lines on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. <emphasis>“We’re being attacked.”</emphasis> He
showed them the freighter and Confluence Station. <emphasis>“You need to jump
close enough to defend us.”</emphasis> He changed his tune to target specific
lines. Line seven, to keep the ships together in the void, but to allow
them to jump a single ship. Line nine, to enter the void, and line ten
to make the jump.</p>
      <p>Rossi lunged at Ean. “Stop him. He’s crazy. He’ll kill us all.”</p>
      <p>He was too late, for they were in the void.</p>
      <p>In the infinity that was the void, Ean had time to straighten the
damaged lines on station.</p>
      <p>That wasn’t right. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> was supposed to jump, not the station.</p>
      <p>They exited the void. Ean couldn’t tell who was swearing the loudest.
Sale, Kari Wang, or the freighter captain.</p>
      <p>“Ean,” Abram said, and Ean concentrated on that, for everyone else was
yelling at him. “You’ve switched places with the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, and Captain
Kari Wang is heading at full speed for the freighter.”</p>
      <p>The station wasn’t supposed to jump.</p>
      <p>“Ean,” Abram was insistent. “If you don’t do something in the next three
minutes, she’ll hit it.”</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> rocked then anyway, under a shot intended for Confluence
Station.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Protect yourself,”</emphasis> Ean said to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. <emphasis>“That field.”</emphasis> For it
was the only thing he could think of. Then added hurriedly, <emphasis>“But don’t
kill us.”</emphasis> The field had a limit of two hundred kilometers. Abram
insisted each fleet ship stayed at least twice that distance apart.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“We won’t destroy you.”</emphasis> The lines were a comforting sound in his head.
<emphasis>“You are of our line.”</emphasis> The resonance on line eight changed to include
the special song that was the green protective field.</p>
      <p>Inside the freighter, the captain was yelling, “Reverse thrusters. And
for the lines’ sake, get that jump ready.”</p>
      <p>The song extended in a thick, green stream. It reached the first of the
fleeing shuttles, flicked them like motes of dust. Ean thought he heard
the sonorous song of the void underneath it.</p>
      <p>It reached the freighter.</p>
      <p>“Jump,” the freighter captain said.</p>
      <p>The freighter lines disappeared.</p>
      <p>Ean pushed Rossi away and dragged himself to his feet. There was a
difference between a jump and a push, and that had been a push. But
where had the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> pushed the freighter to? The void? He thought
he’d heard the void come in at the end.</p>
      <p>Rossi snarled. “You are insane.”</p>
      <p>“Nicely done, Ean,” Abram said.</p>
      <p>Ean looked around the room. Everyone was laughing. The insane
after-battle-adrenaline laughter. Through the comms, he heard Wendell
say to Kari Wang, “Nice control there.” It was seconded by Helmo and
Gruen.</p>
      <p>“Thank you.” Kari Wang was still swearing. “No thanks to Lambert. But
when we’ve learned to use this thing properly, we’ll be able to turn it
on a pinhead.”</p>
      <p>Ean decided to keep out of Kari Wang’s way for a while.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The attack was midnight news. Here, and—if you believed Ru Li—throughout
the Lancian sector as well. Ean hoped Radko’s family was keeping her
occupied enough to keep her away from the vids.</p>
      <p>Abram gave a press conference in person this time. Ean watched it from
his rooms on Confluence Station. He didn’t go into the shared area, for
Rossi still twitched when he came near. He seriously considered singing
Rossi’s lines calmer, but that wasn’t going to end anywhere good.</p>
      <p>He watched the Blue Sky Media feed. Sean Watanabe hadn’t been so
animated in months.</p>
      <p>“Is the New Alliance ready to move against Gate Union at last?
Yesterday, they unveiled new technology in the form of intersector
communication. Today, they showed what power the alien ships have given
them. An hour ago local time, a disguised freighter attacked Confluence
Station and was repelled by one of the alien ships. Is this the next
step in their war against Gate Union?”</p>
      <p>Ean flicked over to Galactic News, where Coral Zabi was interviewing
someone in a mottled purple uniform. “And what of the rumors that the
New Alliance staged the attack themselves to demonstrate how powerful
the alien ships are? We have with us Admiral Markan, from Roscracia.”</p>
      <p>Markan was the military commander of Gate Union, although—according to
Abram and Michelle—he was struggling to keep that command right now.
Especially given that his plan to win the war by denying the New
Alliance access to jumps wasn’t going as well as he’d planned. Not only
that, the Redmond/Gate Union accord was shaky right now, and that had to
be worrying Markan, for the line factories were all on Redmond worlds.
If Redmond went its own way, Gate Union was as vulnerable as the New
Alliance. It was all very well to control the jumps, but if Gate Union
didn’t have line ships to jump with, they weren’t any better off than
the New Alliance.</p>
      <p>Zabi turned a professional smile on Markan. “Before we start, can you
tell us where you are right now, Admiral?”</p>
      <p>“Merchett,” Markan said.</p>
      <p>Merchett was the major Gate Union world in the Lancian sector. Ean
smiled. It must have hurt Markan to say that. Especially since Markan’s
home world, Roscracia, was three sectors on from Lancia and half a
galaxy away from the Haladean Cluster. He would have made the trip
specially to find out if the rumors of instantaneous communication were
true.</p>
      <p>He was finding out they were.</p>
      <p>“And I’m Coral Zabi, from Galactic News, currently situated close to the
New Alliance capital, Haladea III. Galactic News is making history
tonight, being the first to report live in real time between sectors.”
Zabi smiled her professional smile again.</p>
      <p>From the scowl on Markan’s face, he hadn’t planned on being part of that
history.</p>
      <p>“Admiral, did Gate Union attack Confluence Station earlier?”</p>
      <p>Ean sighed. Markan’s answer would be as slippery as one of Abram’s.</p>
      <p>Sure enough. “We are at war. Why would we hide the fact that we are
attacking our enemy by disguising the attacker as a freighter?”</p>
      <p>Maybe because a Gate Union battle cruiser wouldn’t have gotten anywhere
near as close.</p>
      <p>“So you believe this was a message from the New Alliance,” Zabi
suggested. “Showing what they could do. You think they would pretend to
attack one of their own bases?”</p>
      <p>“It’s hard to know what to think,” Markan said. “I don’t know what the
New Alliance planned. Fact. Gate Union is at war with the New Alliance.”
He paused long enough for Zabi to open her mouth to ask the next
question. “I imagine the New Alliance was waiting for an opportunity to
show off that particular piece of technology. A controlled experiment
might be safer for them than taking their showpiece into a real war
situation, and the New Alliance might well consider the station
expendable.</p>
      <p>Expendable. All those people who had died. Yet Zabi was nodding.</p>
      <p>Ean switched back to Blue Sky Media. They were showing the jump and what
had happened after.</p>
      <p>From the outside, looking in, it didn’t look much. You couldn’t see the
explosions. The station spun a little, but not as noticeably as it had
when you were on it. If it hadn’t been for the feed Ean had sent
through—which was showing on half the screen—you might not have known it
was under attack.</p>
      <p>Suddenly, Confluence Station wasn’t there and the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> was. Heading
at speed toward the freighter.</p>
      <p>They weren’t getting the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> feed. Ean was glad about that.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>’s green field pulsed out. Both the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> and the
freighter fired thrusters. The green field enveloped the freighter.</p>
      <p>Ean switched off the vid.</p>
      <p>As well as the freighter, they had destroyed every shuttle in a
two-hundred-kilometer radius. Shuttles with people on them. Innocent
people who’d been trying to escape. Innocent people who’d been going
about their business ferrying goods, until Ean had unleashed the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>He would have liked to talk to Radko about it. She wouldn’t judge. She
wouldn’t say, “It’s war, don’t worry about it.” She’d listen.</p>
      <p>What was the problem with Radko’s family, anyway? Radko had once said
the crew on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> was her family. That Abram
Galenos had given her a life.</p>
      <p>Why wouldn’t anyone talk about what was wrong?</p>
      <p>The lines must have picked up some of his worry, for Jordan Rossi’s own
thoughts came through the lines. <emphasis>“Hey, Bastard, sing your own lines
straight rather than corrupting everything on the station.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Ean sighed and lay back on his bed.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_four_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER FOUR: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>Iris recognition got Radko into the barracks, where she hunted up an old
squad mate she hadn’t seen in years. Toll had been at headquarters
forever.</p>
      <p>“It’s a little early for partying,” Toll said. “Incidentally, your
hair’s sticking out like you’ve plugged your arm into an electricity
supply.”</p>
      <p>She fixed that by pulling off the cleverly designed hairpiece Pieter had
made for her. “Do me a favor, Toll. I’ll owe you forever. My kit is in
the Emerald waiting room at the palace. Can you send a guard to collect
it?” Toll was a group leader. He’d have the authority to send someone.</p>
      <p>“Emerald. We do live the high life. A little too grand for a simple
spacer now. Or are you team leader?”</p>
      <p>Another advantage was that Toll knew about her family.</p>
      <p>“Please, Toll.” She was begging, and he could see it.</p>
      <p>“Owe me forever, right.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you. I’m going to wash this makeup off.”</p>
      <p>She recycled the fresher twice before Toll arrived back with her kit,
but she couldn’t wash the stupidity out. What was done was done. Should
she warn her family?</p>
      <p>“Your kit’s here,” Toll said. “And the guard I sent said there were a
lot of minor dignitaries in that room. All twittering.”</p>
      <p>Twittering. What an apt word. Radko smiled as she came out to dress.</p>
      <p>The bag vibrated. Her comms. She ignored it while she pulled on her
uniform.</p>
      <p>“And she said someone wants you really badly. They called you four times
on the way across.”</p>
      <p>Radko could imagine what it was about. She ignored it.</p>
      <p>Dressed, cleansed of all her makeup, she felt capable of thinking again.</p>
      <p>She had to tell Vega and Galenos what had happened. Vega was here, on
Lancia, but she’d be at the palace. Not the smartest place to talk when
you wanted to inform on Emperor Yu. Should she go back to the ship and
report to Captain Helmo instead?</p>
      <p>At least Dow had given her enough of a reprieve to report to someone.</p>
      <p>“That’s much better. You look like you.” Toll focused on the braid on
her shoulders. “Royal Guard. We are moving up.”</p>
      <p>Radko slung her kit bag over her shoulder. “Thank you, Toll.”</p>
      <p>“Although seriously, Radko. Don’t stay too long in the Royal Guard. It’s
a career killer.”</p>
      <p>“It’s been fun, lately.”</p>
      <p>Her bag vibrated again.</p>
      <p>She didn’t want to talk to them. Unless… maybe it wasn’t about her.
Maybe it was about Ean. She snatched the comms out of her bag.</p>
      <p>Vega.</p>
      <p>She clicked it on.</p>
      <p>“I hope you haven’t done anything stupid,” Vega said, by way of
greeting.</p>
      <p>It wasn’t about Ean. It was about her. “I might have done, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>Vega sighed. “Where are you?”</p>
      <p>“At the barracks, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>“<emphasis>Which</emphasis> barracks?”</p>
      <p>“Baoshan Barracks.” As if there was more than one.</p>
      <p>“So you’re still on Lancia?”</p>
      <p>“Yes, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>“That’s something to be grateful for. Report to me. Now. I’m at the
palace.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, ma’am.” That solved one problem. Vega must know something already.
She’d want to hear the rest.</p>
      <p>“It will take you twenty minutes. If you’re a minute late, I want to
know why.”</p>
      <p>“What a dictator,” Toll said, as Radko slipped the comms into her
pocket. “Who is she?”</p>
      <p>“My boss. Gotta go. Thanks, Toll. I owe you.” Radko took off at a run.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Radko arrived at the palace barracks as paramedics wheeled a stretcher
out. It was Sasha Martinsson, one of Michelle’s bodyguards.</p>
      <p>Vega took her job as head of Princess Michelle’s security seriously.
Anything that got in the way of her doing her job upset her. Sure
enough, she was scowling at the empty space in the assembled team where
Martinsson would have been.</p>
      <p>“What are the chances of one of my crew collapsing two minutes before
they’re due to escort Her Royal Highness to the Emperor?” Vega demanded
of Radko.</p>
      <p>“Low,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>Commodore Bach, in charge of the Emperor’s Royal Guard, stood beside
Vega. “We can supply a guard for you.”</p>
      <p>“One I don’t know? I’d rather go in understaffed.”</p>
      <p>She wouldn’t, of course, and she couldn’t go in herself. That would look
bad. “You,” to Radko. “Get in line.”</p>
      <p>Radko obediently got in line. Yu wouldn’t recognize her. She hoped. He
didn’t recognize house staff or guards. They were like furniture, and
just as dispensable. But Bach’s soldiers would.</p>
      <p>Or maybe not. She was in uniform now, without the makeup that had
covered her face. They might recognize her as a relative of the Emperor,
but he had lots of relatives—particularly illegitimate ones, for Emperor
Yu’s relationships had been prolific in his youth—and there were half a
dozen in the fleet.</p>
      <p>It was too late, anyway, for they were already marching out the door.</p>
      <p>“Wait.” Vega put a hand to Radko’s arm to stop her. The whole team
stopped as a synchronized unit. “This stupidity of yours. How urgently
does it need fixing?”</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow wanted something. He’d organized a reprieve. Could it wait?
Probably. Unless Emperor Yu recognized and killed her this time.</p>
      <p>“It can wait,” Radko said, and the team marched out.</p>
      <p>Down the corridor, away from anyone who was likely to pry, Radko said
quietly to Ashleigh, beside her. “In case I don’t survive tonight, tell
Vega I don’t trust Sattur Dow. He has plans.”</p>
      <p>Ashleigh’s shock was palpable. “You think Sattur Dow was behind the
bombing of Confluence Station?”</p>
      <p>Radko misstepped—she never misstepped—and concentrated on getting back
the rhythm.</p>
      <p>“No,” but then they were outside the princess’s apartments, and Michelle
was walking out to join them. They surrounded her, like the well-trained
protective machine they were, and marched her to the throne room.</p>
      <p>Radko’s training let her make the right moves, which was just as well,
for she wasn’t thinking about them any longer. What had happened on
Confluence Station?</p>
      <p>Was Ean all right?</p>
      <p>What if Ean wasn’t there to protect? What if he’d been killed in the
attack? What would that do to the line ships? No wonder Vega had asked
if she had done anything stupid.</p>
      <p>They entered the throne room.</p>
      <p>Radko took in the changes at a glance.</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow had gone. The guards had changed.</p>
      <p>Michelle moved to sit on the seat Sattur Dow had been sitting on before.
She was smiling. “Father. It’s good to see you looking so well.”</p>
      <p>Of all the Emperor’s family, the Radko branch included, Michelle was
possibly the only one who retained a genuine affection for the Emperor.</p>
      <p>“One cannot say the same of you,” Yu said. “You are looking tired. That
last news conference you gave.” He waved a hand. “Perhaps you are
working too hard.”</p>
      <p>Radko stared straight ahead. She couldn’t tell if the comment was
genuine concern, delivered badly, or a veiled dig.</p>
      <p>“It won’t be forever,” Michelle said. “It’s for Lancia, and we both want
the best for our home.”</p>
      <p>“For Lancia. Yes. Although, Daughter, I have some concerns regarding
what you perceive as good for Lancia.”</p>
      <p>“I do not understand.”</p>
      <p>“It is for this reason I have called you home. Without your shadow.”</p>
      <p>“My shadow?” Radko couldn’t read the look Michelle gave her father. “It
is unusual for you to be so oblique, Father.”</p>
      <p>“Then let me be blunt. Lancia has half a garrison on Haladea III, plus a
number of high-ranking executives and statesmen.”</p>
      <p>“Hand-chosen,” Michelle agreed. “People who will bolster Lancia’s
standing in the New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>“Therein lies our problem, doesn’t it? They have been chosen by you. You
and Admiral Galenos. Yet you block me and my representatives.”</p>
      <p>Michelle stilled. “I assume we are talking about my refusal to allow
Sattur Dow to set up offices on Haladea III.”</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow again. Had Michelle’s refusal triggered Yu’s plan to provide
Dow access through Radko?</p>
      <p>“Your refusal. Or Galenos’s?”</p>
      <p>“Mine.” It was firm. “The worlds of the New Alliance associate Merchant
Dow too closely with the palace here at Baoshan. They believe that
anything Dow does is with your tacit approval, and with some advantage
to you. We cannot afford to lose all our goodwill. Sattur Dow’s
reputation as a ruthless businessman who destroys everything that gets
in his way is well deserved.”</p>
      <p>“So is that of Merchant Pact, from Yaolin, and Merchant Fanko—”</p>
      <p>“As is your reputation for swooping in after Dow has destabilized
commerce and taking concessions for Lancia.”</p>
      <p>“Only a foolish man would ignore something ripe for the picking. Ignore
it, and other worlds get the fruit.”</p>
      <p>“Rightly or wrongly, the New Alliance sees Sattur Dow both as a threat
to the economy of Haladea III and as the beginning of Lancia’s
attempting to take control of the New Alliance government. They see it
as Lancia’s attempt to take over the commerce of the Haladean worlds.
And once we own the commerce, to control the government, for that is
what happened on Pasko.”</p>
      <p>Michelle paused. “I see that, too.” She sounded calm, but her back was
damp. “We cannot afford to lose what support we have by bringing in
people other worlds don’t trust.”</p>
      <p>The Emperor stood to pace. Radko watched him, while the guards on either
side of her kept their eyes on the Emperor’s guards. “In the old
Alliance, Lancia never had problems placing people.”</p>
      <p>“The old Alliance was losing a war,” Michelle said. “This is not that
Alliance. This is a new governing body with a different structure.
Lancia cannot simply walk in and take over. They have equal power with
sixty-nine other worlds.”</p>
      <p>“And we agreed to that?”</p>
      <p>“We did. You know as well as I do that had we not, we would be a
second-rate Gate Union world right now. Or at the top of a third-rate
Alliance with maybe ten worlds left.”</p>
      <p>“I took my daughter’s advice. Maybe I was misinformed.”</p>
      <p>Michelle sighed. “Maybe you are getting bad advice from elsewhere,
Father. Or your wits have finally left you permanently.”</p>
      <p>Yu swung around. “My daughter certainly isn’t giving me any advice.
Other than to stay away.”</p>
      <p>The turn placed him face-on to Radko. If he recognized her, he didn’t
show it. Radko watched his movements without seeming to.</p>
      <p>“Maybe I am not the one getting bad advice. Admiral Galenos also voted
against my request.”</p>
      <p>He swung around to face Michelle again. “What advice is he giving <emphasis>you</emphasis>,
Daughter?”</p>
      <p>A flush flamed Michelle’s skin, and fire sparked deep in her eyes. She
lifted her chin, and her tone crackled ice as she said, “You should
apologize for that. Abram Galenos works for Lancia.”</p>
      <p>An answering spark ignited in her father’s eyes. He turned away. Radko
thought his lips quirked in the beginnings of a smile, quickly tamed.</p>
      <p>“So ready to defend him.” Emperor Yu resumed pacing. Maybe it hadn’t
been a smile. Radko couldn’t tell if he was genuinely angry or acting.</p>
      <p>“I am the ruler of Lancia. Where is <emphasis>my</emphasis> seat on the council? Where is
<emphasis>my</emphasis> vote on matters concerning my world? Where is <emphasis>my</emphasis> voice? Last
week, the council voted that each world would crew its own alien ship.
What power do we have?”</p>
      <p>“Equal power with other worlds, and whatever our alliances can bring. We
are trying to build alliances.”</p>
      <p>“Daughter, I have been building alliances for longer than you have been
alive. Now you tell me I don’t know my job.” He started to pace again.</p>
      <p>Michelle’s pause seemed interminably long. “Yes. I am. We are doing what
we can to keep Lancia powerful.”</p>
      <p>The only reason Lancia had any real power was because their
representatives—Crown Princess Michelle and Admiral Abram Galenos—worked
hard to prove they weren’t a threat. Radko should have told Vega about
her earlier meeting with Yu and Dow.</p>
      <p>Emperor Yu stared at Michelle. “Sometimes it seems, Daughter, that you
are happy to allow Lancia to decline to a second-rate world, to allow
other worlds to bully you.”</p>
      <p>Michelle chided gently. “Bullying me in return, Father? That worked when
I was five. It doesn’t work now.” She sat up straighter. “I want Lancia
to be a power as much as you do. We have to remain in the New Alliance
long enough for us to become that power. And I don’t want us feared by
everyone when we do. I want us to be a respected ally.”</p>
      <p>“Power brings respect,” Yu said.</p>
      <p>“That sort of power is not respect, it’s fear, and the problem with fear
is that people who are afraid are likely to destroy what they are scared
of if they can.”</p>
      <p>“My own daughter lectures me on politics. Me, who has twice her
experience and ten times her power.”</p>
      <p>“We are trying to make a future for Lancia.”</p>
      <p>“We?” Yu turned so fast every soldier in the room instinctively put
their hands to their weapons. Radko was pleased to see that on average,
Vega’s team was a second faster than Bach’s. “You and who?”</p>
      <p>“All of us working with the New Alliance,” Michelle said.</p>
      <p>“You and Galenos.”</p>
      <p>“We are both in charge.”</p>
      <p>“Maybe that’s the problem,” Yu said. “Galenos forgets that he is <emphasis>not</emphasis>
in charge, that he answers to you. Instead, he fills your head with
foolish notions like respect supposedly earned by showing how harmless
we are.”</p>
      <p>“They’re not just his notions. They’re mine as well.”</p>
      <p>“Are they, Daughter? Maybe I left you too long under the protection of a
man who chooses not to put Lancia first.”</p>
      <p>Michelle opened her mouth to argue. Yu silenced her with a hand. “Do you
know what I call someone who refuses to put Lancia first, when they are
employed by the government of Lancia?” He waved her quiet again.
“Traitors. That’s what I call them.”</p>
      <p>“You can call it what you like, Father, but you know as well as I do
that Galenos only works for the best of Lancia.”</p>
      <p>“Not according to my sources. As head of Alien Affairs, and with his
seat on the council, he has more power than anyone in the New Alliance,
you included. Has power gone to his head? I ask again. What has he done
for Lancia? Where are our ships? Where are the secrets from those ships?
Where are our benefits?”</p>
      <p>“The alien ships are a shared New Alliance resource,” Michelle said.
“Lancia is already getting more access than anyone else.”</p>
      <p>“Then why do we not have instant communication with Haladea III? Why are
we not jumping ships the way you jumped that alien ship earlier?”</p>
      <p>Michelle could still smile. In her place, Radko wouldn’t have been able
to. “That was an emergency. One of our bases was under attack. We would
prefer not to have jumped the ship the way we did today without a lot of
testing beforehand.”</p>
      <p>Alien ships moving unplanned sounded like Ean. As soon as this meeting
finished, Radko would find out what had happened.</p>
      <p>“As for instant communication, is that not what we have done?” Her voice
hardened. “Is this not the first time we have communicated between
sectors? Between the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> and a small number of
designated ships back in the Haladean sector.”</p>
      <p>A lot more had happened than Radko realized.</p>
      <p>“Would Galenos have mentioned this if it hadn’t made the evening news? I
think not.”</p>
      <p>“You would have known once tests were completed.”</p>
      <p>“Are you certain of that, Daughter? Of course not.” Emperor Yu moved
back to sit on his throne. “It is time to tip the balance of power our
way.”</p>
      <p>Radko hadn’t thought Michelle could get any stiller, but she did.</p>
      <p>“How?”</p>
      <p>Yu put his palms together in what might have been a bow, or an attitude
of prayer, and rested his chin on his fingers as he smiled. “How many
votes do we need for a majority in the New Alliance government?”</p>
      <p>“Fourteen. Seven worlds if both the military and civilian councilors
vote the same way. They will be difficult to get. We will alienate
worlds if we push too hard.”</p>
      <p>“I can get you twenty votes.”</p>
      <p>“How?” Michelle asked again.</p>
      <p>“I have ten worlds who would take full membership in the New Alliance
and support Lancia in all things.”</p>
      <p>“Who?” If Michelle looked wary, who could blame her? Most worlds were
rushing to join Gate Union, sure that line restrictions would soon mean
the end of the New Alliance as any real power. That would have happened
already if the New Alliance hadn’t had the alien ships.</p>
      <p>And Ean Lambert.</p>
      <p>“The Worlds of the Lesser Gods,” the Emperor said, and waited for her
reaction.</p>
      <p>He got a puzzled frown in return. “The Lesser Gods? If they affiliate
with anyone, surely it would be Redmond.”</p>
      <p>Yu’s smile was wide. “I, too, have been making alliances, my daughter.
While you sit in parliament too scared to oppose those who oppose you,
listening to the advice of a man who has let power go to his head.”</p>
      <p>Michelle’s mouth became a straight line, but she remained silent.</p>
      <p>“I have been building a power base for Lancia’s future. The Worlds of
the Lesser Gods recently fell out with Redmond over mineral rights on
Satan’s Gate. They came to us, for Lancia has the only other known
supply of pelagatite.”</p>
      <p>“Which was mined out two centuries ago. Not to mention that it’s beneath
Settlement City, and you gave that to Sattur Dow years ago.”</p>
      <p>Yu waved dismissively. “I have offered Sattur something in return.”</p>
      <p>Access to the line ships through his new wife.</p>
      <p>“Maybe so,” Michelle countered. “How will the Factor feel when he
realizes you have duped him? One worked-out mine is not enough to create
an alliance.”</p>
      <p>Yu smiled. “The mine was only the start of negotiations, Daughter, and
the Factor has evinced a certain… interest in my bait.”</p>
      <p>“Which is?”</p>
      <p>The New Alliance would certainly be interested in the Worlds of the
Lesser Gods, for while they were small, politically, they shared space
close to Redmond. Having access to ten worlds in the same sector would
make it easier to strike at the enemy.</p>
      <p>“Tell me, Daughter, would not a bloc of ten votes—twenty votes—be to our
advantage?”</p>
      <p>“Of course it would. If we could be sure the Worlds of the Lesser Gods
would vote for us. They are known to be unfriendly to Lancia. What bait
did you use to get them to agree?”</p>
      <p>“A close binding of our worlds. You, Daughter, will marry the Factor of
the Lesser Gods.”</p>
      <p>Michelle laughed. She was the only person who would have dared. “Maybe.”
She stood up. “I will investigate the Worlds of the Lesser Gods and take
your news back to the New Alliance so they can prepare for their request
for membership.”</p>
      <p>He walked with her to the door. “And Daughter, beware of who you take
advice from. When I say something is to happen, I expect it to happen.”</p>
      <p>Michelle glanced back. “I hear you, Father. Loud and clear.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Vega had a replacement guard ready when Michelle left the throne room.</p>
      <p>The team followed Michelle while Radko waited with Vega.</p>
      <p>“Turns out Martinsson’s allergic to his own world,” Vega said. “Or the
pollution in it, anyway. He hasn’t been back here since Sattur Dow
extended his factory at Settlement City. Airborne particulates.”</p>
      <p>Like any world, Lancia had minimum clean-air requirements, but those
requirements were specific, and easy to get around if you had the money
or power to buy exemptions.</p>
      <p>Vega scowled in the direction of Settlement City. “So let’s hear how bad
it is.”</p>
      <p>Radko was strongly aware of Commodore Bach at his desk. These rooms,
used exclusively by the guards working for the Emperor’s household, were
as secure as the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, but after what she’d heard,
Radko thought that anything she told Vega would go right back to the
Emperor.</p>
      <p>“I left my kit at the barracks, ma’am. I’ll need to collect it if I’m to
leave now.”</p>
      <p>Vega nodded and walked with Radko. One thing about Vega. She picked up
messages very quickly.</p>
      <p>They were both silent until they were in the aircar taking them over to
the barracks.</p>
      <p>“What happened at Confluence Station?” Radko asked, for that was safe
talk. Anyone would want to know about it. “I hear it was attacked.”</p>
      <p>Vega’s eyebrows rose. Radko didn’t have to guess what she was thinking.
If she hadn’t known about Confluence Station, how could she have done
anything stupid?</p>
      <p>“It’s all over the vids. Galactic News and Blue Sky Media filmed it for
us.”</p>
      <p>“I haven’t seen the vids.”</p>
      <p>“I’m surprised.” Vega folded her hands in her lap. “Confluence Station
was attacked by an armed ship disguised as a freighter. It did a lot of
damage.”</p>
      <p>“And Ean?”</p>
      <p>Vega’s tone turned dry. “The linesmen are safe. Before the freighter
could destroy it, the station switched places with the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, leaving
the two ships to battle it out.”</p>
      <p>No one listening would have understood what Vega had told her in those
short sentences. They hadn’t known before today that two ships—or a ship
and a station—could switch places. Ean was the only person who could
have done it.</p>
      <p>“There is some conjecture in the media as to whether the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>
destroyed the freighter or whether it jumped,” Vega said. “And the
captain of the freighter hasn’t come forward to say, one way or the
other. I’m sure you will make up your own mind when you see the vids.”</p>
      <p>Judging from the grim way Vega smiled, the freighter had been destroyed.</p>
      <p>The aircar landed.</p>
      <p>“Thank you for taking the time to inform me, ma’am,” Radko said, as they
stepped out onto the tarmac.</p>
      <p>The aircar lifted on auto and whisked itself away.</p>
      <p>It was safe to talk now, but Radko kept her voice low. “Did you see
Michelle’s audience with her father?”</p>
      <p>“I did.”</p>
      <p>“Did you see my audience, earlier?”</p>
      <p>“No.”</p>
      <p>She wouldn’t have had a reason to.</p>
      <p>“Sattur Dow was there. I think he wants access to the alien ships.”
Radko reported the whole conversation as precisely as she could,
including her own pending marriage. “Not only that, I traveled to
Baoshan in an aircar with Tiana Chen and Ethan Saylor. They’re connected
with Sattur Dow. Saylor let slip that they believe they’ll have access
to Lambert soon.”</p>
      <p>“That’s worrying. Especially in light of the later meeting.”</p>
      <p>They walked together in silence around the parade ground at the
barracks. “Your kit is at the palace,” Vega said, eventually. “Let’s
hope Bach doesn’t realize.”</p>
      <p>There was no excuse for clumsiness like that. “Sorry, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>Vega waved that away. “Emperor Yu does not like people who defy him.
He’s just as likely to change his mind and call you in for an
accounting, no matter what Dow says.”</p>
      <p>An accounting like that only ended one way. With the accountee being
wheeled out dead.</p>
      <p>“If you stay on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, he can call you in at any
time. Even if he doesn’t, you become Dow’s access to the alien ships
because they have plans, and you’re important to them.”</p>
      <p>She’d expected it, but a slow hatred started to burn against the two men
who would destroy her life.</p>
      <p>“You could always transfer me.” Her voice wasn’t as steady as she wanted
it to be.</p>
      <p>“We could. But why break up a good team? We’ll send you away
temporarily, for your own safety, until we work out what the plan is and
find a way to circumvent it.” Vega smiled, albeit grimly. “Let’s hope
Dow has overreached himself this time, and we can take him down for it.”</p>
      <p>That was almost treasonous talk. Radko glanced around, instinctively
taking in who might have been listening to them. No one.</p>
      <p>“Lambert won’t take it well. Especially if he knows you don’t want to
go.” Vega looked at her. “Unless you do want to go, that is.”</p>
      <p>“No, ma’am.” It came out more fervently than she’d planned.</p>
      <p>Another grim smile. “Lambert will do fine without you.” Then Vega
amended that to, “Well enough, anyway. Personally, I’d prefer you there
to handle him, but under the circumstances—”</p>
      <p>“He doesn’t need handling, he needs understanding.”</p>
      <p>“He’s like an out-of-control weapon. You never know whether the recoil
will kill you.”</p>
      <p>“But it’s more likely to turn around and hit the enemy,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>“So far. But don’t worry, I’ll keep him safe until you get back.
Inasmuch as I can because we all know Lambert.”</p>
      <p>The brusque words relieved Radko, for she had wondered if she would be
allowed to return. “How long?”</p>
      <p>“As long as it takes. We’d best get you off now. Make it look as if you
were already assigned, rather than us bundling you off in a hurry.”</p>
      <p>Vega stopped and tapped something into her comms. “A temporary
promotion, I think. I’m trying you out as a team leader. The lines know,
you’re long past ready for it.”</p>
      <p>Ean had once told Radko that he could sometimes hear when people like
Abram or Helmo or Michelle made decisions. “It’s like a snap,” he’d
said. “A sharp color, and they’re done. Instant decision, with a whole
plan behind it. As if they’d spent hours thinking it out.”</p>
      <p>Radko would bet Vega had just made a decision like that.</p>
      <p>“Hah,” Vega said. “And I’ve the perfect job here, especially in light of
your recent information. You’ll like this one. You’ve done covert ops
before.”</p>
      <p>It wasn’t a question. Before she’d come aboard the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis>, Vega had studied everyone’s dossier. Radko answered anyway.
“Yes, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>Not many, but enough.</p>
      <p>“And your Redmond-language skills are good?”</p>
      <p>“Yes, ma’am.” In fact, all of Radko’s covert operations to date had been
on Redmond, for her parents had planned a career for her as a diplomat
long before she’d chosen to join the Lancian fleet. She was skilled in
three languages outside Lancian and Standard. Redmond, Carina, and
Aquacaelum—and had spent time on each world as a child.</p>
      <p>Interestingly, they were all in what was now enemy territory.</p>
      <p>“Get yourself some clothes,” Vega said. “Formal business attire. I’ll
have someone collect your kit and send it home.”</p>
      <p>When Radko came out of the tailoring machine, Vega had gone, but her
orders were on Radko’s comms, coded and backdated.</p>
      <p>A Redmond trader, Callista OneLane, has acquired what she hints are
details of groundbreaking experiments on linesmen. Further, she hints
that the records include the data from the last six months, when the
parameters changed, and they started getting real success with the
experiments.</p>
      <p>Six months ago the then-Alliance had discovered the alien spaceships.
And realized that current line theory was flawed. And made massive leaps
in communicating with the lines, themselves. Radko’s breath quickened.
They had to be using what the New Alliance had learned from Ean and his
work with the alien lines.</p>
      <p>As you can imagine, we’re keen to see those plans.</p>
      <p>So was Radko.</p>
      <p>They were offered to Sattur Dow, who has bought contraband from OneLane
before. Until your report, we had no idea why. Now we do.</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow was never getting close enough to Ean to use what he might
have learned from those experiments.</p>
      <p>Dow is sending Tiana Chen to purchase the report.</p>
      <p>Vega was right. Radko did like it.</p>
      <p>We’ll delay Chen for twenty-four hours.</p>
      <p>You are ideally situated to know what the report shows and how important
it is. Check it out, pay what you think we should offer for them.</p>
      <p>Above all, don’t get caught, and don’t get yourself killed.</p>
      <p>That was Vega, blunt and to the point. Abram Galenos would never have
said that. He would assume she was smart enough to stay alive. Radko
rubbed her eyes. Change was inevitable, and she liked Vega, but everyone
on ship had been comfortable with the old regime.</p>
      <p>They’d been happy, Ean had said.</p>
      <p>You have been assigned a small team. Your “other” job—</p>
      <p>Based on the quotes Radko assumed this was unofficially as important to
Vega as the first.</p>
      <p>—is to assess them for line ability. Every one of them went through line
training and failed certification. I want a full report on each of them,
including their level and your assessment of their capabilities.</p>
      <p>Radko wasn’t a linesman, but she was better equipped than most to
recognize the individual songs of each line. Vega must have been
planning this part of the operation for a while.</p>
      <p>There’s a ship leaving for Mykara at 1800 hours. Be on it. Leave the
ship at Shaolin. Lancia has a cache there. You can arm yourself, and
from there you can catch a ship to Redmond.</p>
      <p>She had exactly fifteen minutes to make the shuttle Vega had booked for
her. Radko shouldered her bag and ran.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_five_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER FIVE: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Ean and Rossi fixed as many of the damaged lines on Confluence Station
as they could, and the twenty linesmen Ean had been training came out
the next day to finish off. Abram came along as well.</p>
      <p>Ean listened to the trainees’ work.</p>
      <p>“There isn’t much more I can teach them,” he told Abram. “They know how
to listen now, and how to sing the lines straight.”</p>
      <p>“That’s good,” Abram said. “There’s a push to train more. We’ve every
world in the New Alliance scouring for suitable linesmen for you to
train.”</p>
      <p>Singing to the lines wouldn’t be a secret much longer.</p>
      <p>They suited up so that Abram could inspect the damaged areas.</p>
      <p>“Some worlds have agreed to leave their trained linesmen here to help
you,” Abram said. “Provided they can train others from their own world.”</p>
      <p>“Hernandez?” Hernandez was a ten. She had spent so much time around the
eleven ships, she’d have problems if her home world of Balian took her
away.</p>
      <p>“Of course,” as if that was a given. It probably was. Admiral Katida of
Balian would like her own personal ten knowing everything that went on.
“You lose Tai.” Tai was the chief engineer on the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis>. Ean had never expected him to stay. “Chantsmith will stay on
the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>Chantsmith had always defended the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>. “I’m glad.” The <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>
would be happy.</p>
      <p>“At least this attack has galvanized those councilors and admirals who
were uncertain before. They’re seriously looking for line crews.”</p>
      <p>Finally.</p>
      <p>“We’re also training paramedics from the various worlds to work with
line-related problems. You’ll work with a mix of experienced and
inexperienced paramedics for a while.”</p>
      <p>“So when does the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> get its crew?”</p>
      <p>He could tell from the way Abram paused that he wouldn’t like the
answer.</p>
      <p>“It doesn’t. Not initially. They’re still arguing over who should crew
it.”</p>
      <p>“It’s not fair the other ships get crews—and captains—while the flagship
doesn’t. Besides—” He broke off.</p>
      <p>“Besides?” Abram looked wary.</p>
      <p>“I promised it was next.”</p>
      <p>“I can’t get you a captain, Ean. Not the way we got Kari Wang. This one
will take all the politicking—and more—that the first one didn’t.”</p>
      <p>How was Ean going to tell the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> that? “The lines won’t wait
forever. Lines need people.” The more permanent crew a ship had on
board, the more aware a ship became. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> was markedly different
from the lonely ship they had found in the outer depths of space all
those months ago. “How are they crewing the other ships if they’re not
crewing the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>?”</p>
      <p>“We’ve promised every world a ship of its own, provided they agree to
remain on permanent loan to the New Alliance fleet.”</p>
      <p>That would take some politicking of its own, for there was a range of
ships. Fleet carriers, which were the largest outside the eleven ships
and had smaller one- and two-man ships on board. There were twenty of
them. Patrol ships, smaller than the carriers and not as heavily armed,
but some of the weapons were massive. Then there were sixty smaller,
faster combat ships with lighter weapons and bigger engines. Lastly were
the scouts, which carried six people.</p>
      <p>Every world would want the larger ships though many of them were
damaged. One of the fleet carriers and two of the patrol ships would
have to be rebuilt before they could take crew.</p>
      <p>What did the aliens do when their ships were damaged so badly? What
could cause that sort of damage, anyway?</p>
      <p>It was good to know that the ships were getting crew, but the flagship
needed crew as well. “Why don’t you make each supply a crew member for
the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> as a condition for getting its own ship?” The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>
had a full linesman and a single-level linesman from each world; the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> should have the same. “Two crew. A single and a full.”</p>
      <p>Abram smiled. “I’ll see what I can do. I may be able to get you a crew
even if I can’t get you a captain.”</p>
      <p>They arrived at the internal air lock that blocked off the more damaged
areas of the station. Once through the air lock, the still-intact
passages gave way to a structure of struts and clear plastic, separating
the inside from the outside.</p>
      <p>Ean’s stomach flipped queasily. Sure, he knew that there was nothing
except space outside a ship or station, but he’d rather not see it. Not
an empty black expanse like this.</p>
      <p>Abram looked around. “That freighter did some damage.”</p>
      <p>Yet Confluence Station wasn’t majorly distressed about it. Even though
the lines were damaged, and their station manager was still in the
hospital, the station song was more of fixing things and of everything
under control. The <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> would have been distressed if
its “Ship”—Captain Helmo—was missing.</p>
      <p>“Do you think only ships, and not stations, bond with their captains?”
Ean asked.</p>
      <p>“Do you?”</p>
      <p>“No.” Although both Piers Wendell and Jita Orsaya believed that going
through the void increased the bond between ship and captain, and Ean
knew his own link with the lines expanded every time he went through the
void. “Maybe. I don’t know.” Ean would still have expected some
recognition from Confluence Station that its “Ship” was damaged.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Captain Helmo called at midnight to say he was returning to Haladean
space. Fergus and Commodore Vega were on the bridge with him.</p>
      <p>Ean already knew one person was missing. “Is everyone—”</p>
      <p>“There is a line-security issue I need to discuss with you, Linesman,”
Vega said over the top of him. “Make yourself available on the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> at the earliest opportunity.”</p>
      <p>“A security issue?”</p>
      <p>“At the earliest.”</p>
      <p>He could get subtle—and not so subtle—hints.</p>
      <p>Ean let Fergus sing them in, while he checked the surrounding lines to
ensure there were no ships nearby. This was a sanctioned jump, ordered
in the name of a freighter half the galaxy away, but Gate Union knew by
now that the New Alliance was buying jumps on the black market. How
could they not?</p>
      <p>Ean trusted the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet ships to stop any intruders, but Captain
Helmo wasn’t as trusting as he was. It was Ean’s way of reassuring Helmo
that everything was all right. Maybe one day, Helmo would believe it
enough to jump cold.</p>
      <p>The galaxy would turn into a black hole first.</p>
      <p>He went out to the shared common room, where Ru Li and Gossamer were on
duty. “I need to go to the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“Now?” Gossamer asked.</p>
      <p>“There’s a problem.” Vega might have wanted him to wait until morning,
but she had said at the earliest.</p>
      <p>Ru Li sighed and went to wake Bhaksir.</p>
      <p>“If it’s line-related, couldn’t you fix it from here?” Gossamer asked.</p>
      <p>If it was line-related, he could have. “Vega said a line-security issue.
And to make myself available, at the earliest.” Besides, he wanted to
know what had happened to Radko.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir came out with Hana. Hana rubbed sleep out of her eyes. Sale came
out from her room.</p>
      <p>Guilt swamped Ean. He looked at the growing crowd of people. “It can
probably wait until morning.”</p>
      <p>“Ean,” Sale said. “Once you’ve asked for something, don’t weaken your
position by saying it’s not important.”</p>
      <p>“Besides, it’ll be good to have Radko back,” Bhaksir said.</p>
      <p>Except Radko wasn’t back, and her own team leader didn’t know that yet.</p>
      <p>Jumps weren’t permitted close to other ships. They waited in the shuttle
for the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> to come in closer before they went to
meet it. If human ship lines developed to the level of the alien ship
lines, there would be no need to jump so far out. If they could jump as
accurately as the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> had earlier, they’d simply jump directly into
position.</p>
      <p>Ean listened to the chatter of the ships as they waited. Abram was going
out to the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> as well.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir and Hana listened to the Lancastrian news feeds—no longer in
real time although still more current than they had been—switching
between channels when something bored them. Ean hadn’t kept up with
Lancian news. He didn’t plan on keeping up with it, either.</p>
      <p>Some of the news was about the war. Gate Union had attacked the mining
colonies at Aratoga.</p>
      <p>“At least it’s a change from the usual complaints about how restrictions
on jumps are harming the New Alliance world economies,” Bhaksir said.
“Wait,” as Hana poised to flick the channel again.</p>
      <p>The reporter was the striking woman Ean had seen on the news vids
earlier, Maxine Oroton. On-screen behind her was a picture of Michelle,
wearing a formal blue jacket encrusted with jewels. Her dark hair was
swept up in an elegant chignon, and she wore a tiara glittering with
more jewels.</p>
      <p>“News in from the palace,” Oroton said. “His Imperial Majesty, Emperor
Yu, has announced the betrothal of his oldest daughter, Her Royal
Highness, Crown Princess Michelle, to the Factor of the Lesser Gods.”</p>
      <p>The image changed to display a man—equally formally dressed—with cropped
black hair and a wide, sensuous mouth.</p>
      <p>He looked—to Ean’s prejudiced gaze—like a man who thought a lot of
himself.</p>
      <p>“We go now to Professor Ghyslain, to tell us about the Worlds of the
Lesser Gods.”</p>
      <p>The image crossed to a man standing in an open area, long coat streaming
in the wind. A massive castle filled the screen behind him. “I’m
standing here in the capital of Aeolus, the largest and most populous of
the Worlds of the Lesser Gods.”</p>
      <p>He had a booming voice that didn’t so much compete with the wind as
quell it. “The building behind me is the Factor’s primary home. This is
where Her Royal Highness Princess Michelle will reside after her
marriage to the Factor.”</p>
      <p>Michelle had four and a half years left on Haladea III before she went
anywhere. New Alliance council members were elected for a term of five
years.</p>
      <p>“Professor Ghyslain, can you tell us more about the people and the
worlds Her Royal Highness is marrying into?”</p>
      <p>“Of course. There are ten Worlds of the Lesser Gods. They’re in the
Redmond sector.” A galactic map filled the screen. Six worlds were
highlighted in the center. “These are the Redmond worlds, which we all
know.” The image moved to the top right corner and zoomed in to an edge
of the sector. “These are the Worlds of the Lesser Gods. They are named
after ten of the gods in Greek mythology. That’s an Old Earth
mythology,” he added. “Aeolus, Asclepius, Amphitrite, Dionysus, Hebe,
Hellas, Maia, Nemesis, Pan, and Persephone. Named, I might add, because
the first three worlds discovered personified these gods.”</p>
      <p>Ean had never heard of them.</p>
      <p>“Aeolus is the god of winds, and as you can see, this place is most
definitely windy. Asclepius is the god of healing. It was on Asclepius
that we discovered the restorative compounds so vital in regeneration.
Amphitrite is the goddess of the sea, and that world is totally covered
in water.”</p>
      <p>The overlay disappeared, and the image returned to Ghyslain.</p>
      <p>“The worlds are relatively new and unknown. They are 150 years old, and
most of their trade to date has been with Redmond, so this political
marriage is a major step up in galactic power for them.</p>
      <p>“They have a lot in common with Lancia, in fact, and a lot to offer us.
Like our own world, a single family has ruled since humans settled
there. The leader of that family—of the whole ten worlds—is known as the
Factor. His full title is the Factor of the Lesser Gods.”</p>
      <p>“And when her Royal Highness marries the Factor? What is her title?”</p>
      <p>“She doesn’t take a title,” Ghyslain said. “She becomes the Factor’s
partner. She will retain her own titles at home, of course, and on other
worlds she will still be known as Lady Lyan, but on the Worlds of the
Lesser Gods she is a commoner, at the command of the Factor in all
things.”</p>
      <p>The Factor sounded like someone Michelle should avoid.</p>
      <p>Even Maxine Oroton looked a little nauseated. “Her Royal Highness is a
working royal. I cannot see her accepting that.”</p>
      <p>Ean liked Maxine Oroton a lot better, suddenly.</p>
      <p>“I am sure our princess is willing to do what needs to be done for the
good of the New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>Ean couldn’t imagine Michelle giving up on her duties or ceding power to
a husband.</p>
      <p>Oroton seemed as unconvinced as Ean. “The Worlds of the Lesser Gods have
been closely associated with Redmond until now. Why do you think they
seek an alliance with Lancia?”</p>
      <p>The wind was so strong, Ghyslain’s smile was almost pasted on. “Emperor
Yu is famous for initiating political alliances that benefit Lancia, and
a pact with the Worlds of the Lesser Gods certainly will be that.
Particularly as Lancia requires only fourteen votes on the New Alliance
council to gain a majority. I am sure His Majesty must be considering
that.”</p>
      <p>So would the rest of the council, many of whom were worried about Lancia
already. Ean could name three worlds immediately that would look askance
at this. Probably more.</p>
      <p>“It’s perfect timing,” Ghyslain said. “Some months ago, Redmond and the
Worlds of the Lesser Gods had a falling-out. Redmond stopped supplying
pelagatite, which is essential to manufacturing on the Lesser Gods
worlds. The Factor had been sounding out Gate Union—”</p>
      <p>“Aren’t Redmond and Gate Union allies?” Oroton asked.</p>
      <p>Ghyslain laughed. “Of course, but there’s no love between those two, and
both of them will use any political clout they can get. Anyway, it’s too
late, for His Imperial Majesty stepped in. For, you see, the only other
known pelagatite mine is on Lancia.”</p>
      <p>If you asked Ean, a world—or worlds—so dependent on one mineral was not
a stable world or a rich world.</p>
      <p>“The mine under Settlement City? Wasn’t that closed down years ago?”</p>
      <p>“It was, yes, but it may be viable to reopen it, especially if Lancia is
prepared to mine it at a loss in order to bring the Worlds of the Lesser
Gods into the New Alliance. And it’s already being rumored that the
marriage agreement is dependent on the Factor’s bringing his worlds
across. This could be counted as a coup for Emperor Yu, who
single-handedly brings ten worlds into the alliance, while strengthening
Lancia’s position and power.”</p>
      <p>The unemotional words went on.</p>
      <p>Ean watched Bhaksir and Hana, both of whose faces lost all expression as
they listened. Radko sometimes went blank-faced. Usually when she didn’t
want people to know what she was thinking.</p>
      <p>It was a pity they were in the shuttle. On ship, Ean could have worked
out how they really felt about it.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>After seemingly forever, the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> came into range, and
their shuttle moved toward it. They docked just after Abram did.</p>
      <p>Abram waited for Ean. Since Vega was pacing in Michelle and Abram’s
workroom, Ean went with him. Ship mood was anxious. Ean sang to the
lines as he walked, but it was nothing he could fix. Should he ask about
Radko? Maybe not right now. It didn’t feel like a good time.</p>
      <p>Helmo joined them outside the workroom.</p>
      <p>So far as Ean knew, Vega had never been in Michelle’s workroom since her
introductory tour, and while Helmo talked to Michelle a lot, he often
did it from the bridge. Yet Michelle wanted them here. She felt safe
here. That came through on line one.</p>
      <p>Michelle should feel safe anywhere on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. Was
this about her impending marriage?</p>
      <p>Michelle settled onto her couch with a sigh. “Where do I start?”</p>
      <p>There were no preliminary explanations, and she didn’t treat Ean as if
he shouldn’t be there. Ean sat down quietly in his regular seat, as if
he had every right to. Abram had a regular seat as well, but he didn’t
sit there today. Instead, he sat beside Michelle, leaving Helmo and Vega
to sit on his couch.</p>
      <p>“One month ago, my father sent a delegation from Lancia to help on the
council. He does that all the time,” she said to Ean. He was the only
one who didn’t know that, for everyone else nodded. She looked around at
the others, so the next bit was for everyone. “He wanted Sattur Dow to
head the delegation.”</p>
      <p>“Not exactly a smart move, politically,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>“No,” Michelle agreed.</p>
      <p>When Ean was a boy, Emperor Yu had gifted Sattur Dow with Settlement
City. Dow had given the residents two days to get out. On the third day,
he’d sent in demolition crews. By nightfall, the city was razed. Those
people who hadn’t got out in time were dead. The rest had flooded in as
refugees to the slums at Oldcity, where Ean lived, causing turf wars
that lasted years.</p>
      <p>It would be a kind of justice for all those people Ean had known if Yu
kicked Sattur Dow off that land now so they could reopen the old mine
under it. Especially since he’d spent billions of credits in the
intervening years building a factory on it.</p>
      <p>“Naturally, we told him he couldn’t come,” Michelle said.</p>
      <p>She rubbed her hands together as if they were cold. It was an
uncharacteristic movement from Michelle, who could normally keep her
feelings hidden when she needed to. Ean could hear through the lines
that this next bit was important. “Then my father called me home.”</p>
      <p>“To talk about Dow?” Ean asked. Or to talk about her forthcoming
marriage?</p>
      <p>Vega said, “I recorded the feed if you’d prefer me to show it.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you. I would.”</p>
      <p>They watched in silence as Emperor Yu accused Abram of treason, then
attempted to trump that by telling Michelle she was to marry the Factor
of the Lesser Gods. They sat silent a moment longer after it finished.</p>
      <p>Abram blew out his breath. “I knew there were rumors about a blowup
regarding pelagatite, but I cannot see the Worlds of the Lesser Gods
allying with Lancia and the New Alliance over it. Not unless there’s
something in it for them. Something big.”</p>
      <p>Maybe they thought the New Alliance would win the war and wanted to be
on the winning side.</p>
      <p>“The Factor has a smooth tongue,” Michelle said. “Even so, my father
isn’t normally taken in by clever words.”</p>
      <p>“Not unless he has plans of his own,” Abram said.</p>
      <p>Like gaining an extra twenty votes in council for Lancia. “We heard
about the engagement,” Ean said. “It made the news.”</p>
      <p>Michelle made a face. “I would have preferred more time to sort that out
privately. However, that’s not my concern. My father is paranoid. I have
seen how he acts when he believes someone is undermining his power. He
starts to worry aloud whether that person truly supports him. He starts
to believe his own questions. I have seen other people, good people,
destroyed for that.”</p>
      <p>And Yu was questioning Abram now.</p>
      <p>“He’s getting really bad advice,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>“And Settlement City,” Helmo said. “Why give that away when he’s already
promised Michelle? He has to compensate Sattur Dow then.”</p>
      <p>“As to that,” Vega said, and her look at Ean was veiled, “I expect it’s
an excuse. I imagine he’s promised Dow one of the alien ships. Or access
to it, anyway. If you won’t let Dow come here as part of a business
delegation, he has every right to come here to see his wife. Her Royal
Highness isn’t the only one who was betrothed yesterday.”</p>
      <p>She glared around at them all.</p>
      <p>“He’s also remarkably well informed, for he knew exactly whom to
target.” Her glare stopped at Ean.</p>
      <p>What had he done?</p>
      <p>“Radko,” Michelle said.</p>
      <p>At first, Ean didn’t understand. Then he did. “Are you saying Radko is
to marry Sattur Dow?” The ship lines sang with his incredulity.</p>
      <p>Helmo winced.</p>
      <p>“Worryingly well informed,” Abram said.</p>
      <p>Yu had no right to tell Radko or Michelle whom they were to marry, and
Sattur Dow was not getting anywhere near Radko. Not if Ean could prevent
it.</p>
      <p>“Where is Radko?” Ean asked.</p>
      <p>Vega glared at him again. “Spacer Radko is on special assignment.
Organized <emphasis>two weeks</emphasis> ago. I’m trying her out for a team-leader
position.”</p>
      <p>Two weeks. “She didn’t tell me she was on special duties.”</p>
      <p>“She didn’t know about it until last night, Ean,” Michelle said. “You
should pretend you both knew about it.”</p>
      <p>“When will she be back?”</p>
      <p>“When this business is over,” Vega said. “Not before.”</p>
      <p>If Ean had anything to do with it, it would be over soon.</p>
      <p>“So what do we have?” Abram counted them off. “A plan involving Sattur
Dow and access to the linesman. A plan to bring votes into the New
Alliance by allying Lancia with the Worlds of the Lesser Gods. Are they
related, do you think?”</p>
      <p>“My father always has many plans on the go.”</p>
      <p>“Probably not, then. And we have Emperor Yu starting to question my
abilities as admiral.”</p>
      <p>“Because you’re not doing what he wants you to,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>Abram worked for Lancia, and anyone who had listened to the lines would
know that. Except Yu, it seemed.</p>
      <p>Abram blew out his breath. “Misha, unfortunately, you’ll have deal with
the fallout from the Lesser Gods. I’ll help where I can, but you’ll get
the brunt of it.”</p>
      <p>“It might even be a good thing,” Michelle said. “A base that close to
Redmond might give us a chance to strike at them.”</p>
      <p>Close was only relative when you were talking distances in space.</p>
      <p>“Or it might simply make the Lesser Gods an immediate target,” Abram
said, and Vega and Helmo nodded. “Take them out before they have the New
Alliance behind them.” He blew out his breath again. “If I were the
Factor of the Lesser Gods, I’d be asking Lancia for protection, just in
case.”</p>
      <p>“Have they?” Vega asked.</p>
      <p>Abram shook his head. “Which is worrying in itself.”</p>
      <p>Redmond was building ships based on alien technology. They were building
weapons based around the same. Kari Wang had been testing them, back
before her world, Nova Tahiti, had defected from Gate Union to join the
fledgling New Alliance.</p>
      <p>The Worlds of the Lesser Gods were pastoral worlds. If Redmond chose to
attack them, they wouldn’t stand a chance. Even if there were only six
Redmond worlds to the Lesser Gods’ ten.</p>
      <p>If Gate Union chose to help—not that Redmond and Gate Union were working
much together at present, but they were still formally allied—the fight
would be over even faster.</p>
      <p>“What about Dow? If he wants access to Ean, he’ll find a way to get out
here.”</p>
      <p>Vega looked as sour as Ean had ever seen her. “You have already denied
him access to Haladea III. There is only one place he can come.”</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>“I must host him when he comes,” Michelle said. “He is a close friend of
my father’s.”</p>
      <p>“I can deal with Dow,” Vega said. “If Radko’s not here, he has no access
to Lambert. But it would be better if Lambert wasn’t on ship at the same
time at all. They can’t help running into each other. Lambert will have
to remain on Confluence Station.” Vega had always wanted Ean off the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, but right now, she looked as happy about it as
Ean was.</p>
      <p>“I’ll put Orsaya in charge of the confluence linesmen’s security,” Abram
said. “She’s got Rossi there as well, so she has a reason to own it.”</p>
      <p>“Let’s hope we get Ean back,” Michelle said. “She’ll love to have Ean
under her charge.”</p>
      <p>Everyone laughed, and the sudden relaxation of tension emphasized just
how much there had been in the room beforehand.</p>
      <p>The worry soon flooded back as little eddies of song—different tunes for
different people. Vega’s worry was about the ship and how she would make
it secure. And about Ean, which was unexpected. Then, she didn’t know
Orsaya, who didn’t ally herself with Lancia—she was part of the other
main power group in New Alliance politics—but was line obsessed. Orsaya
would look after Ean. She wouldn’t give away line knowledge if she could
prevent it.</p>
      <p>Helmo’s worry was centered around Michelle, and line eight was strong.</p>
      <p>Abram’s worry likewise had a lot of Michelle in it, but it was normal
Abram, only stronger. Ean took that to mean these were the things Abram
normally worried about. Like keeping Lancia strong, keeping Michelle
safe.</p>
      <p>Michelle’s worry was a swirling crescendo full of the sound of Abram, so
loud it almost drowned out the others.</p>
      <p>“Bhaksir’s team will stay with Lambert, of course,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>Abram nodded.</p>
      <p>“Everyone in Sale’s teams will need to stay on station as well because
if he can’t get Ean, that’s who he’ll try next.”</p>
      <p>Abram nodded again.</p>
      <p>At least Ean wouldn’t be totally alone although he wasn’t sure how
Bhaksir and Sale would take the news that their temporary relocation
wasn’t as temporary as it had been.</p>
      <p>Michelle blew her breath out in a manner reminiscent of Abram. “Any
suggestions for what we do about the Worlds of the Lesser Gods? The New
Alliance will see this as a power grab by Lancia, which it is. We are
not going to make friends with this.”</p>
      <p>They didn’t mention the other issue. Emperor Yu and Abram. Ean knew they
weren’t going to.</p>
      <p>Everyone went silent for a moment. Even the ship went quiet.</p>
      <p>“Emperor Yu has already made news of the engagement public,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>Through the lines, Ean heard the green snap of Abram making a decision.
“Give them something else to think about. Something they’ve been asking
for a while. Let’s send the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> on a mission.”</p>
      <p>“Is she ready?” Helmo asked.</p>
      <p>“When is ready? We won’t send her into a full battle situation. Not yet
anyway. A skirmish somewhere, a small battle to show the power of the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>The song of the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> lifted. There was hope in the
tune now.</p>
      <p>“Gate Union attacked the mining colonies at Aratoga two hours ago. The
Aratogans are defending,” Abram said. “As you can imagine, they’re
severely limited with the jumps they can get.”</p>
      <p>Fighting a war when the enemy controlled the jumps was no way to win.
The Gate Controllers would deny any New Alliance jumps direct from
Aratoga to the war zone. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> didn’t need a controlled jump—at
least, Ean was sure it didn’t—but no one was prepared to test it. Maybe
this time Abram and Kari Wang would let him do it.</p>
      <p>“And how do we get a jump for the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>?” Vega asked.</p>
      <p>“We don’t,” Ean said. “We trust that the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> won’t jump into space
occupied by another ship.”</p>
      <p>Silence greeted his words.</p>
      <p>“We switched the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> and Confluence Station yesterday. That’s a
tiny jump window, compared to what we usually have.”</p>
      <p>“We also knew where both ships were,” Helmo said. “I won’t risk a cold
jump. Kari Wang won’t either.”</p>
      <p>Marcus Helmo was not a man who scared easily, yet he had a deep-seated
fear of jumping cold. That fear was starting to freeze the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis> lines right now.</p>
      <p>“They’ve done it before. If you listen to your ship, you’ll be safe,”
Ean said to Helmo.</p>
      <p>“Can you guarantee 100 percent—absolutely 100 percent—that we won’t jump
into another ship?”</p>
      <p>Could he? If he was wrong, he condemned everyone on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> to
death. He didn’t want that. “We need a jump, then.”</p>
      <p>Abram bought jumps on the black market. It was an expensive business,
and fraught with danger, for eventually the Union of Gate Worlds would
realize what the marketeer was doing. There was always the worry that
this time, the jump would be a setup, and they’d be sent into another
ship, or into an asteroid.</p>
      <p>Abram checked his comms. “The only one I have in the next two hours is
close to Roscracia.”</p>
      <p>Two hours. Abram planned for them to go right now.</p>
      <p>Michelle managed to laugh. “That would go down well. Why, hello Admiral
Markan,” for Roscracia was a populous Gate Union world, and home to
Markan, who headed the Gate Union war effort. “We’re just dropping by to
get a jump.”</p>
      <p>“Actually”—Abram’s eyes gleamed—“it might work. Are we likely to be
refused a jump from Roscracia? Especially if Ean taps into one of the
military ships there and uses that to request it.”</p>
      <p>It was even safe, for they knew Ean could control the lines on other
ships.</p>
      <p>“You are certifiably crazy, you know that.” But Helmo was grinning.
“It’s insane enough to work.”</p>
      <p>Abram reached for his comms.</p>
      <p>“Might I remind you,” Vega said. “You are taking our only level-twelve
linesman into the heart of enemy territory. A member of Her Royal
Highness’s personal staff. Someone from whom that same enemy recently
tried to get information.”</p>
      <p>“They’ll only be there long enough to get another jump,” Abram said.
“The jump window we have is for a civilian ship. It won’t be anywhere
near the warships.”</p>
      <p>The captain of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> came up on the comms.</p>
      <p>“Captain Kari Wang, we are deploying the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> to the incident at
Aratoga. Linesman Lambert will accompany you. We’ll send you a situation
report and plan of action. Execute it as soon as the linesman is on
board.”</p>
      <p>“Not that I like losing our twelve,” Helmo said. “I would prefer Lambert
stayed here.”</p>
      <p>At least Helmo thought Ean was part of the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> crew.</p>
      <p>Vega had taken out her comms as well. “Bhaksir, you and your team are
assigned to active duty on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. Protecting Linesman Lambert.
Prepare to move out in five.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>Through the lines, Ean heard Bhaksir call up the rest of her team on
Confluence Station and relay those orders.</p>
      <p>Ean stood up. When they made decisions around here, they moved fast.</p>
      <p>“Ean,” Abram said. “You know what you have to do?”</p>
      <p>“Use another ship’s comms to book a jump.” It would be so much easier to
jump to Aratogan space. He forced himself not to rub his palms down his
sides. He wished Radko were here. It wasn’t a hard job. He’d listened in
to other ships’ comms before. He’d stopped them firing on the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>“Choose a military ship, if you can. They’ll get jumps fast.”</p>
      <p>Ean nodded.</p>
      <p>“And don’t, whatever you do, sing the enemy ship into the fleet.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll try not to.” He couldn’t promise something like that.</p>
      <p>Sale, Bhaksir, and Craik had discussed at length how lucky they’d been
with Wendell and Gruen. Wendell had been in the wrong place at the wrong
time, and his home world of Wallacia had branded him and his crew
traitors. Wendell had no love for either side, but the New Alliance let
him keep his ship, and that was the most important thing to him. As for
Gruen—she had left the Roscracian military after Admiral Markan had
refused to get back her captured ship. They wouldn’t be lucky a third
time. If Ean sang a Gate Union military ship into the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>’s fleet
and they kept the captain on, he’d be singing a spy into their midst.</p>
      <p>“Thank you.”</p>
      <p>Michelle stopped him. “Take care.”</p>
      <p>“You too, Michelle.” And Ean smiled at her. “Everything will work out.”
He didn’t mean just the upcoming battle, which he deliberately wasn’t
thinking about.</p>
      <p>“What happens if Lambert mucks up?” Vega asked.</p>
      <p>The smile in Abram’s tone was reflected by a red-mint-cinnamon spurt of
amusement from Michelle. “Ean can be unconventional, but he usually
manages.”</p>
      <p>At least it had stopped that awful worry that had been circulating
through the ship earlier.</p>
      <p>Abram opened his comms again. “Galenos here. Get me Admirals Orsaya,
Katida, and MacClennan.”</p>
      <p>They were the other admirals in the Alien Affairs Department of the New
Alliance, which was the department in charge of the alien ships. Abram
would have to get their agreement to run this trial. Or did Abram, being
in charge, decide, and just tell them?</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Battle.”</emphasis> The song of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> was pleased. <emphasis>“Fight.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Sometimes the ships seemed a little bloodthirsty to Ean. He forgot they
had been warships.</p>
      <p>And behind all that, the thread of a sad whisper from the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.
<emphasis>“If we had a crew, we could fight, too.”</emphasis></p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_six_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER SIX: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>On the shuttle, Radko received another package of data from Vega.</p>
      <p>Radko was tapping out a careful set of instructions for Bhaksir:</p>
      <p>Just because he wears the uniform, don’t expect Ean to know everything.
He hasn’t had the training. Explain things. He doesn’t think like a
soldier; he thinks like a line. Lines don’t think the way we do.</p>
      <p>She paused over the SEND button, and deleted it instead. The team would
cope perfectly well without her. Ean would, too. Then took a moment to
compose herself before she opened Vega’s message.</p>
      <p>OneLane’s shop is in the FourDogs district of Bane, the largest city on
Satan’s Gate.</p>
      <p>Satan’s Gate was the main Redmond world. Radko had spent time in Bane,
even knew of the FourDogs district although she’d never been there. It
was a well-to-do area full of high-class boutiques and antiques shops.
She pulled up images to view the address Vega had supplied.</p>
      <p>The shop had a narrow entry, with artfully displayed artifacts in the
window. The window was crisscrossed with a grating that glowed a soft
blue around the edges. A security field. Whatever OneLane had in there,
she liked it well protected. Radko saw four cameras at the front of the
shop, and although she couldn’t see the back, they would be there,
somewhere.</p>
      <p>A discreet plaque on the wall advertised LoneField Security—one of the
best in the business.</p>
      <p>Radko turned back to Vega’s comms.</p>
      <p>You have a team of three. They’ll join you on the freighter to Shaolin.</p>
      <p>Theodora van Heel works in surveillance. She has worked in intelligence
for twenty years, the last six behind a desk. She is a class hacker and
can break into most systems. A reliable person when you need to break
into a system or to cover your tracks, but every year she is called in
for remedial target practice. That, and her level of fitness, are the
main reasons she is behind a desk rather than in the field.</p>
      <p>Bless Vega for telling her the important things she needed to know about
the people she was working with.</p>
      <p>She is the only one of your team who has worked off world before.</p>
      <p>Yves Han is military police. He works in the main barracks at Baoshan.</p>
      <p>Han was a high-caste Lancastrian family name. Combined with a French
first name like Yves, his family would move in the same circle as hers.
In which case, Radko knew him. Renaud Han’s son.</p>
      <p>She brought up the image. The resemblance to Renaud was strong. Yves Han
was three years older than Radko. She’d last seen him when she was nine,
and he’d been twelve. Her family had been visiting the Hans and she’d
found Yves Han standing over his tutor—seventy years old if he was a
day—forcing the old man’s hand onto the red-hot heat supply of the
furnace.</p>
      <p>The tutor screamed as Yves forced his hand down.</p>
      <p>“Stop that now,” Radko commanded.</p>
      <p>Yves had laughed at her. “Go away, little girl. Keep out of things that
don’t concern you.” He’d pushed the tutor’s arm down again.</p>
      <p>So she’d beaten him up.</p>
      <p>She was the one who’d gotten into trouble. Yves had needed regen, and
the tutor claimed he’d burned his own hand. She hadn’t seen Yves since.
He’d tested high on the Havortian tests and taken up the offer of an
apprenticeship from one of the big cartel houses.</p>
      <p>Yet she’d always liked Yves’s parents. Even though Renaud and Amina Han
were part of the Emperor’s inner circle, they always had time for the
Emperor’s aunt, and for the almost-forgotten young cousin.</p>
      <p>Radko frowned at the image. The boy she’d known had bordered on sadistic
or worse. She hoped fleet training had knocked some of his nastiness out
of him. He definitely wasn’t someone she’d ever introduce Ean to,
linesman or not.</p>
      <p>I have worked with Han before, back when I spent two years as a captain
on Baoshan. I found him reliable and easy to work with. A good man to
have at your back.</p>
      <p>He didn’t sound like the Yves Han she remembered.</p>
      <p>Radko turned to the last name.</p>
      <p>Arun Chaudry is six months out of training. His psychiatrist says he has
a death wish. Joined the fleet to get himself killed.</p>
      <p>The preliminary psych tests should have picked that up.</p>
      <p>They put him in Stores—on base—where he’ll never see combat. His group
leader is surprisingly protective of him, says he’s lost and needs to
find something he can do.</p>
      <p>Radko flipped the name to see who the group leader was and wasn’t
surprised to find it was Lee Toll.</p>
      <p>Van Heel was the only person with any experience in this kind of work.
As for the other two—a man who might or might not like power over others
and a man with a death wish. Did Vega believe they were dispensable? Or
was there something more?</p>
      <p>The something more came on the next line.</p>
      <p>Yves Han trained ten years at House of Sandhurst. Theodora van Heel,
seven years, House of Xun. Arun Chaudry, six years, House of Isador. Van
Heel and Chaudry failed certification.</p>
      <p>According to Ean, six years was the absolute minimum for a line
apprenticeship. The apprentices started in their teens—although a cartel
master would take them earlier if they showed real promise—and couldn’t
be tested until they were seventeen. The ones the cartel masters thought
would fail were tested early. Van Heel and Chaudry probably hadn’t shown
much ability.</p>
      <p>Vega hadn’t said how old they were, but Radko could guess from their
images that van Heel had trained a generation earlier than Chaudry.</p>
      <p>I need to know what lines they are and if they are suitable for line
training.</p>
      <p>Han certified as an exceptionally strong seven but received head
injuries in an accident not long after certification. The doctors say
there is nothing physically wrong with him, but after the trauma, he
lost any line ability. I want you to assess whether Lambert may be able
to fix his line problem.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The only ships getting jumps to and from Lancia nowadays were
unaffiliated merchants. Mostly small, second-class freighters, and right
now they were making a fortune. The ship was crowded. Every ship leaving
Lancia was.</p>
      <p>Radko didn’t have a cabin. There was a netted-off area in the bar to
stow her kit, for she and her team would leave the ship in four hours.</p>
      <p>Them and a hundred others.</p>
      <p>She recognized Yves Han immediately. He stood like a member of one of
the Great Families, as if he expected people to move around him, rather
than him to move around them. Sometimes, Radko knew, she did that
herself.</p>
      <p>She pushed forward to stand beside him. “Han.”</p>
      <p>If he remembered the last time they’d met, it didn’t show. “Team
leader.” Or maybe he’d had time to decide to ignore the memory. Vega
must have sent their names through to the whole team—without the other
identifying information Radko had received—or otherwise he wouldn’t have
recognized Radko. That was unusual for by-the-book Vega. Radko had a
code she could use to identify herself to the other three. That was what
she would normally use on an operation like this.</p>
      <p>The title felt strange, and not something she planned on getting used
to. She liked the job she had.</p>
      <p>“This is crazy crowded,” Han said. “I hope we arrive safely.”</p>
      <p>She tapped in the identifying code and touched her comms to Han’s.
Identity established. “Yes,” she said, and looked around. “Somewhere in
this crowd, we’ve two other people.”</p>
      <p>Her comms chimed. Van Heel.</p>
      <p>“Never mind,” van Heel said, when she answered. “I can see you. I’m
nearby.” She pushed through the crowd. “This overcrowding. It’s
dangerous.”</p>
      <p>It would get worse before it got better. Unless Ean could convince the
New Alliance to jump cold.</p>
      <p>As Radko touched her comms to van Heel’s to establish identity, the bell
chimed to signify the ship was about to enter the void. She paused and
looked around to be sure her charge was safe this time. Weird things
happened around jumps.</p>
      <p>But, of course, Ean wasn’t there.</p>
      <p>She waited until they jumped, then went back to her comms. No one else
had noticed; no one else cared. She’d forgotten how normal jumps were on
other ships.</p>
      <p>The public address blared over the top of her attempt to contact
Chaudry. “All passengers leaving at Shaolin please assemble at the
shuttle bays. Be sure to collect all luggage prior to disembarking.”</p>
      <p>“That’s us,” Radko said, and thumbed the comms open to the other member
of her team. “Chaudry. This is team leader Radko. We’ll meet you at the
shuttle bays.”</p>
      <p>“That’s early,” Han muttered. “Can’t wait to get rid of us, obviously.”</p>
      <p>Personally, Radko couldn’t wait to get off the ship.</p>
      <p>They found Chaudry standing, arms crossed, in the middle of the shuttle
queue. He wasn’t much taller than anyone else, but he was wider. His
arms were bare, and the muscles bulged. Despite the crowd, people moved
a long way around him.</p>
      <p>“He’s enough to scare anyone’s grandmother,” Han said.</p>
      <p>Radko frowned at him.</p>
      <p>“Arun Chaudry,” Han said.</p>
      <p>Chaudry narrowed his eyes. “Who’s asking?”</p>
      <p>“I wasn’t asking, I was identifying.” Han gave a half bow. “Your
teammate, Yves Han, and with me I have Theodora van Heel and Team Leader
Radko.”</p>
      <p>“I need a code,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>Radko tapped in the code and touched her comms to his.</p>
      <p>Han had names and images to identify the team. So had van Heel. Chaudry
hadn’t. “I’m surprised you know us all,” Radko said to Han. “I only got
them on my comms as I was coming out here.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel was a hacker. If she was as good as Vega said, then she could
find out who she was working with. But Han? He was a policeman on base.</p>
      <p>“I have contacts.”</p>
      <p>“I see.” Radko made a mental note to let Vega know. Military police
shouldn’t have been able to get that detail.</p>
      <p>Han watched her face. “I like to know what I’m getting into. And we do
have orders on our comms.”</p>
      <p>“Those orders shouldn’t be something you can get from your contacts.”
Radko looked around at the crowd waiting to exit the shuttle. “We’ll
discuss it when it’s more private.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Radko’s team was directed to a small, eight-man shuttle. They were the
only passengers for Barth, the fourth-largest spaceport on Shaolin.</p>
      <p>“We get people like you every four, five trips,” the pilot said. “They
think because it’s busy and on the southern end of the continent, it’s a
good place to come if you need to go south. But there’s nothing but
cargo sheds. Passengers don’t usually get off here. Most people go on to
San See and take an aircar across the continent.”</p>
      <p>Which was why their equipment was stored at Barth. “It’s close to where
we need to go,” Radko said. “And provided we can hire an aircar, does it
matter if there’s nothing there?”</p>
      <p>“Lady, your aircar will have to come from San See. If you were thinking
of saving money, this is not it.” The pilot turned abruptly and waved
frantically at Chaudry, who’d been about to strap himself in beside a
small, refrigerated crate. “Not on that side. Can’t taint the special
orders, can we.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry squeezed in between van Heel and Han instead.</p>
      <p>Radko looked at the crate. She recognized the logo. “Gippian shellfish.
Here?”</p>
      <p>“You’d be surprised where we take these babies,” the pilot said. “Here.
The center of the galaxy. The outer rim. We go from Lancia to Redmond,
Roscracia to Yaolin, and everywhere between. Anyplace someone is
prepared to pay for them.”</p>
      <p>Including Haladea III, where the Lancastrian ambassador served them to
his guests.</p>
      <p>It was a pity this particular delivery wasn’t going straight to Redmond.</p>
      <p>“Gippian shellfish,” Han said, salivating.</p>
      <p>“Spacers can’t afford shellfish on our wage,” van Heel said. “You’ll
never get to taste it, Han.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry shuddered. “I had one once. It was awful.”</p>
      <p>“Gunter Wong is a friend of my father’s,” Han said. “He brings it over
sometimes when he comes for dinner. Fresh as.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel and Chaudry might not have understood the reference, but Radko
did. Gunter Wong owned the Gippian shellfish company. His beds were on
the coast in the province of Han, across the river from the main Han
estate, in fact.</p>
      <p>“Wish I had friends like that,” the shuttle pilot said. “I’ve never even
tasted the things. That little box is a week of my wages.”</p>
      <p>“Some people say they’re an acquired taste.” Radko smiled as she thought
of Ean, politely swallowing shellfish, then washing it down with a
mouthful of wine.</p>
      <p>“It’s a taste I wouldn’t mind acquiring.”</p>
      <p>The discussion as to the merits of whether it was worth acquiring lasted
until touchdown.</p>
      <p>The pilot let them off with a cheery wave. “Order your aircar now,” he
said. “It’s got to come half a continent. You’ll be here awhile.”</p>
      <p>Radko didn’t tell him the aircar was already on its way, courtesy of
Vega’s well-laid plans.</p>
      <p>He off-loaded his precious cargo into the drone that waited for it, and
he and the drone took off at the same time.</p>
      <p>Han looked around. “We must be the only humans for hundreds of
kilometers. What a dismal place.”</p>
      <p>“We’ve an aircar coming,” Radko said. “Let’s collect our gear.” Their
gear was stowed in a cargo container on the edge of the field.</p>
      <p>“They couldn’t have gotten it out any farther away without taking it all
the way back to San See.” Han clapped Chaudry on the back, making him
jump. Chaudry had been looking around nervously. “You don’t have to
worry about other people. There’s no one here.”</p>
      <p>Radko suspected that was the problem. “Have you been out of the city
before, Chaudry?”</p>
      <p>He shrugged. “Maybe.” It was a mumble.</p>
      <p>There was a cure for that. Take his mind off the wide-open spaces. “Van
Heel, you’re in charge of our equipment. Tell us what you want. Chaudry,
you pack it. Han, you’re on guard.”</p>
      <p>She watched what van Heel chose. She definitely skewed to the
surveillance and electronic side.</p>
      <p>“Add two sheets of explosives,” Radko said. If all else failed, they
could blow themselves out of trouble. “Some hand weapons. A blaster
each. And spares.”</p>
      <p>She checked the stats of the ship they were to travel to Redmond on. It
was a commercial liner. “Van Heel, what can you hide from the ship
security?”</p>
      <p>“You don’t hide something like this from a ship,” van Heel said. “You
bribe the staff. I’ve got that in hand.”</p>
      <p>Radko hoped she was right. “More weapons then.” Something that didn’t
look like a weapon. Something they could put in their baggage. “A tranq
gun. And that Pandora field diffuser, there.”</p>
      <p>“That’s not a weapon,” van Heel said. “I don’t even know why it’s in the
container. It’s practically an antique.”</p>
      <p>Radko hid a smile. Commodore Vega, who collected ancient weapons, had an
early-model Pandora field diffuser on her wall. “You never know. It
might come in useful.” It wouldn’t be the first time one had been used
as a weapon.</p>
      <p>“If we come across a meteor shower,” Han said, picking it up and handing
it across to Chaudry. “We’ll let the captain know we’ve got one in our
luggage.”</p>
      <p>“Any other crazy suggestions?” van Heel asked.</p>
      <p>“No,” Radko said. “I’m sure you think one is enough.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Once in the aircar, the extended day caught up with Radko. All she
wanted to do was sleep. Instead, she spent the trip to the spaceport
going over the job and getting a feel for her new team.</p>
      <p>“You all know this is a covert mission,” she said. “Secrecy is vital and
will likely save your life. Don’t discuss the mission where we can be
overheard.”</p>
      <p>“Are you sure it’s covert ops?” Chaudry said uneasily. “I don’t think
I’d be good at that.”</p>
      <p>It wasn’t a comment Radko would have expected from a man whose
psychiatrist said he had a death wish. Radko thought Toll’s assessment
might be more accurate.</p>
      <p>Van Heel pulled out her comms and held it up to him. “What do you think
that code means?”</p>
      <p>Radko craned her neck to look. Van Heel had brought up her mobilization
orders.</p>
      <p>Chaudry looked at the orders as if he’d never seen them before although
he had.</p>
      <p>Van Heel put her comms back into her pocket. “You can’t say you didn’t
look at it, for you’re in casual clothes, like the rest of us.”</p>
      <p>“I was on leave. My kit’s in my bag.”</p>
      <p>“And I was pulled out of a training course I’d waited two years for,”
Han said.</p>
      <p>One soldier on leave, another on a training course. Vega must have
scrambled to get this together so fast. Even if Vega’s main reason for
choosing them had been their line ability, surely there were more than
three available linesmen in the Lancian fleet.</p>
      <p>Perhaps Vega didn’t trust the Lancian fleet right now. Sattur Dow was
getting his information from somewhere, and it was more likely to be
inside the fleet than out of it. Radko could understand that Vega might
go outside the usual channels to put her covert-ops team together.</p>
      <p>Which meant Chaudry and Han wouldn’t have had the usual pre-op training.
Vega would deal with it when they got back. In the meantime, a quick
overview of the basics would be a good start.</p>
      <p>“I hope you all understand what a covert op entails. No uniforms. No
comms out until we’ve completed our task. In fact, you should all have
received new comms before you left.”</p>
      <p>They nodded.</p>
      <p>“You should have left your own comms behind.”</p>
      <p>This time van Heel was the only one who nodded.</p>
      <p>Should she make them wipe their comms? She could, because they’d
compromised the job by bringing them. If Redmond got hold of either
comms, they would know who they had. But then, they hadn’t known any
better.</p>
      <p>She coded a security override into her own comms. “Give me your personal
comms.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry handed his over first. She pushed the override through and
handed it back. “Iris and fingerprint recognition.” Radko waited until
Chaudry had held the comms up to his eyes, then pressed his thumb on the
screen. “You, and only you, can use it. If anyone else tries, the whole
thing will be wiped clean.”</p>
      <p>Han handed his over but didn’t let go of it. “Mine’s already set for
that.” She could see it was true. “My family is paranoid about
security.”</p>
      <p>Radko remembered Renaud Han as an easygoing man. Still, it had been
years. Maybe he’d changed.</p>
      <p>“Give me permission to check the settings.”</p>
      <p>He did. It was way more secure than she’d made Chaudry’s.</p>
      <p>“Right. Don’t use your personal comms for anything. Turn it off and pack
it away in your bag. Use the issued comms from now on.”</p>
      <p>Han scowled down at his hands.</p>
      <p>“Han?” If he refused to do this, she was going to take his comms away.
Or maybe try to use it so that it wiped itself.</p>
      <p>“Understood.” Han depressed the back panel to turn his comms fully off.
He looked at it, then held it out to her.</p>
      <p>She almost took it, shook her head at the last moment. “You’re
responsible for your own shit, Han. Look after it.”</p>
      <p>He slipped it into his pocket.</p>
      <p>“Same for you, Chaudry. Don’t use your personal comms for anything.”</p>
      <p>Preliminaries over, it was time to get back to the job in hand. “We’re
going to Redmond, where Tiana Chen—that’s me—will attempt to buy a
stolen report. You are my bodyguards.”</p>
      <p>Han stretched himself out in one of the seats, arms crossed behind his
head. “Tiana Chen. You don’t mean that loathsome woman who hangs around
court and blackmails everyone?”</p>
      <p>“I do.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry cleared his throat. “Redmond is enemy territory.”</p>
      <p>“Of course it is,” van Heel said. “Covert ops. Remember. You do them in
enemy territory.”</p>
      <p>You didn’t always, but Radko didn’t correct her.</p>
      <p>Chaudry pulled at the knuckles on his right hand. “I don’t speak
Redmond; I work in Stores.” He didn’t state his question aloud, but
Radko understood, anyway.</p>
      <p>“They haven’t made a mistake. You were specifically chosen. All of you
were.”</p>
      <p>“Why?” van Heel asked. “So when we do get this report they can catalog
them properly in Stores?”</p>
      <p>“That’s better than the other option,” Han said. “That we’re
disposable.”</p>
      <p>“No one is disposable,” Radko said. “I intend to bring us all back.”
Herself included. “We do this carefully, and we do it safely. I’ll take
Chaudry and Han with me. Van Heel, I want you on surveillance, and as a
backup if anything goes wrong.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel nodded.</p>
      <p>“As for not understanding the native Redmond language, Chaudry, you
don’t have to. The person we are meeting knows where we are from. She’ll
expect us to speak Standard.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_seven_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER SEVEN: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Kari wang was in the middle of a ship check when Ean arrived with
Bhaksir and Hana. Even so, she took time out to meet them at the shuttle
bay.</p>
      <p>“Touch my ship without my agreeing to what you are doing—without my
knowing what you plan—and I will personally boot you off the ship.”</p>
      <p>“Understood,” Ean said because there was nothing else she wanted to
hear.</p>
      <p>“Good.” Kari Wang turned to Bhaksir. “Keep him out of my way until I
need him.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir looked dubiously at Ean. “Isn’t he supposed to work with you? I
mean—”</p>
      <p>She should have done what Radko would have done, which was say, “Yes,
Captain,” then let Ean work anyway.</p>
      <p>“I’ve an undercrewed ship; no one is battle trained. I don’t have the
foggiest how many weapons I’ve got or how to use them. I don’t need
Lambert in my way. I’ll call you when I’m ready.”</p>
      <p>Kari Wang headed back to the bridge, opening her comms as she went.
“Mael, is level three secured?”</p>
      <p>“All good,” Mael said.</p>
      <p>Ean started after the captain.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir hesitated. “Shouldn’t we wait till she calls us?”</p>
      <p>“No.” Because no matter what she said, Kari Wang would expect them on
the bridge soon. “Listen to the lines,” Ean said. Ship lines were a song
of anticipation and calculation. “She says she’s worried.” Worry seemed
to come with captaincy. “But she’s looking forward to it.”</p>
      <p>The human lines were mostly calm—some nervous. Kari Wang had done a lot
of training with these people in a very short time.</p>
      <p>Ean sang softly to the lines as he followed the captain through the
ship.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Ready to fight,”</emphasis> the lines sang back, and Ean could taste the
anticipation.</p>
      <p>The alien ships were all warships. They would be used to fighting. Had
that eagerness come from their prior crew or their current captain?</p>
      <p>They reached the bridge. Kari Wang continued her checklist. She was
nearly at the end, for Ean could hear the nerves and excitement.</p>
      <p>Finally, “Dubicki?”</p>
      <p>“Line eight is good.”</p>
      <p>“Abascal?”</p>
      <p>“Line seven is ready.”</p>
      <p>“Lambert?”</p>
      <p>“Here,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“Good.” She opened the comms—to Abram and to the other <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet
ships. “This is the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. Preparing to jump. Lambert.”</p>
      <p>Ean started singing direct to the sevens, linking all the line sevens in
the fleet, so that when they jumped through the void, they wouldn’t lose
contact.</p>
      <p>“Lambert. You have the coordinates.”</p>
      <p>Yes, but how did he translate them to something the lines could
understand? The captain usually keyed the coordinates on human machines.
They didn’t have any way to set the jump on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>He stopped singing. “We have a problem.”</p>
      <p>The alien ships didn’t understand human references. In their practice
runs, one of the human ships had always set the jump. He would have to
bring one of the other fleet ships with them to set the coordinates.</p>
      <p>He sang the comms open to the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>’s bridge. “Captain Wendell. I
need you to come with us. I need you to set the jump.”</p>
      <p>Captain Wendell never slept. Well, he must, but Ean seldom saw him away
from his bridge. He was on the bridge now. Ean wondered if he used the
lines to tell him when things were happening.</p>
      <p>“Unarmed, into enemy territory.”</p>
      <p>He shouldn’t have known where they were going.</p>
      <p>“You’re not unarmed. You’ve six bombs. And we won’t be there long.”</p>
      <p>“If we do this, I want a full complement of weapons on this ship
afterward.”</p>
      <p>It didn’t have the snap of the quick decisions Abram and Helmo made.
Then, Wendell must have been planning how to get his weapons back. No
doubt he’d worked out long ago all the possible ways he could do it, and
this was one of them.</p>
      <p>“I can’t promise that,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>Kari Wang’s impatience was a wave battering at him. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> joined
in the chorus. <emphasis>“Battle.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>“Of course you can,” Wendell said. “You’re a level-twelve linesman.”</p>
      <p>“We’ll lose our jump window soon,” Kari Wang said.</p>
      <p>“I can’t promise weapons,” Ean said, again. “I’ll talk to Abram about
it, but that’s all I can do.”</p>
      <p>How could he explain to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> where it had to jump? There would
be a way to translate human coordinates into something the ship could
understand. He just didn’t know what it was yet. It would be like line
seven, explaining what it did, but it had taken them months to work out
what it meant. He didn’t have months. He had minutes.</p>
      <p>“A pity,” Wendell said. “What are the coordinates?”</p>
      <p>“I haven’t promised any weapons.”</p>
      <p>“I understand that.”</p>
      <p>“We have two minutes left in the jump window,” Kari Wang said. She
pushed the coordinates through to Wendell herself.</p>
      <p>Ean started singing again. <emphasis>“Only the</emphasis> Eleven <emphasis>and the</emphasis> Wendell.
<emphasis>The rest of you remain where you are.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Underneath the song, he heard Wendell’s crisp directions. “Ship, prepare
to enter the void.”</p>
      <p>He had the usual forever in the void to check the lines. There were only
two sets—the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>’s and the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>’s. That bit worked, at least.
Both sets of lines were clean. Both sets anticipating what was to come.</p>
      <p>He realized he’d forgotten to clear Wendell’s coming with Abram. He sent
a hurried song back. “<emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>’s coming with us.”</p>
      <p>Then they were back in normal space, with the chatter of the lines from
the various ships in this sector, and Wendell and Kari Wang’s
now-familiar relief at the safe passage through the void momentarily
swamping the lines.</p>
      <p>Kari Wang didn’t give Ean time to relax. “Find me a military ship close
by.”</p>
      <p>How was he supposed to pick a military ship from a nonmilitary one?</p>
      <p>He sang to line five on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. He’d heard military ships before.
They were nearly always busy, with information being passed through.
They also contained plenty of weapons.</p>
      <p>Kari Wang didn’t wait for an answer. She turned to her own crew. “What
have we got?”</p>
      <p>Her crew was singing, too, bringing up line-five traffic on each of the
nearby ships, singing them down again when Kari Wang shook her head.
Kari Wang herself was going through ships on the small human screens set
around the captain’s chair.</p>
      <p>Through the lines, Ean could hear Wendell’s crew doing the same. He sang
the lines open from the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, and vice versa. It
was easier to do that than have to explain everything later.</p>
      <p>For a while, there was no sound except the two ships’ checking off and
discounting possible ships.</p>
      <p>There had to be an easier way. Like asking. Ean raised his own voice and
directed it out through line five. <emphasis>“Which of you have been in battle?”</emphasis></p>
      <p>He got the instant attention of fifty ships, probably more. He chose the
strongest. “That one,” and pointed to it on the screen. He had no idea
how far away it was.</p>
      <p>Abascal sang the comms open.</p>
      <p>The multiple messages going in and out made a jumble of sound. Ean
concentrated on new messages, pushing them through.</p>
      <p>“This is the GU <emphasis>Packard</emphasis> calling Weapons Supplies.”</p>
      <p>“Go ahead, GU <emphasis>Packard</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“We ordered fifty fusion warheads. You sent us heat-seeking missiles.”</p>
      <p>“Get us a jump,” Kari Wang demanded, close to Ean’s ear. He hadn’t
realized she’d moved.</p>
      <p>He nodded. “Be ready to order a jump. Like you normally do,” and sang to
the lines on the GU <emphasis>Packard</emphasis>, <emphasis>“We’re going to borrow your lines for a
moment.”</emphasis> It was disorienting that he didn’t get an answer—he was used
to the alien ships, which answered back—but the lines waited for him. He
opened the lines to the gate station in this sector—all linesmen knew
how to do that though he’d never had to request a jump before.</p>
      <p>The clerk on duty sounded bored. “This is the Roscracia Sector Gate,
what can we do for you?”</p>
      <p>“This is the GU <emphasis>Packard</emphasis>.” Kari Wang made it crisp and military. “We
require a jump to Aratoga sector 123.2143.23, effective immediately.”</p>
      <p>“As you are aware, we are in a war situation here, and there might be a
slight delay in obtaining codes. I’ll need to confirm your—”</p>
      <p>“Just get me the jump and stop mucking around.”</p>
      <p>Ean looked at Kari Wang. She looked back. The clerk put the line on
hold—which didn’t stop Ean’s hearing it—and said, “Military. All the
same. Must have it now. There’s a war on.” He took the line off hold.
“Sending an identity check through now. Please reply with the correct
response, or I will be unable to provide the jump.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang the check on through the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> and back to the GU <emphasis>Packard</emphasis>.
<emphasis>“Confirm it. It is correct. Send back the right code.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>For a moment, he didn’t think it would work. He changed his tune to
include line eight. <emphasis>“Send the confirmation through.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Something went back, and Ean held his breath until the clerk said,
“Codes confirmed. Please wait while I set a jump for you.” His tone
changed, to a monotonous cadence. “Please be aware that requesting an
immediate jump incurs a surcharge of 200 percent. You must confirm this
and accept the surcharge as part of the jump contract.” He said it like
it was something he’d recited hundreds of times before.</p>
      <p>“Accepted,” Kari Wang said.</p>
      <p>“This acceptance must be confirmed by the officer in charge of your
ship, the ship second, or the ship third.”</p>
      <p>“I confirm as officer in charge.” Kari Wang wound her finger in front of
Ean, as if wanting him to do something.</p>
      <p>What did she want?</p>
      <p>A signal came through then. “Please use a thumbprint and retina scan and
return this as the authorizing officer.”</p>
      <p>She held her comms up to scan her eyes, then pressed her thumb against
the screen. “Sending confirmation through now.”</p>
      <p>She sounded as if she’d done it a thousand times.</p>
      <p>Kari Wang circled her finger at Ean again. This time he understood what
she wanted. He sang the confirmation through. He didn’t route it via the
other ship. All they wanted was confirmation that she was captain and
that she was authorized to request this.</p>
      <p>“Thank you, Captain. Setting your jump now.”</p>
      <p>The clerk whistled tunelessly as he set the codes. Kari Wang twitched as
they waited. Wendell paced.</p>
      <p>Ean tuned them out. He had lines to thank. <emphasis>“We appreciate you letting
us borrow your lines.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>The human ship lines didn’t respond in words, but he thought they were
pleased to be talking to other lines.</p>
      <p>They were so weak compared to the lines on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> and the
<emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>. He could hear Wendell’s boots as the pacing got faster.</p>
      <p>Grayson, Wendell’s second-in-command, was at the comms. He moved. Ean
wouldn’t have interpreted it as anything, but Wendell did and stopped.</p>
      <p>“Enemy ships have noticed us,” he said.</p>
      <p>“Coordinates coming through,” the clerk said, seconds later, but it felt
like hours. He pushed them down line five. “Thank you, Captain Kari
Wang. Have a great trip.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you,” Kari Wang said, and clicked off.</p>
      <p>Ean kept the line open and sang the clerk’s comms open, so he could hear
what came next. Sure enough, “Wasn’t that the GU <emphasis>Packard</emphasis>?” the clerk
said. “Shouldn’t that have been Captain Packard?”</p>
      <p>He punched in a code to the ship Ean had used. “Captain Packard,
confirming the jump you recently requested.”</p>
      <p>Kari Wang pushed the codes through to Wendell. “Lambert.”</p>
      <p>Ean began singing to the sevens.</p>
      <p>“Ship, prepare to jump,” Wendell said.</p>
      <p>They entered the void.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>In Aratogan space, all was quiet.</p>
      <p>Somewhere, close to one of the weapons bays, Spacer Tinatin was talking
to Spacer Qatar. “They didn’t want him on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>
anymore, so they sent him to Confluence Station. But Confluence Station
didn’t want him either, so now he’s here on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, until they can
work out what to do with him.”</p>
      <p>“You are full of it, Tinatin,” Qatar said.</p>
      <p>On the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, Abram was back at his old desk in his and
Michelle’s workroom, talking to Admiral Dirks, from Aratoga. Dirks must
have been on Haladea III, for Ean couldn’t get any information other
than what he could hear through line five.</p>
      <p>“Now in Aratogan space. No ships close by.” Kari Wang used her human
screens to tell her that. “Moving toward the battleground.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you, Captain.” Abram looked toward Dirks’s screen. “We now have
real-time communication with the Aratogan sector, Admiral. The comms is
yours.”</p>
      <p>“I could get used to this.” Dirks’s grin was a toothy baring of teeth.
There was something about admirals. They showed more teeth than other
soldiers. Maybe it was a seniority thing. He clicked on his comms,
through to another admiral. A woman this time. “Brant. Dirks here.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang the feed going to Abram’s screens onto one of Kari Wang’s
screens. She nodded her thanks.</p>
      <p>“This had better be important, Dirks. We’ve a situation at this end.”</p>
      <p>“I know. We’re sending you reinforcements.”</p>
      <p>“That’s going to be a lot of use. This battle will be over in six
hours.”</p>
      <p>Six hours. How did she know with such precision how long it would be?</p>
      <p>Brant looked at the comms. “You’re in real time. You’re in the Aratogan
sector?” She was animated suddenly. “What are you sending us? And how
long will they be?” Ean heard her say quietly to someone, “Get Commodore
Summers on the comms.”</p>
      <p>“We’re two hours away,” Kari Wang said.</p>
      <p>“Who in the lines are you?”</p>
      <p>“Captain Kari Wang, ma’am. New Alliance governance fleet.”</p>
      <p>Governance fleet? Ean had never heard of it. Neither, by her frown, had
Brant.</p>
      <p>“We are in the Aratogan sector and making at speed toward—”</p>
      <p>“Kari Wang. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>? You’re sending me one of the alien ships?”</p>
      <p>“Affirmative,” Dirks said.</p>
      <p>“Admiral Brant, Admiral Galenos here. Understand that this is a trial
run. We are still testing the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. Results might be unexpected.” A
strong sound of Ean came through with that. “We ask that you give the
ship space to do what it needs to do, and if Captain Kari Wang asks your
people to do something, then they should do it. It will be for their
safety. Sometimes our control is… erratic.”</p>
      <p>“Give us access to that green field,” Brant said, “and I don’t care how
erratic you are. Even the sight of the ship should scare them. Hell, it
scares me and it’s on our side.”</p>
      <p>“Command of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> is yours, Admiral Brant.”</p>
      <p>“Commodore Summers is the man in charge at the scene.” Brant switched in
another line. “Are you there, Commodore?”</p>
      <p>“Admiral.”</p>
      <p>“Situation report.”</p>
      <p>“We’ve ten enemy ships surrounding Asteroids 527 and 629,” Summers said.
“Ships range from a two-hundred-crew Class Three warship to
one-hundred-crew Class Five.” He put the data and maps on-screen as
well. Ean pushed that through to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> and to the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>.
“These asteroids contain the offices and supply stores for the whole
belt. If we lose them, we lose control of the asteroids. We’ve five
Aratogan ships. With the exception of the ship I am on, all are smaller
warships with less than a hundred crew. We have five battle cruisers two
light-years away, but we can’t get jumps for them.”</p>
      <p>“Sounds bad,” Brant said. “But you’re about to get reinforcements.”</p>
      <p>“We’ll be glad of them.” Summers stumbled, then righted himself.</p>
      <p>It took Kari Wang’s saying, “He’s under attack,” before Ean realized
what had happened.</p>
      <p>“They hit him?”</p>
      <p>Kari Wang nodded.</p>
      <p>Summers glanced over to where someone was giving orders, then looked
back. “How many? What class? When will they be here?”</p>
      <p>“One ship,” Brant said.</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t need the image on Abram’s screen to see Summers wince.</p>
      <p>But they didn’t have one ship, they had two. And one of them was
effectively unarmed.</p>
      <p>“Class—” Brant looked at Abram. “Does it have a class?”</p>
      <p>“Eleven,” Abram said.</p>
      <p>“Never heard of it,” Summers said. Then he did a double take, much like
Brant had before. He looked from Abram to Dirks to Brant. “One of the
alien ships?”</p>
      <p>“Affirmative.”</p>
      <p>“How long to get here?”</p>
      <p>“One hundred and fifteen minutes,” Kari Wang said.</p>
      <p>Ean tuned them out. He’d brought the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> along; he had to make
sure Wendell and his crew were safe.</p>
      <p>The conversation between the admirals, commodore, and captain was done.
The Aratogans clicked off, leaving only the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet ships online.</p>
      <p>“Wendell,” Kari Wang said, “you should stay here. We’ll collect you on
the way back.”</p>
      <p>“No,” Ean said. “He should come inside the protective field.”</p>
      <p>“I’ve been meaning to ask,” Abram said. “Was Wendell’s coming along an
accident? Or deliberate?”</p>
      <p>He hadn’t gotten Ean’s message. Another thing they knew now. You
couldn’t send messages while you were in the void.</p>
      <p>“We couldn’t set the jump on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>,” Kari Wang said.</p>
      <p>“I can see that might be a problem. I wonder how the aliens did it.”
Abram gave a wry smile. “Maybe you should have used one of the media
ships, Ean.” Ean wasn’t sure if he was joking. “This could be an
impressive show.”</p>
      <p>“Wendell,” Ean said, for Wendell wasn’t making any attempt to move.</p>
      <p>“Sure, I’ll come along,” Wendell said. “But I’m not going in close. Not
even to ensure my protection. Not at the speeds we’re traveling.”</p>
      <p>“It was safe when the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> did it.”</p>
      <p>“The <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> wasn’t traveling at full speed toward a
battle. No thank you, Ean. I’d prefer to take my chances following
behind.”</p>
      <p>“Not to mention he’ll slow us down,” Kari Wang said. Which was true, for
the alien ships could travel twice as fast as the Bose engines could
drive human ships.</p>
      <p>Admiral Brant called back. Commodore Summers not long after. Kari Wang
and Mael were soon deep in tactical discussions.</p>
      <p>“War is mostly waiting,” Bhaksir told Ean. “With occasional exciting
moments. Hanging around you, it’s more exciting than normal.”</p>
      <p>Ean liked life quiet. The lines, his crewmates on the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis> — especially Radko, wherever she was—and the alien ships. His
preferred adventures were discovering new things about the lines.</p>
      <p>He listened to the lines and kept out of Kari Wang’s way.</p>
      <p>Ten minutes later, a ship jumped into space close enough for the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> to register the lines. Then another. Then a third. The three of
them started to move toward the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>“Damn.” Kari Wang didn’t sound surprised. She called up Wendell. “You’ve
three ships closing in on you.”</p>
      <p>“We can see two of them. Where’s the third?”</p>
      <p>Ships broadcast their location, but because communication within a
sector was instantaneous, most ships ignored anything outside a known
radius of their own ship unless they were specifically contacting
another ship. Otherwise, they’d drown in the information overload.</p>
      <p>Kari Wang gave coordinates.</p>
      <p>Ean looked at the positions. Sure, the ships were thousands of
kilometers apart—but that was normal for jumps. These three ships had
arrived in close succession, and had arrived close to where the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>
had jumped.</p>
      <p>Now they were making for the nearest ship.</p>
      <p>Ean had brought the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> into this battle and left him there. “We
have to go back and rescue him.”</p>
      <p>“We have a battle plan. Other ships are working to our timetable, have
already started moving. What do you want me to do? Call them up, and
say, ‘Sorry, we’ll be delayed’?”</p>
      <p>Yes, he did. “We can’t leave one of our own fleet.”</p>
      <p>“This is war, Lambert.”</p>
      <p>Another ship arrived. Then another. Gate Union intended to make sure of
their kill.</p>
      <p>War or not, Ean couldn’t leave Wendell there to face five ships. He
opened his mouth to sing.</p>
      <p>Kari Wang took out her blaster. “You jump us back to that ship, and
you’re a dead man.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir jumped up hurriedly. “I can’t let you do that, Captain.”</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t think Kari Wang would kill him, but she would knock him out,
and he wouldn’t be any use to anyone then. He closed his mouth.</p>
      <p>Maybe he should try singing Wendell home. Or… “Why don’t I swap? Like we
did with Confluence Station? That won’t cause too much delay, and we
know it works.”</p>
      <p>“Last time we did that, we weren’t traveling at this speed,” but he
could see she was considering it.</p>
      <p>“The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> knows what to do. And it’s not like we’re doing anything
dangerous.” He hoped. “We’re switching places.”</p>
      <p>“Can you guarantee that?”</p>
      <p>He wanted to lie. “No.”</p>
      <p>She put her blaster away. “If you’d said yes, Lambert, we wouldn’t be
thinking of this.”</p>
      <p>If he couldn’t guarantee it, why was she thinking of it? “I will do my
best to make it as safe as we can.”</p>
      <p>“I’m not sure that’s the right approach with you.” Kari Wang turned to
the screen. “So, Wendell, you’ve five ships headed toward you. I’m sure
you’d like to fight your way out of it, but Lambert has a suggestion.”</p>
      <p>“They’re not good odds this end,” Wendell admitted. “We only have six
warheads. I’ll listen to any suggestions.”</p>
      <p>His crew were already making plans. Ean could see them, calculating
distances and trajectories.</p>
      <p>“We’re thinking a swap, much like Lambert did with Confluence Station.
We don’t want to swap too often, or I’ll lose too much trajectory.”</p>
      <p>“Minimum number of swaps.” Wendell scratched his chin.</p>
      <p>“Minimum number any <emphasis>sane</emphasis> person would do. I don’t want to die of
fright doing it.”</p>
      <p>Was she talking about him or about Wendell?</p>
      <p>“Give me some calculations, Piers, and a safety margin.”</p>
      <p>Wendell came up with three jumps to get all five ships. “We could do it
in two, but you’ll be getting close to one of the ships.”</p>
      <p>It meant a change in course, and Wendell had planned that so it looked
as if he were trying to avoid one of the ships, which in fact took him
into the path of another two.</p>
      <p>“With luck, they’ll see what you do to the first two, and the rest will
retreat to regroup,” Wendell said. “That’s what I would do.”</p>
      <p>Provided everything worked as planned.</p>
      <p>They watched the ships move closer to Wendell. Too close. What if the
<emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> was destroyed before the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> swapped? Atmosphere on the
<emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> was calm, ready for battle. Wendell paced around the bridge,
slow and careful, as if he wanted to cover every centimeter of surface.</p>
      <p>On the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, there was a lot of nervous excitement. Kari Wang
continued to drill her crew, treating it like a training exercise. Ean
wasn’t sure if she believed it was, if it was to keep them calm, or if
she thought they needed more training.</p>
      <p>Two hours ago, Ean had been listening to Michelle tell them Emperor Yu
had called Abram a traitor.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> drew closer to the battle. The <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> grew closer to the
warships.</p>
      <p>“Shields up,” Wendell said, as the first ship fired. “Take evasive
action as needed but keep heading toward those ships.”</p>
      <p>Eventually, the two ships were as close as planned. The <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> took
some damage, but Wendell’s crew were good and the Gate Union ships wary,
so damage was minimal.</p>
      <p>Wendell stopped pacing. “We’re in range.”</p>
      <p>Commodore Summers came online. “You are within range of our sensors,
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“Good,” Kari Wang said. “Ean. Switch.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang the request. <emphasis>“Switch places, with the Wendell, please. Like
you did the other night with Confluence Station.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>“Preparing to enter the void,” Kari Wang said, but by the time she’d
said it, they were out the other side.</p>
      <p>“Captain Kari Wang?” Summers said.</p>
      <p>“One moment,” Kari Wang said. “Status report?”</p>
      <p>“We’re about to get shot,” Mael said.</p>
      <p>“Thank you, Mael, that’s truly helpful.”</p>
      <p>But Mael was already adding, “One ship at 234.23.33, one at 235.24.186.”</p>
      <p>“No one in range here,” Wendell said. “But I see a lot of ships within
ten to twenty minutes.”</p>
      <p>“Ean. Turn on the field.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang the protective field on.</p>
      <p>“Mael, set a course between the two ships. I want the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> to pass
within nine kilometers of the first, then be ready to swing around and
do the same for the other.”</p>
      <p>The enemy ship frantically fired side rockets to turn. It was too slow.
The protective field triggered at just under ten kilometers and spread
outward from the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. This time, Ean was listening for the quick,
deep dirge of line nine. The enemy ship disappeared, its lines with it.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> and its crew sang with triumph.</p>
      <p>A whole ship, gone in seconds.</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t join the singing.</p>
      <p>The green field spread out inexorably farther. Two hundred kilometers
farther, then it stopped, held for thirty counts, then began to recede.
All the while, the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> moved closer to the second ship.</p>
      <p>Through line five on the second ship, Ean heard the captain requesting a
jump. He held his breath. Abram always had a jump ready. Please let
these people have a jump ready.</p>
      <p>Mael counted off the distance on one of the human screens. “Two hundred
eighty kilometers. Two hundred seventy kilometers. Two hundred sixty
kilometers.”</p>
      <p>The clerk assigning jumps sounded the same as the one in the Roscracian
sector. “Please be aware requesting an immediate jump incurs a surcharge
of 200 percent. You must—”</p>
      <p>“Confirmed and accepted as officer in charge,” the captain said. “Now
send me the jump, or you’ll kill us all.”</p>
      <p>“Please use a thumbprint and retina scan to confirm that you are the
authorizing officer.”</p>
      <p>“One hundred thirty,” Mael said. “One hundred twenty.”</p>
      <p>The ship disappeared.</p>
      <p>“One hundred ten. Ship has jumped.”</p>
      <p>“Captain, please use a thumbprint and retina scan to confirm you are the
authorizing officer,” the clerk at the other end of the now-empty line
five repeated.</p>
      <p>Ean blew on his hands, which were icy.</p>
      <p>“They jumped cold.” Kari Wang shivered. “Ean, swap us back.”</p>
      <p>Ean dutifully switched the two ships and breathed deep as he listened to
the celebration around him. He should have insisted they trust the lines
to jump them safely into Aratogan space. Then the first ship wouldn’t
have been sent into the void, and the second wouldn’t have taken that
desperate jump.</p>
      <p>Now they were stuck in the void forever. Ean had been in it long enough
to know how horrible that was, and based on the condition of the
original crew of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> — stuck in stasis like the crew of the
<emphasis>Balao</emphasis> — the aliens must hate it as much as he did.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Why did you send them into the void?”</emphasis> He used the sound for line nine
because he didn’t know how to differentiate between the line that took
them into the void and the void itself.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Void?”</emphasis> line one on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> replied. <emphasis>“Not the void. We sent
them.”</emphasis> What came through was the heavy strength of line six.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“You used the void to flick them into line six?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Not line six. This.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>The second time around, Ean heard subtle changes in the sound. It was
fainter, deeper, heavier. Stationary. He’d heard the sound on the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> back near Haladea III. He’d never been sure what it was.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Quick. Kind.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Bose Engines were mostly energy. Was the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> telling him it had
flicked the first enemy ship into a massive energy source? Like a sun?</p>
      <p>Summers was relieved to see the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> back. “I wasn’t sure what
happened there,” he said.</p>
      <p>“Some Gate Union ships tailing us.” Kari Wang glanced over to Ean,
looked as if she would say something, then didn’t. “There are another
three ships. We might need to jump again to eliminate them.”</p>
      <p>Summers nodded. “You will be back in time though?”</p>
      <p>“Yes. Currently on track to arrive in ten minutes,” Kari Wang said. “Any
changes to our plan?”</p>
      <p>He looked bemused at that, as if wondering why she asked. “Negative.”</p>
      <p>That plan had been agreed to and valid five minutes ago. In that five
minutes, they’d destroyed a ship full of people and lines, and forced
another to jump cold.</p>
      <p>And no one but them had noticed. Ean shivered. He’d never get warm
again.</p>
      <p>Kari Wang let her crew celebrate for another five minutes, then called
them back to their tasks. She glanced at Ean occasionally but said
nothing, although she did look at Bhaksir once, and incline her head
toward Ean.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir came over and sat beside Ean. “Is there a problem?”</p>
      <p>“No,” Ean said. “Missing Radko, actually.”</p>
      <p>He didn’t know why he’d said it, but Radko’s absence was an ache that
wouldn’t go away. He’d have given anything to have her nearby, even if
she was making him do laps on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> when his throat
was burning, and he couldn’t breathe. His throat was burning now, too,
and he hoped Bhaksir wouldn’t ask him any more questions. He wasn’t sure
he could answer.</p>
      <p>“Me too, Ean. Me too,” Bhaksir said.</p>
      <p>Wendell watched the boards carefully. “The third ship’s definitely
slowing. So are the ones chasing us.”</p>
      <p>Two minutes later, all three jumped out, one after the other, at
intervals of half a minute.</p>
      <p>“That’s one problem out of the way,” Kari Wang said. “I wish the ships
around here would do that.” She looked at Ean. “Do I need to state the
obvious? No shield here, or we’ll annihilate ships on our own side.”</p>
      <p>She hadn’t needed to state it, but Ean said, “Understood.”</p>
      <p>Kari Wang opened her comms to the whole ship. “Positions.”</p>
      <p>Line one echoed with the wave of anticipation and nerves.</p>
      <p>“Abascal, Dhalmans. Ready on the weapons?”</p>
      <p>“Ready, Captain,” from two different parts of the ship.</p>
      <p>Ean moved over to Mael. “Which ones are friends; which ones are foe?”</p>
      <p>Mael sang the IDs for the enemy first. “Here, here, here, and here.
Enemy.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang them back to the ship. “<emphasis>Enemy.</emphasis> And the Aratogans?”</p>
      <p>Mael sang their IDs.</p>
      <p>Ean sang them back to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> as well. <emphasis>“Friends.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>He hoped the lines could distinguish between the terms.</p>
      <p>After which, they waited some more. War seemed to be one long wait, with
tiny bits of action between.</p>
      <p>On the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, Abram was making tea for himself and
Michelle. Captain Helmo wandered the decks, stopping occasionally to
talk to crew. The lines were melancholy. They were melancholy on the
<emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> as well. Captain Wendell was sitting—a rare still moment for
him—staring at the screens as if he expected the enemy ships to jump out
of the void again. Ean didn’t think he thought that at all.</p>
      <p>The only ship that had any real life was the Galactic News ship, where
the engineer who’d been so animated two nights previously was animated
again.</p>
      <p>“I tell you, Coop. We’re getting live news again. This time from the
Aratogan sector.”</p>
      <p>And, of course, from Spacer Tinatin on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. “… Lady Lyan, and
no one is happy about it because it means she’s trying to make Lancia
back into the power it used to be back in the Alliance.”</p>
      <p>That news was only two hours old. Where was she getting it from?</p>
      <p>“Combat ship coming into range,” Kari Wang said, crisp and clear, making
Ean jump.</p>
      <p>The whole ship seemed to brighten.</p>
      <p>“Abascal, Dhalmans. Are you ready?”</p>
      <p>“Ready, Captain.”</p>
      <p>“We’re ready too,” Tinatin said to Qatar.</p>
      <p>“We’re on the wrong side of the ship for fighting.”</p>
      <p>“But we’re still ready.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Ready,”</emphasis> the ship echoed.</p>
      <p>“Fire on my command. Three, two, one, fire.”</p>
      <p>Line eight sang. Two twangs, and seconds later—it felt like
hours—Abascal said, “Missile gone.” Dhalmans said the same, almost on
top of her.</p>
      <p>Did the other ship realize they had fired? Ean sang gently to the lines
on the other ship to find out.</p>
      <p>Yes, and they were firing rockets now, moving away. But the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> had
fired first.</p>
      <p>“They’re taking evasive action,” he said. “And they fired at us.”</p>
      <p>“Calliope. Fire jets eighty-seven and eighty-eight. Five seconds on half
thrust.”</p>
      <p>Calliope sang instructions to the ship, and the ship responded
instantly.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>’s missiles hit the enemy ship then. It bucked against the
force.</p>
      <p>“Fire again, on my command. Three, two, one, fire.” Two more missiles
headed toward the ship. The enemy ship’s own sudden, evasive
acceleration turned it into their path. The ship lines jangled and
stayed jangling.</p>
      <p>Ean clasped his fingers together, saw Kari Wang glance at them, and
crossed his arms instead.</p>
      <p>“Weapons ready,” Abascal said, and Dhalmans, almost on top of her again.
“Ready.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Ready,”</emphasis> line eight echoed.</p>
      <p>Ready to pound other lines into oblivion. Then, that was what battles
were for, and this was a warship.</p>
      <p>“Missile will pass fifty meters from port side,” Mael said. “And two
vessels have broken away from the main fight, making toward us. Staying
within two hundred kilometers of Aratogan ships.”</p>
      <p>“Acknowledged,” Kari Wang said.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Ready,”</emphasis> line eight sang again. A persistent tune under everything
that was happening on the bridge.</p>
      <p>“Line eight is ready,” Ean said. <emphasis>“Ready to do what?”</emphasis></p>
      <p>The answer that came back was quiet and blue and smelled like hot blood.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Not your green field.”</emphasis> They’d kill everyone within a
two-hundred-kilometer radius, friend and foe.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Not the automatic defense system. The…”</emphasis>
        <emphasis>Quiet, blue, hot blood.</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>“Ready to what?” Kari Wang asked.</p>
      <p>Use? Do? “The thing.”</p>
      <p>“That’s really helpful, Lambert. I need more information.” She opened
the comms. “Those of you not at active stations, see if you can work out
what Lambert’s talking about.”</p>
      <p>“It’s line eight,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>What questions would Radko ask?</p>
      <p>Is it a weapon? How do you use it?</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“How does it work?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>In line eight’s song, the tune twisted and turned into a hot, blue ball.</p>
      <p>“I think it’s a weapon,” Ean said. <emphasis>“Can you fire at a specific ship?”</emphasis></p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Of course.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>“The GU <emphasis>Salvan</emphasis> has fired,” Mael said. “Two missiles, coming this way.”</p>
      <p>Kari Wang checked her boards. “Calliope. Fire jets eighty-seven and
eighty-eight. Five seconds on full thrust.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Can you fire at that one?”</emphasis> Ean made the sound for the GU <emphasis>Salvan</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>For a moment, they were in the void. Line eight released something, then
they were out again.</p>
      <p>“Lambert. Do that again without my permission, and I will kill you
personally.”</p>
      <p>A bright blue ball of flame engulfed the GU <emphasis>Salvan</emphasis>. The metallic smell
of hot blood swamped Ean momentarily. The lines on the GU <emphasis>Salvan</emphasis> went
dead.</p>
      <p>Ean put a hand to his mouth. Lives and lines, so easily wiped out.</p>
      <p>“And what did you do, anyway?” Kari Wang asked.</p>
      <p>The three single eights started cheering.</p>
      <p>“GU <emphasis>Salvan</emphasis> has been neutralized,” one of them—Boleslav—said.</p>
      <p>“How do you know this?” Kari Wang demanded.</p>
      <p>“Didn’t you see it, ma’am?”</p>
      <p>“No, I didn’t.”</p>
      <p>“There are no lines left alive on that ship,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“Another missile leaving the GU <emphasis>Salvan</emphasis>,” Mael said. “And another. No,
scratch that. Lifepods exiting.”</p>
      <p>At least something had come out of it alive.</p>
      <p>Ean watched the exiting pods while Kari Wang turned her attention to the
next ship Summers had assigned her. “Can we do it again?”</p>
      <p>She had to stand right in front of him before he realized she was
talking to him.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Can you?”</emphasis> Ean asked line eight.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Time. Wait.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>“Not yet, I think.”</p>
      <p>“Let me know when it can.”</p>
      <p>Ean nodded and went back to watching escaping pods.</p>
      <p>The sounds of war went on around him. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> destroyed another
ship, and damaged two more. It was hit twice, neither time badly.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Ready,”</emphasis> line eight said finally.</p>
      <p>Ean took a deep breath.</p>
      <p>One of the Gate Union ships disappeared. It had jumped. Then another,
and another. In five minutes they were all gone, scattered no doubt over
the galaxy to whatever jumps they’d been assigned.</p>
      <p>Ean blew out his breath.</p>
      <p>Summers was all smiles over the comms. “Thank you, Captain. Your
presence here routed the enemy. It was good to see you in action. Most
impressive.”</p>
      <p>“We’re still learning the ins and outs of the ship,” Kari Wang said.
“Once we know it, then you’ll see impressive.”</p>
      <p>The lines sang with pleasure. <emphasis>“You will.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Kari Wang patted the console, then called up the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>. “If we’re to
jump together, I’d prefer to be closer. We know how much space we have
to clear.”</p>
      <p>A lot, because Abram didn’t like the ships too close together. But at
least Kari Wang was prepared to jump home cold. Although, really, when
you had instantaneous communication between two sectors, and feeds from
ships in the other sector, how dangerous was it? The jump took a
millisecond, and you knew what was there.</p>
      <p>Even so, Ean was going to make good and sure the jump was a safe one.</p>
      <p>Afterward, while the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> made for its rendezvous with the
<emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>, Kari Wang walked around the ship.</p>
      <p>“Walk with me,” she said to Ean.</p>
      <p>He wanted to sit and think, but he could tell from the lines that she’d
insist if he didn’t. He trailed her out, and Bhaksir trailed him.</p>
      <p>Kari Wang stopped and talked to some of her crew close by. “Well done,”
she said. They talked some moments, then moved on. As they moved off Ean
noticed she listed slightly to the left. So the fight hadn’t been as
easy as it looked. He was glad about that.</p>
      <p>“You should sit down,” he said.</p>
      <p>“I need to check my crew,” she said. “Was this your first fight?”</p>
      <p>“No.” He’d been in a battle before, back when he’d been with Orsaya on
the shuttle, escaping from Markan. Kari Wang wouldn’t be satisfied with
a no. She’d keep on at him until she got to the root of what she thought
was the problem. All Ean wanted was to forget what had happened. “Today
was… it was so easy to destroy a ship full of people. Normal people like
you and me. And they didn’t have a chance. We just—”</p>
      <p>Either ship—the one they had destroyed with the green protective field
or the one they had destroyed with the hot blue ball that no one but the
eights had been able to see—and the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> was as bloodthirsty as its
crew. But then, ship sentience came in part from its crew, so a warship
would think that was right.</p>
      <p>“It makes you wonder what damage the aliens did to each other,” Kari
Wang said.</p>
      <p>They knew what damage they did. Some ships looked as if they’d been
bitten in two; on other ships, the lines were so bad Ean still hadn’t
fixed them properly.</p>
      <p>“That weapon I couldn’t see. Does every ship have that?”</p>
      <p>“I don’t know. I’ll ask later.” When he could work out a way to
formulate the question. Maybe he should approach each ship and ask it if
it had one. “There is so much we don’t know.”</p>
      <p>Kari Wang stopped to talk to more crew. Ean waited, quiet beside her.</p>
      <p>After they resumed their walk, she said, “You did well today.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you.”</p>
      <p>“And it’s comforting to know that our leading linesman isn’t going to
opt for the kill every time if he can help it.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_eight_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER EIGHT: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>They had a two-room suite on the liner to Redmond. An outer room for
Tiana Chen’s staff, and an inner room with a huge double bed that was
bigger than Radko’s cabin on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>The screen on the wall, tuned to a news channel, was as tall as she was.</p>
      <p>“I could get used to this.” Van Heel looked around the outer room with
satisfaction. She settled onto a comfortable couch. “Toss me some fruit,
Chaudry,” for Chaudry was inspecting the contents of the bowl on the
table.</p>
      <p>“I don’t even know what most of it is,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>“I don’t care. Send some over.”</p>
      <p>“I need sleep,” Radko said. This was the third time zone, and third set
of daylight hours she’d been awake for. “Stay in quarters. Do any prep
you think you might need, but if I don’t get some rest, I’ll be
useless.”</p>
      <p>She jerked awake when they turned up the sound. The first word she heard
was “<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>,” followed soon after by “alien ships.” She recognized the
voice of the man being interviewed. Admiral Markan of Roscracia.</p>
      <p>Radko rolled out of bed and went to see what was happening.</p>
      <p>Markan looked calm, but Radko had seen enough of him to know that
underneath he was ready to blow.</p>
      <p>“It is only one ship,” Markan said. “It can’t be everywhere at once.”</p>
      <p>“But there are another 130 ships in orbit around Haladea III. And one of
those is larger than the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“Half those ships are damaged too badly to use. The rest have no crew.
Including the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. It will be months before they can use them.
The war will be over by then.”</p>
      <p>“Even one ship can do massive damage, as we’ve seen.”</p>
      <p>The reporter had a Roscracian accent. It was the first time Radko had
seen Markan put on the spot by his own people.</p>
      <p>“Of course it can,” Markan said. “But as I mentioned, it is only one
ship. If it arrives at a battle, we know how to counteract it. We can
simply jump away until the ship leaves, then come back. The New Alliance
cannot get the jumps. <emphasis>Everything</emphasis> is under control.”</p>
      <p>“There is a rumor the alien ships don’t need jumps. That they can jump
cold. What do you say to that?”</p>
      <p>Markan stared straight at the camera. “I say that is an absolute lie.
Furthermore, if the New Alliance is jumping cold, they risk the lives of
billions of people every time they do so. These are the monsters we are
fighting.”</p>
      <p>“Sometimes I admire that man,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>Han gave her a strange look.</p>
      <p>She ignored it. “What happened?” but the screen had already changed.</p>
      <p>Filming a battle was difficult, for the distances were huge and ships
relatively small. News crews deployed drones to a battle and used them
to create composites, with the distances compressed. Hundreds of drones,
tiny little mechanized cameras that clogged up the spaceways and could
be more dangerous than incoming fire.</p>
      <p>“They deployed one of the alien ships,” Han said.</p>
      <p>She could see that. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> loomed closer and closer, then suddenly
it wasn’t the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> anymore.</p>
      <p>“They swapped with the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>.” That was the kind of thing Ean would
do. Kari Wang would never switch ships like that, and Radko bet it had
been a cold jump.</p>
      <p>“They swapped with the enemy,” Chaudry said. He looked as pleased as if
he’d arranged it himself. “They planned that ship would be destroyed in
place of them.”</p>
      <p>“I bet the captain’s having kittens,” Han said.</p>
      <p>Not Piers Wendell. He got calmer the stronger the action. There was
nothing around the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> that posed a danger to the ship. That meant
the fighting was elsewhere. “Can we see what the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> is doing?”</p>
      <p>“It’s hiding, waiting for someone to destroy the Wallacian ship,”
Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>“You need to learn which ships are on our side.”</p>
      <p>“It’s the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>,” Chaudry said. “He is a spy.”</p>
      <p>Radko looked at her team of three. Even van Heel was nodding. “The
<emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> and its crew are part of the New Alliance fleet. They have no
love for Gate Union, or for Wallacia. No one calls them spies.
Understand.”</p>
      <p>She didn’t miss the look that passed between them. She didn’t comment
either.</p>
      <p>On-screen, the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> switched places with the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> again.</p>
      <p>Radko watched the rest of the battle. The alarm on her comms sounded as
the first of the Gate Union ships disappeared, making them all jump.</p>
      <p>“I need to get ready,” she said. “The rest of you, do what you can to
disguise yourselves, but not obviously. Makeup or clothes, nothing more.
I want you to look different.” If they got into trouble, they could
quickly change clothes and remove their makeup. It might be enough to
get past any blocks set up to stop them.</p>
      <p>She made for the fresher.</p>
      <p>Ean had been on board the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. They couldn’t have done a ship flip
like that without him. He’d probably made for his own fresher afterward.
He wouldn’t have liked the battle.</p>
      <p>The sooner this job was over, the happier Radko would be.</p>
      <p>Except they still had the problem of Sattur Dow. Until that was sorted,
she couldn’t go home.</p>
      <p>She dressed carefully in the classic-cut business clothes fashionable
across the galaxy right now and added a black wig with a heavy, coiled
braid. She’d thought about dyeing her own hair black, but Chen had long
hair, and it would be difficult to explain a sudden haircut. Not only
that, if they needed to escape, she could get rid of the wig, and no one
would recognize her.</p>
      <p>She hoped.</p>
      <p>As she applied careful makeup to broaden her chin and flatten her
cheeks, she thought about what she knew of Tiana Chen. Most of it came
from Galenos’s intelligence gathering, but she had seen her around the
palace occasionally. And at her mother’s house. Yesterday now.</p>
      <p>She’d once heard Chen put a highly placed palace official in his place.
At the time, Radko had wondered how she dared, for the man outranked
her. It was only after she started working on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>
that she discovered Chen was blackmailing half the people in the palace.
Not badly enough for them to do away with her but enough for her to
enjoy some role reversal when she could get it.</p>
      <p>And now she had an in with Sattur Dow. Had Chen blackmailed Dow, and if
so, with what? Or maybe Dow had simply offered her patronage in return
for her knowledge.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The shuttle down to Redmond was a classy, six-passenger vehicle. The
sort a wealthy woman would hire. What was Tiana Chen doing right now?
How long had Vega been able to delay her?</p>
      <p>It was a silent trip. Radko used the time to check her comms, which was
what Chen would do. Had done, in fact, on that earlier trip with Radko
and her mother. She’d talked then as well, but that was to equals. She
wouldn’t talk to her bodyguards.</p>
      <p>Chaudry—almost unrecognizable with a cleverly applied makeup that looked
as if he’d recently come out of regen—pulled at the knuckles of his
right hand. It was his only sign of nervousness, but she suspected if
she could hear lines, there’d be a note of distress in there somewhere.
It was a pity it was out of character to try to calm him.</p>
      <p>Once on the ground, she hired an aircar. A luxury model. Again, what
Chen would hire.</p>
      <p>“I could get used to this,” van Heel said again. “None of my jobs to
date have been like this. Usually, we’re mechanics or service people.”</p>
      <p>“Not much fun being the servant,” Han said. “I never realized how boring
being a servant would be.”</p>
      <p>“It has to be better than a military policeman.”</p>
      <p>“Clearly, you’ve never been a military policeman.”</p>
      <p>Radko routed the aircar halfway across the city from where they planned
to go. Call her paranoid, but she didn’t want to go straight to her
destination.</p>
      <p>“I’ve been meaning to say, Chaudry, your disguise is brilliant.” If
anyone came looking for them, they would look for someone with
regenerated skin.</p>
      <p>It calmed him, which it was meant to, but it was honest, too.</p>
      <p>“As children, we played doctors and symptoms.”</p>
      <p>It wasn’t a game Radko had ever heard of. “And you were the doctor?”</p>
      <p>“I preferred to be the symptoms.”</p>
      <p>“Strange games where you came from,” Han said.</p>
      <p>“It was fun. You had to do the symptoms right.”</p>
      <p>Radko thought it might have been. A combination of art and medicine.
She’d like to hear more, but right now they had other things to worry
about. “Pick the smaller blasters. Use a back holster. Make sure it
can’t be seen under your jacket.” It would take vital seconds to get at
them, but OneLane would ask two armed bodyguards to remove their
weapons.</p>
      <p>She felt naked without a weapon at her own side. Chaudry looked as if
he’d never worn one in his life. He probably hadn’t, outside of drills.</p>
      <p>Radko breathed out, long and slow. This was an easy job. Remember that.
A quick in, look at the plans, see if they were worth buying, then out.</p>
      <p>And then what? Would Sattur Dow be gone by then? Unlikely.</p>
      <p>Vega would send her on another job—possibly already had it planned, in
fact.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Their roundabout trip gave van Heel time to set up some of the
surveillance equipment. She passed each of them a tiny disc. “The shop
is a communications black hole. I can’t trace you while you’re in there,
but I’ll know the second you come out.”</p>
      <p>Radko looked at the screen. One had to assume OneLane was selling pricey
stolen goods to warrant such security. “Do a flyover, then circle around
to land.”</p>
      <p>“Nearest park is two buildings away,” van Heel said. “Whoever heard of a
shop that doesn’t have roof landing?”</p>
      <p>Ean had said there were whole blocks where he’d grown up that didn’t
have parking for aircars. Although, the area they were flying over
wasn’t that sort of place.</p>
      <p>“What do you think?” Radko asked.</p>
      <p>“It looks normal. Like a high-end shopping center. Right number of
people, right amount of traffic.” Van Heel dropped neatly into a
carspace.</p>
      <p>“Let’s go,” Radko said to Han and Chaudry.</p>
      <p>Radko had been in shops like Callista OneLane’s before. As a youngster,
trailing after her mother for another jeweled egg, or for a high-end
gift for a member of the Great Families her parents needed to impress.
Or later, on her own, when she found something to interest her. It had
been a shock the first time she’d entered one wearing a spacer’s
uniform, to find the proprietor thought she’d come to sell stolen
military property.</p>
      <p>Radko smiled ruefully. She’d been young then.</p>
      <p>The shop was quiet.</p>
      <p>Radko recognized Callista OneLane immediately. She was ushering a client
out the back, into the private offices. A man around her own age, in
casual clothes, with the pale skin of a spacer who seldom came on world.
The quick glance he gave them as they came in made her think he was
selling rather than buying.</p>
      <p>There were two shop assistants and one other customer—a well-dressed
businessman examining a long, pointed obsidian stick that looked as if
it might sit well on Commodore Vega’s wall. He looked familiar.</p>
      <p>An assistant handed something small and black to the businessman. He
clicked it onto the middle of the stick, holding himself stiff while he
did so. Radko bet he was wearing a corset under his clothes, something
that pulled in his waist and forced him to stand straight. She smiled at
the small vanity that gave the otherwise colorless businessman a measure
of personality.</p>
      <p>The other assistant came over to Radko. “May I help you?”</p>
      <p>“Callista OneLane is expecting me. Tiana Chen.”</p>
      <p>“Of course.” They’d been primed, for he recognized the name. “Madam
OneLane is with a customer at the moment. She won’t be long.” He
indicated a luxurious sitting area off to one side of the store. “While
you wait, can I offer you some refreshments?”</p>
      <p>“No.” Radko made it sharp and dismissive, like Tiana Chen would. “I’ll
browse.” She felt safer on her feet. More in control.</p>
      <p>He hovered, offering information about various items, until she said,
“If I require information, I’ll call you.”</p>
      <p>He bowed. “Of course,” and blessedly left her alone with Han and
Chaudry.</p>
      <p>Han kept an easy pace behind her, whistling softly to himself. It wasn’t
recognizably a line tune; it was a popular song. Had she ever heard a
linesman sing popular songs? Ean, for sure, wouldn’t know any. The lines
were his life.</p>
      <p>Chaudry wasn’t as comfortable. He stared around the shop although his
gaze kept returning to the other customer.</p>
      <p>“Don’t stare obviously, Chaudry,” Radko said, quietly, so that only the
three of them could hear. “Do it unobtrusively, with sideways glances
when you’re looking at something else.”</p>
      <p>“He’s staring at us,” Chaudry said. “And there’s something—”</p>
      <p>Radko glanced over at the man. He was watching them, frowning as if they
weren’t supposed to be there. She glared at him discouragingly through
narrowed eyes.</p>
      <p>He winked at her, hefted the obsidian spear in his hands, and looked
down over it, as if looking down a barrel. He seemed to be pointing it
directly at her.</p>
      <p>Radko remembered the movement, recognized the man. Last time he’d lifted
his arm like that, he’d had a blaster in his hand and had been about to
kill her.</p>
      <p>Stellan Vilhjalmsson. Assassin, and close friend and confidante of
Admiral Markan, head of the Gate Union fleet.</p>
      <p>“I’ve got it,” Chaudry said triumphantly, making Radko jump. “He’s
wearing a surgical brace. That man has injured his spine.”</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson turned back to his weapon. Though his attention seemed to
be off them, Radko knew he watched them as carefully as she was now
watching him.</p>
      <p>“Be wary of him. He’s an assassin. He could kill us from where he stands
if he wanted to.”</p>
      <p>Why hadn’t he?</p>
      <p>“He’s injured,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>She didn’t think that would stop him.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>An older woman burst into the shop. Radko wasn’t the only one who swung
around. Vilhjalmsson did as well. Chaudry was right. He did move
carefully.</p>
      <p>“Where’s Callista?” She reminded Radko of Governor Jade in build and in
imperiousness. Her voice was familiar. Distinctive, and parodied on many
comedy shows across Lancia and Haladea III. The wife of the head of
government of the Redmond worlds.</p>
      <p>An assistant hurried forward. “Madam OneLane will be with you in a
moment, Partner Nataliya. Meantime, can I offer you refreshments?” He
tried to lead her over to the elegant couches, but she paced the shop as
if a demon were after her.</p>
      <p>“I <emphasis>am</emphasis> in a hurry.”</p>
      <p>“She won’t be long, ma’am,” the sales assistant said smoothly, while the
other assistant slipped quietly out the back.</p>
      <p>Moments later, OneLane came out with the seller she’d exited with
earlier. They shook hands. The seller looked satisfied. No doubt he’d
gotten a better deal than he’d expected, given OneLane hadn’t had time
to bargain.</p>
      <p>The shop assistant moved up discreetly to stand beside Radko. “We
apologize for keeping you waiting, Madam Chen, but Partner Nataliya is a
regular at the store, and it <emphasis>is</emphasis> an emergency for her.”</p>
      <p>Partner Nataliya looked like a person who had emergencies all the time.</p>
      <p>“Can I get you some refreshments?” and he once again tried to usher
Radko across to the couches.</p>
      <p>Another time she might have sat because she could tell it would be a
long wait. But not now, not when it put her in a corner with a master
assassin roaming around.</p>
      <p>“I am enjoying browsing,” Radko said. “I have everything I need.” She
moved closer to OneLane and Partner Nataliya, partly to get rid of the
shop assistant—for he wouldn’t persist close to other customers—and
partly to put a barrier between herself and Vilhjalmsson. She made sure
Chaudry and Han followed. It was her job to keep them alive. The move
brought her close enough to hear the conversation between storekeeper
and customer.</p>
      <p>“I am in dire straits, Callista,” Partner Nataliya said. “I’m catching a
ship tonight to Aeolus, and I need to take a gift to the Factor of the
Lesser Gods to celebrate his upcoming wedding.”</p>
      <p>Why would the wife of the ruler of Redmond buy a betrothal gift for a
man whose world was supposed to be enemies with hers? Why would she be
going to said enemy’s planet?</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson hadn’t moved.</p>
      <p>OneLane picked up a striking latticework in a greenish-brown metal.
“What about this? It’s made from pelagatite.”</p>
      <p>Nataliya made a face. “Pelagatite’s not rare anymore. Not on the Worlds
of the Lesser Gods. They’ve a big mine coming up to production on
Hellas, and another one on Pan.”</p>
      <p>Hadn’t Emperor Yu offered Michelle’s hand in marriage and a pelagatite
mine in exchange for the Factor’s support?</p>
      <p>They eventually settled on a small etching by the preline artist Tamas
Abbat. Radko conservatively priced it at five hundred thousand credits.</p>
      <p>Partner Nataliya left happy.</p>
      <p>One of the shop assistants had a quiet word with OneLane. She nodded and
came over to Radko.</p>
      <p>“Madam Chen. I am so glad you came promptly. Offers like this don’t come
on the market every day. I already have other interested parties.”</p>
      <p>Did she half glance back at Vilhjalmsson when she said that, or was it a
trick of the light when her eyes moved? Vilhjalmsson definitely smiled.</p>
      <p>“May I see the merchandise?” Radko asked. And the back door, if they had
one. Or would Vilhjalmsson expect that?</p>
      <p>OneLane raised her hand to her staff in a discreet signal. “This way,”
and started toward the back. Radko, Han, and Chaudry followed. Radko
kept her hand close to the knife in her boot.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson raised the spear. It was, indeed, a weapon. They were close
enough that Radko could see the buttons on the top, and the miniscreen
that lifted. Unfortunately, too far away for her to use her knife for
anything except throwing.</p>
      <p>“I wouldn’t mind sitting in on this,” Vilhjalmsson said.</p>
      <p>“Touch my people, and you’re dead,” Radko told him.</p>
      <p>“Believe me”—and he sounded fervent—“I have no intention of harming any
of your people right now. Not until I know where I stand.”</p>
      <p>“I am glad we understand each other.”</p>
      <p>Behind them, something heavy thudded to the floor. He was good. She
hadn’t seen him move. A second thud.</p>
      <p>She knew what it was without looking. OneLane’s assistants.</p>
      <p>OneLane glanced back but didn’t move toward them.</p>
      <p>Chaudry started toward the fallen salespersons. “Chaudry,” Radko said,
“leave them. They’re either dead already, or they’ll be fine.”</p>
      <p>“It’s a general anesthetic,” Vilhjalmsson said. “They’ll come out of it
in around four hours.” He moved the spear OneLane’s way when she
surreptitiously tried to take out her comms. “Drop it on the floor.”</p>
      <p>“That weapon is a ceremonial Traaken spear,” OneLane said. “Deadly when
it’s loaded, but in my shop it isn’t. You might be able to stab us with
it, but you can’t do much else.”</p>
      <p>“Now there’s where you’re wrong,” Vilhjalmsson said. “I was in here
yesterday.” OneLane nodded at that. “Today, I came prepared. It is fully
armed now, even the tip, as you can see by what happened to your staff.”
He tapped the small black piece he’d clipped on earlier. “Anesthetic and
poison darts,” then tapped the length of the spear farther down.
“Voltage here. Drop your comms.”</p>
      <p>OneLane complied.</p>
      <p>Chaudry moved to do the same.</p>
      <p>“Not you, Chaudry. You keep your hands clear and away from your body.
All of you. I know how fast you people can get a weapon out.”</p>
      <p>She shouldn’t have mentioned Chaudry’s name. It was too late now. Radko
kept her arms away from her body and ensured that Han and Chaudry did
likewise.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson indicated the office door. He waited for them to walk into
the office, and Radko thought there might be a hint of sweat on his
brow. Maybe he was weaker than he looked. Could she use that?</p>
      <p>Chaudry moved alongside Radko. “It’s a rigid lumbar brace,” he said
quietly. “He’s recently out of regen. He’s had spinal fusion. He can’t
move fast.”</p>
      <p>He’d kept his voice low, but the assassin heard him. “It makes me slow,
Chaudry, but I don’t need speed for accuracy.”</p>
      <p>The Alien Affairs Department had calculated Vilhjalmsson would be out of
action for six months after Ean’s inadvertent use of line eight. “You’re
walking well for someone who should still be in hospital,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>“I am. A new surgery technique. It came from the military hospital at
Goed Lutchen. Pioneering work done by Dr. Arnoud and his team. I’m sure
you appreciate the irony.”</p>
      <p>Appreciate wasn’t the word Radko would have used.</p>
      <p>Chaudry lifted his head, almost scenting the air. “Dr. Arnoud’s team
specializes in nerve and bone regeneration.”</p>
      <p>It wasn’t knowledge Radko would expect a young recruit in Stores to pick
up. Or maybe she should have, given Chaudry’s childhood game of doctors
and symptoms.</p>
      <p>They entered OneLane’s office.</p>
      <p>The far wall was covered with screens. Each screen—except the central
one—showed a view from the security cameras. The shop; outside the front
door; the alley at the back. There was a door in the wall on the left,
cleverly hidden in the paneling. Radko had to look twice to be sure it
was a door.</p>
      <p>The office was dominated by a huge wooden desk—made of the same black
timber that Radko’s mother used for displaying her jeweled eggs—so
polished they could see their reflections. The desk was bare.</p>
      <p>Radko stepped forward, and the spear crackled hot against her cheek.</p>
      <p>“No sudden moves,” Vilhjalmsson said.</p>
      <p>It was more, she thought, to ensure they all respected the spear than
from any worry about her moving. She touched her finger to her face.
He’d gone close, but he hadn’t burned her. Even she couldn’t shoot that
accurately. Especially not with a weapon that had been on a store shelf
fifteen minutes ago.</p>
      <p>“You’re very jumpy,” Han said.</p>
      <p>“One needs to be with a soldier like her. Especially since, as Chaudry
here has noted, I am a little sore at present. Right now, I intend to
shoot first, before anyone gets near enough to harm me.”</p>
      <p>It was a warning. And a threat. Radko moved back.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson glanced over to where Callista OneLane waited. “Let’s see
this famous report.”</p>
      <p>OneLane was calm. Either she’d been held at weapon point often enough to
realize she was in no danger for the moment, or she had a secondary
protective system, and backup was already on its way. Radko hoped it was
the latter.</p>
      <p>“I don’t give things away for free,” she said. “If you want it, you’ll
have to pay for it. In fact, I would have preferred you steal it after
my client left. Not here. This is bad for business.”</p>
      <p>“I did plan on stealing it afterward,” Vilhjalmsson admitted. “Until I
recognized Spacer ‘Chen,’ here.” He waved the spear at OneLane, but he
spoke to Radko, “You’re not minding people anymore?”</p>
      <p>Radko didn’t answer.</p>
      <p>OneLane said, “I am taking a comms out of the drawer.” She’d definitely
had a weapon trained on her before. “Incidentally, your own comms won’t
work in this room. You can’t record. This is the only copy you will
get.”</p>
      <p>Han moved his hand to scratch his back. He was going for his weapon.
Radko caught his eye and shook her head. Not yet. As Stellan
Vilhjalmsson had just illustrated, Han wouldn’t stand a chance.</p>
      <p>OneLane held up the comms, then turned it on and pushed the data through
onto the larger screen in the center of the wall behind her. “The
report.”</p>
      <p>There were two logos on the title page. Redmond Fleet Military Service
and TwoPaths Engineering.</p>
      <p>So, a combined military-commercial exercise.</p>
      <p>Radko had come across TwoPaths Engineering before. They built spaceships
based around the original line ship, the <emphasis>Havortian</emphasis>. They’d had the
plans for over ten years now. Line ships. Linesmen. How coincidental was
that?</p>
      <p>She crossed her arms and watched as OneLane moved the report on to the
next page, which contained a list of names associated with the report.
She recognized one. “Hold it.”</p>
      <p>OneLane stopped scrolling.</p>
      <p>The second name down. Latoya Jemsin, currently sequestered in a New
Alliance prison on Haladea III, after an early incident where she’d
tried to question Jordan Rossi, and failed.</p>
      <p>“You said this was new data. Dr. Jemsin has been in prison for months.
If she wrote the report, it’s old.”</p>
      <p>“This report has been ten years in the writing. Dr. Jemsin was part of
the team.” OneLane pointed to a line farther down. “You will see as we
scroll through that none of the later reports are hers. Dr. Adam
EightFields has taken over her work.”</p>
      <p>If she knew this much about every illegal item she sold, then no wonder
she asked so much money. Radko nodded and let her continue to scroll
through the pages.</p>
      <p>OneLane scrolled through the first ten pages of the report slowly, then
flicked through others, faster, and again slowed at the end. “It’s a
massive report. Ten years of data here, and their conclusions.”</p>
      <p>“How much?” Radko asked. And how did she buy it and keep it out of
Vilhjalmsson’s hands.</p>
      <p>Movement caught her eye, and she looked up to the screens. On the screen
depicting outside, soldiers jogged into view. Five in at the front. Four
at the back. A full team, dressed in military uniform. Redmond soldiers.</p>
      <p>Callista OneLane smiled.</p>
      <p>There had to be an emergency button here in this room. OneLane must have
pushed it when she’d entered. Although it had only taken five minutes to
respond. With such a quick response, one could almost think the whole
thing was a setup.</p>
      <p>For Chen? Or for Vilhjalmsson?</p>
      <p>It didn’t matter who it was for. Radko couldn’t let herself or her team
be caught or questioned by Redmond soldiers.</p>
      <p>The soldiers in the back alley had to break the lock. Good. They’d
arrive a minute after the ones who came in the front.</p>
      <p>“Chaudry, Han. Get down behind the desk. Use it to cover yourselves
while you cover me.” And Radko watched carefully—one eye on the
screens—to see what Vilhjalmsson would do.</p>
      <p>He inclined his head toward the office door. Maybe, today, they were on
the same side. She’d soon find out.</p>
      <p>She nodded and pulled her blaster from the holster at her back. It was
good to be armed. She took a position to the left of the door.
Vilhjalmsson took the right.</p>
      <p>The door blasted open.</p>
      <p>OneLane’s reinforcements had arrived.</p>
      <p>“These people are—” OneLane said, as the lead soldier glanced around
quickly.</p>
      <p>The soldier turned his weapon toward OneLane and blew her away.</p>
      <p>Radko’s answering blast went straight to his heart. Beside him, his
companion went down. She and Vilhjalmsson seemed to share the same
enemies. For the moment.</p>
      <p>They downed two more before the Redmond soldiers realized they were a
threat. A blaster fired over her left shoulder took down the final
soldier in the first group. Han, as accurate and reliable as Vega
claimed him to be.</p>
      <p>The soldiers hadn’t been expecting trouble, so why a full team? To
prevent a back-door escape? Or to remove all witnesses?</p>
      <p>The soldiers from the alley arrived then. They expected victory, and the
battle to be over before they got there. They were seconds too slow.
Radko and Vilhjalmsson stepped out and took down two each before they
even knew they’d lost.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_nine_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER NINE: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>Radko calculated they had less than five minutes before Redmond sent
reinforcements. There was no one in sight yet.</p>
      <p>She waved to Han and Chaudry. “Go, go. Before the next lot get here.”</p>
      <p>They scrambled out in an awkward run.</p>
      <p>Radko snatched OneLane’s comms a second before Vilhjalmsson did, and the
two of them ran out together.</p>
      <p>Her comms started beeping as soon as they were outside. Van Heel. Radko
flicked it on as they ran.</p>
      <p>“I’ve been trying to call for five minutes,” van Heel said. “A team of
Redmond soldiers went in there.”</p>
      <p>“We found them.”</p>
      <p>“There’s a backup team waiting one street south.”</p>
      <p>They were headed south. Radko beckoned to the others and veered east.
“How close can you get the aircar?”</p>
      <p>“I’ll need at least two blocks if you think they’ll come after us.”</p>
      <p>“Meet us two blocks east then.”</p>
      <p>“Wait,” Vilhjalmsson said. “Maybe we could work together a bit longer.
You have transport out. I have codes that should get us past Redmond
military.”</p>
      <p>His face was gray, covered in a film of perspiration. He couldn’t run
far, or fast. He’d get caught quickly. Given the number of Redmond
soldiers in the area—more when they saw the carnage inside the shop—they
would find it hard enough to escape themselves.</p>
      <p>He was Gate Union, Markan’s man, so he was likely to have codes he
mentioned. Redmond and Gate Union weren’t working together at present,
but they were still, officially, allies. They’d honor their ally’s
codes.</p>
      <p>“Give me the spear and we’ll drop you off on the other side of the
city.” Radko hoped she’d made the correct decision.</p>
      <p>He hesitated, then stumbled, winced, and tossed the spear to her. “It’s
all yours.”</p>
      <p>She covered him while he ran. From the way his back twitched, he didn’t
like it any more than she did. Good.</p>
      <p>They reached the aircar as the first soldiers came running around the
corner.</p>
      <p>“Go, go,” Radko said, and van Heel took off in a straight lift that
pushed them all to the floor.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson grunted, the sound quickly cut off.</p>
      <p>Radko pulled herself up, blaster trained on him. “Han, Chaudry. Cover
him. If he moves—even a twitch—shoot him.” She didn’t look away as she
backed across to van Heel. “How soon can we dump him?”</p>
      <p>“It’s hard not to twitch,” Vilhjalmsson said to Han and Chaudry. “Not
when I know she’s ready to shoot me.”</p>
      <p>The two blasters were close together. Chaudry’s left arm against Han’s
right. All Vilhjalmsson had to do was reach out, and he could grab them
both.</p>
      <p>Why did a left-handed linesman hold his blaster in his right hand?</p>
      <p>“Move away from him,” Radko said. “Make him work if he’s going to take
the weapon off you. A blaster set to burn is as deadly at two meters as
it is at one.”</p>
      <p>“Who is he?” Han asked. “Why so leery of him?”</p>
      <p>“He’s a professional assassin. Reports personally to Admiral Markan.”</p>
      <p>“So why help him?”</p>
      <p>“He helped us,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>If Chaudry thought like that about one of Gate Union’s best assassins,
Vilhjalmsson would walk all over him. “He has codes he can use to get us
past Redmond security,” Radko said. “We have an aircar. Mutual benefit,
Chaudry.”</p>
      <p>“We’re being pursued,” van Heel said. “I can drop him, or I can run, but
I can’t do both.”</p>
      <p>These were Redmond soldiers on their home territory. They couldn’t
outrun them. How long would it take for Redmond to identify the aircar?</p>
      <p>Radko looked at Vilhjalmsson. “Those codes you promised.” If he was
working with Redmond, surely he would have let the soldiers capture them
back at OneLane’s shop.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson stood up carefully.</p>
      <p>“You should get your back seen to,” Chaudry said. “You shouldn’t be
doing strenuous physical movement yet.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry was never going to make a decent soldier. He didn’t have the
personality for it.</p>
      <p>The speaker crackled. “Aircar D-J-12351. This is Redmond Fleet. Please
land in the nearest available landing space.”</p>
      <p>“I need to call base over the aircar’s comms,” Vilhjalmsson said.</p>
      <p>Radko nodded and held her blaster close to his back while he used the
comms system on the aircar to call base. She didn’t relax even when an
irate Redmond voice came through, demanding to know what was going on.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson explained—in Redmond as good as hers—that the attack on
OneLane’s premises had interrupted a sting, and the team following them
should remove themselves before they totally ruined it. He provided
further codes, good enough that the Redmond carrier climbed high with a
burst of speed and disappeared over the city.</p>
      <p>“It won’t hold them long,” Vilhjalmsson said. “Redmond doesn’t share
information about lines or line experiments.”</p>
      <p>It was long enough for Radko. “We’ll find somewhere public to drop you
off. The parking lot at SevenWays Plaza,” to van Heel. It was the
largest shopping center in the city.</p>
      <p>Van Heel set the controls.</p>
      <p>Radko motioned Vilhjalmsson’s hands away from the controls with her
blaster. He put them on the table, facing up. Empty. “I’ll buy the
report off you.”</p>
      <p>She laughed at him.</p>
      <p>“Shopping center coming up.” Van Heel landed the aircar neatly.</p>
      <p>“No?” Vilhjalmsson turned for the door. “I appreciate your not killing
me this time.”</p>
      <p>He winced and almost fell. Radko let him right himself. “Young Chaudry
is right. I would have liked more leave.” He climbed out of the car like
an old man.</p>
      <p>“Vilhjalmsson. Catch.” She tossed him the spear. “You’ll need a weapon.”
She didn’t trust Vilhjalmsson not to have put a tracer on it somewhere,
and she didn’t have time to investigate, which was a pity because Vega
would have liked that weapon. She turned to van Heel. “Go, before he
shoots us all.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel took off in a vertical lift.</p>
      <p>They were five minutes in the air when Radko realized the comms she
thought she’d rescued from OneLane’s dead hands was a military-style
comms. The brand favored by Roscracian military.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Back in their rooms, Radko tossed the comms across to van Heel. “See if
you can hack into that.”</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson’s comms would be like their own. Provided especially for
the mission and nothing personal on it.</p>
      <p>“He seemed so nice,” Chaudry said. “And he was injured.”</p>
      <p>Radko couldn’t work out if the niceness was supposed to prevent an
assassin from stealing things, or if his injury was. She didn’t care.
She wanted to shoot him.</p>
      <p>“He must have swapped as we picked it up.” OneLane’s comms hadn’t been
out of Radko’s pocket since. Or the comms she thought was OneLane’s.</p>
      <p>She had to admire the cleverness of it. If she’d known he had picked up
the comms first, she would have demanded it from him at blaster point.
Instead, he’d offered to swap his comms for this one. She should have
taken him up on his offer and seen him wriggle out of it.</p>
      <p>“We didn’t see him swap it,” van Heel said. “Are you sure this isn’t the
report?”</p>
      <p>“Hack it and see, van Heel.”</p>
      <p>Half an hour later, van Heel admitted, “There isn’t much on here. A code
I can’t read. A ship booking from Roscracia to here. A restaurant
payment for last night. He ate at a place called Sahini’s. He’s staying
at the Grande Hotel.”</p>
      <p>Radko would bet he wasn’t staying there anymore.</p>
      <p>Like her own comms, there’d be deeper information if van Heel hacked
further, but nothing to incriminate Vilhjalmsson, and it would wipe
itself if they tried to discover more. One thing was certain. The comms
with the report on in wouldn’t have last night’s dinner bill on it.</p>
      <p>She dug into the tools on her belt. A tiny screwdriver. A metal knife.
Some wire. She unscrewed that back of the comms, pressed the knife into
the wiring, and wound the wire around the knife. She wound the other end
of the wire around the screwdriver.</p>
      <p>She was about to jam the screwdriver into the other end when she
stopped. This would short the comms. There was a tiny piece of line five
in each comms. She was about to destroy a line. Or a piece of one.</p>
      <p>Could she do it?</p>
      <p>She looked up to see all three of them looking at her.</p>
      <p>“Are you okay?” Han asked. “You look green.”</p>
      <p>Comms lines weren’t intelligent like a ten-line ship, but all the same.
Was it murder?</p>
      <p>“I’m fine,” Radko said, and jabbed the screwdriver down.</p>
      <p>Ean would have told her the line had disappeared. All she got was the
smell of burned plastic and hot metal. And a tiny wisp of black smoke.</p>
      <p>When did lines become sentient, anyway. Surely all the small pieces of
equipment weren’t. They didn’t seem to think until there were ten of
them together and they were much larger than a single sliver. Maybe she
should think of the tiny piece of line in a comms as like regenerated
skin, being grown to match a human DNA. Not alive in a sentient way.</p>
      <p>She tossed the comms away. Vilhjalmsson wouldn’t be able to track it
anymore. Although it would be like him to bug something else.</p>
      <p>“What if you were wrong about which comms it was?” Han asked.</p>
      <p>“Then I’ve destroyed plans we were prepared to pay a lot of credits
for.”</p>
      <p>The trick to a successful operation, covert or otherwise, was not to
think about what-ifs like that until after the operation, when you
worked out what you could do better next time.</p>
      <p>There were other what-ifs she had to think about now. Like, what if
Vilhjalmsson had bugged them?</p>
      <p>“We should all change,” she said. “Everything. Even our shoes if we have
others. We may be bugged.”</p>
      <p>Han followed her into the room she shared with van Heel. She didn’t see
any signals, but van Heel lingered outside. “It’s not such a big deal,”
he said. “Losing the comms, I mean. They can’t expect newbies like us to
be a hundred percent successful first time around.”</p>
      <p>What was he trying to tell her? “Han, with that kind of attitude you’ll
never make it in covert ops.”</p>
      <p>“I never planned for covert ops.”</p>
      <p>Neither had she.</p>
      <p>“I like my job. I like that I can go home every break.”</p>
      <p>“I like my job, too,” Radko said. She missed her job. She missed Ean.
And she didn’t have time for the small talk. “Tell me what you’re trying
to say. I like honesty.”</p>
      <p>Han looked at her.</p>
      <p>“We don’t have time for you to muck around.”</p>
      <p>He hesitated. She waited.</p>
      <p>“Maybe you shouldn’t take it so hard. Losing the report. It’s okay to
destroy his comms, but don’t you think this bugged business might be
going too far.”</p>
      <p>No wonder Vega liked him, but the Yves Han who’d burned his tutor’s arm
wouldn’t ever offer advice like that.</p>
      <p>“Humor my paranoia this once, Han. I know this man.” A lot better than
she had two months ago. “Let’s all get changed and see if he has planted
any bugs. I hear what you’re saying, but I am your team leader in this.
I’m not doing it because I’m upset he stole the comms from me. I’m doing
it because I think he’s bugged us.”</p>
      <p>“And that business with the comms before?”</p>
      <p>“That is a totally different thing. I don’t like destroying lines. Not
even comms lines.” She pushed him out. “Go and get changed.”</p>
      <p>Afterward, she checked their clothes. On the back collar of the business
jacket she had worn as Tiana Chen was a tiny receiver.</p>
      <p>Van Heel took it from her fingers. “Finest grade,” she said approvingly.
“Do you know how much a device like this costs?”</p>
      <p>Radko was sure Vilhjalmsson hadn’t worried about the price.</p>
      <p>She tossed her jacket into the recycler, and got the others to dump
their jackets as well. She sent the bug down with it.</p>
      <p>“I can’t believe I let him do that.” She should have known better.</p>
      <p>“He did save our lives,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>“Chaudry, he’s a professional assassin.” Who’d probably kept them alive
because he wanted to hear more about the line ships and their plans.</p>
      <p>To be safe, Radko had them pack up and move elsewhere. They hired a new
aircar halfway across the city, swapped their equipment over, then took
both aircars across the continent, where van Heel dumped the first one.
After that, they went back to Bane and booked themselves into an
apartment to make plans.</p>
      <p>“What happens now?” Han asked. “We go home, tail between our legs?”</p>
      <p>“No,” Radko said. What kind of a team were they if they let a setback
like that stop them? “We get our report from the source. What names can
you remember from the list of contributors at the front of the report?”
She remembered five. Jemsin, EightFields, Quinn, RiverSide, and Jakob.</p>
      <p>“EightFields,” Chaudry said. “And that one you mentioned. Jemsin.”</p>
      <p>“Jemsin, EightFields, and Quinn,” Han said. “There was a Dr. Quinn who
tested—” He paused, and visibly didn’t finish what he’d been going to
say. “I wonder if it’s the same one.”</p>
      <p>Radko didn’t push. Han had probably met Quinn as a linesman. She watched
Han rub his eyes—with his right hand, again—and wondered. How likely was
trauma to change one’s handedness?</p>
      <p>“Find out all you can about those five people. I want someone I can get
the reports from. Or at the very least, I want to know where they’re
doing their experiments.”</p>
      <p>There were no records for Jakob, and it wasn’t a Redmond name. They had
the whole galaxy to search, and they didn’t have the time or support to
do it.</p>
      <p>“There’s plenty on Jemsin,” van Heel said. “She wrote a lot of papers.”</p>
      <p>“Forget about her,” Radko said. “She’s in jail.” If she’d spilled any
information, the Yaolins would already know about it. “What about
Quinn?”</p>
      <p>“He’s still doing line experiments, apparently,” Han said. “But there’s
nothing here about where he’s doing them. Or where he’s living now.”</p>
      <p>Radko noted the “still.” Would he have a problem if they came up against
Quinn?</p>
      <p>“Concentrate on RiverSide and EightFields then.” They were both
Redmond-founding-family names, likely to be well-known in society. That
was good in one way, because there was a lot of information about the
founding families. They just had to find those particular names among
all the noise.</p>
      <p>“EightFields,” van Heel said. “I can’t believe the names these Redmond
people come up with.”</p>
      <p>Radko’s early studies of Redmond had taught her the importance of the
names. “When the first settlers arrived on Redmond, they renamed
themselves according to their surroundings. Thus, the EightFields family
had a farm with eight fields. TwoPaths had two paths nearby.” She tried
to remember other founding names. “OneLane. FiveWays.”</p>
      <p>“They’re still weird,” van Heel said.</p>
      <p>Radko got van Heel to hack into OneLane’s records, while Chaudry and Han
searched for other people listed on the report, and she tried to find
out what she could about OneLane’s contacts. The woman had run a
legitimate business over the top of her fencing activities. Radko could
even have bought a jeweled egg her mother had been after for years.</p>
      <p>A man named Daniel EightFields was a regular customer. It might only be
coincidence, but once they were done with Adam, she’d get them to search
on Daniel.</p>
      <p>“Adam EightFields fancies himself.” Van Heel pushed an interview onto
the main screen. EightFields was being introduced by a young reporter.</p>
      <p>“Dr. Adam EightFields is one of our foremost line experts here on
Redmond, and—”</p>
      <p>“Not only on Redmond,” EightFields interrupted him. “One of the
universe’s leading experts on linesmen and line theory.”</p>
      <p>Apart from the fact that humans had only settled the one galaxy, there
was a whole race of aliens out there whose children probably knew more
about the lines than any single human expert. Radko would have bet Ean’s
expertise over a whole roomful of people like EightFields, anyway.</p>
      <p>“So how does the news of a new line eleven affect line theory?” the
reporter asked.</p>
      <p>“If it is a new line,” EightFields said. “The New Alliance claims it is,
but is it really so?”</p>
      <p>Radko checked the date on the interview. Not long after Michelle had
been kidnapped, back when people were still arguing whether there really
was a line eleven.</p>
      <p>“Sounds like he took any opportunity he could to get on the media,” van
Heel said. “Or he used to. Haven’t heard anything from him for months.”</p>
      <p>“Can you find out where he works? Where he lives?”</p>
      <p>“Last known employer, TwoPaths Engineering. But they have fifty sites.
His address is here in the city, but then that’s the address of twenty
other EightFields as well. Place must be a mansion.”</p>
      <p>Han was checking the social pages. “He’s got a sister, Christina, who
manages the EightFields estate. A brother, Daniel, who’s a spacer in the
Redmond Fleet.”</p>
      <p>“Only a spacer?” A founding family would have paid for a promotion for
their son. Why hadn’t they? “Find out more about Daniel, Han. Tell me if
he gets on with his family.” A disaffected family member might not be so
loyal to said family. Or he might be broke. Maybe even sell a stolen
report to a woman he shopped from regularly.</p>
      <p>She went back to the shop records. “Callista OneLane sold a jeweled
brooch to Daniel EightFields sixteen days ago. I want to know if that
Daniel is Adam EightFields’s brother.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel hacked into the city security system to view the records for
the street near OneLane’s premises that day, while Chaudry and Han went
painstakingly through each face she brought up and compared it to the
image Han got from the social pages.</p>
      <p>Meanwhile, Radko worked on five different escape plans. They not only
had to find which engineering complex EightFields worked at, but they
had to get off Redmond afterward, and the longer they stayed here, the
harder it would be to get off.</p>
      <p>Maybe they should go back to the original spaceport and convince the
pilot who transported the shellfish to take them off.</p>
      <p>But how long before he’d be back?</p>
      <p>“Got it,” Han said. “It looks like the brother.”</p>
      <p>Radko compared the images and had to agree. “So let’s go after Daniel.
Find out where he is and when we can get to him.”</p>
      <p>There was plenty in the vids about Daniel EightFields. He was a member
of a well-off family, he was a lavish spender, and he was often in
trouble. Much like the progeny of some of the Great Families on Lancia.</p>
      <p>“Looks like his family sent him to the fleet to sort him out,” Han said.
“We get them on Lancia. The parents get tired of bailing them out of
trouble and send them off to the fleet to learn some discipline.”</p>
      <p>Had that happened to Han?</p>
      <p>“They’re useless as soldiers, and we can’t send them anywhere dangerous,
or their family sues. So they stick around headquarters, getting into
trouble, and we have to bail them out. Or we send them off to worlds
where, if they do get into trouble, it doesn’t hurt them or us.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel hacked the public comms codes, found Daniel EightFields’s
comms, and they tracked it until he left the base. Vega was right. She
was a class hacker.</p>
      <p>EightFields finally stopped at a nightclub.</p>
      <p>“Let’s go chat with EightFields the Younger,” Radko suggested.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Their images from OneLane’s shop were circulating on the news vids.
According to the news, they were dangerous murderers, and anyone who saw
them should call the fleet, not tackle them. Chaudry was unrecognizable
as the regen victim, but his short, bulky shape was unmistakable. He
looked nothing like the man on the vid, but anyone seeing him would
report him because of his size. If the police investigated, they’d pass
him over. Provided they didn’t talk to him. If they did, they’d soon
work out he wasn’t a native, so they’d probe more.</p>
      <p>Not the police, Radko corrected herself. The military. Redmond wasn’t
treating this like a civilian murder gone wrong. They were treating it
like a military problem. Even at OneLane’s premises, there’d been no
local police. It had been a wholly military exercise.</p>
      <p>The report had been co-branded with Redmond military. How far were they
prepared to keep the information secret?</p>
      <p>Han was more recognizable. It might be smart to keep them out of sight
if she could. Radko looked nothing like Chen. Best if she did it alone.</p>
      <p>“Van Heel, can you get the feed from inside the club? Han and Chaudry,
stay in the aircar with van Heel. If I need you, I’ll call. Keep an eye
on me.” With luck, she could be in and out quickly, without any need for
backup.</p>
      <p>She waited while van Heel hacked into the club feed. Even the screen
inside the club showed their faces, with the words DANGEROUS KILLERS in
large letters underneath.</p>
      <p>“Have you ever had to kill anyone?” Chaudry asked.</p>
      <p>She wondered, for a moment, if he was serious, for she and Vilhjalmsson
had decimated a team of soldiers.</p>
      <p>“Before today, I mean.”</p>
      <p>“I’m not an assassin.” Not yet anyway. If she came across Vilhjalmsson
again, it might be a different matter. Murdered in cold blood. “I have
killed people.”</p>
      <p>“Don’t you mind?”</p>
      <p>“I don’t think about it.” She didn’t. It was her job. She was good at
her job.</p>
      <p>“I’ve killed people,” van Heel said. “Three of them. If you think about
it, Chaudry, it gets to you. Don’t persist.”</p>
      <p>Radko was glad Chaudry hadn’t harmed anyone earlier. Around about now,
he’d be starting to feel bad.</p>
      <p>“Thank you,” Radko said to van Heel, and glanced at Han, who’d probably
killed his first enemy today, too.</p>
      <p>He knew what the look was for. “I felt nothing.”</p>
      <p>That just meant it hadn’t hit him yet.</p>
      <p>“Got it,” van Heel said, and switched the camera view to pan on the
patrons. They found EightFields with a group of people who laughed at
every joke he made. Radko had had friends like that when she was a girl.
The Yves Han that Radko had known as a child would have friends like
that.</p>
      <p>But she didn’t know this adult Han at all.</p>
      <p>Which reminded her. “Han.” She took out her comms and tossed it across.</p>
      <p>He caught it with his right hand.</p>
      <p>“What do I do with it?”</p>
      <p>“Nothing.” She took her comms back. “Testing your reflexes.” And his
handedness. This spacer she had in her team showed a strong tendency to
right-handedness.</p>
      <p>Yet linesmen were always left-handed, and Yves Han had spent ten years
with House of Sandhurst.</p>
      <p>Ten years. Was he the real Han or wasn’t he? If he was the real Han, but
wasn’t a linesman, then why had Iwo Hurst kept him on? Because he could
be useful? Or because the man in front of her wasn’t the same man Hurst
had trained?</p>
      <p>She was starting to suspect he wasn’t the same man.</p>
      <p>She pushed that question away. Tonight, they were here to get
information from Daniel EightFields. She tucked her blaster into the
back of her trousers and pulled on her jacket. Loose enough and thick
enough to hide the bulge. “Don’t come after me unless I really need
help.”</p>
      <p>She swung out of the aircar.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The nightclub was fashionable and expensive, full of shiny, glittering
surfaces, and a lot of flashing lights. Radko bought herself a drink and
turned to look around the room.</p>
      <p>EightFields’s friends were drunk. Their laughter overloud, their
interactions with other patrons bordering on nuisance. In contrast,
their host looked stone-cold sober, and he twitched every time someone
entered the bar.</p>
      <p>He twitched when Radko entered but relaxed when she ordered her drink.
He twitched even more when a group of uniformed fleet officers entered
and didn’t relax until they’d passed through into a private room.</p>
      <p>A man with something to worry about? And from the way he looked
broodingly at the screen every time Radko and the others appeared there,
it might have something to do with Callista OneLane. Even if it wasn’t
his brother’s report, Daniel EightFields had bought or sold something to
OneLane, and he was worried he’d get caught.</p>
      <p>The woman closest to EightFields called for another round of drinks.
EightFields paid with an absentminded flick of his comms. Radko couldn’t
tell if he always paid, or if he was just inattentive tonight.</p>
      <p>Radko finished her drink and wandered over. “You’re Adam EightFields’s
brother. Am I right?”</p>
      <p>He looked at her, and there was no welcome in his eyes. “Who’s asking?”</p>
      <p>“A friend of Adam’s. I haven’t seen him in months. Where is he nowadays?
I’d like to catch up with him sometime.”</p>
      <p>Daniel EightFields shrugged. “Don’t know. Don’t care.”</p>
      <p>She pushed her way in between the drunk woman and EightFields. “Of
course you do.”</p>
      <p>“Hey,” the woman said.</p>
      <p>“What’s more,” Radko said, quietly, under the other woman’s
protestations, “you’ll tell me, or I’ll mention your visits to OneLane.”</p>
      <p>She felt the hardness of a blaster shoved into her side. “Say anything,
and I’ll kill you,” EightFields said.</p>
      <p>Good. He had something to hide. She didn’t move. If EightFields was
desperate enough to pull a weapon on her, he’d use it, despite the
consequences. “Why don’t we go outside. They’ll have security watching
the patrons. If someone sees your”—she indicated with her chin, but
didn’t look down—“they’ll call the police.”</p>
      <p>He looked around.</p>
      <p>“Your friends are too drunk to be any help.”</p>
      <p>He stood up. “They’re not real friends, anyway. The first sign of
trouble, and they’ll be squalling for a team leader.” He stood close to
her as they exited. “Do anything to draw attention to us, and I’ll kill
you as soon as we get outside.”</p>
      <p>“Trust me, I want to draw attention to myself as little as you do.”</p>
      <p>EightFields led the way out through the back. The staff seemed to know
him, for they let him go through.</p>
      <p>“You’re well-known here.”</p>
      <p>“Comes from being one of their best customers.” The back door led
directly onto a street. “Keep walking. Straight ahead, then turn left at
the black hole.”</p>
      <p>Black hole was an apt description. Radko hesitated before she stepped
in.</p>
      <p>Van Heel couldn’t follow her here with the cameras. She’d have to assume
she had no backup. She turned as she entered and chopped down and
snatched the blaster out of EightFields’s suddenly inert hands.</p>
      <p>He cried out. There was a squawk from the end of the lane. Or alcove,
really, for it only went in two meters. A light flicked on. Two
indignant faces peered at them from the end of the space.</p>
      <p>“Find your own place.”</p>
      <p>“Get out,” Radko ordered, pushing EightFields up against the wall so he
couldn’t escape with them. He struggled. She wondered if she could hold
him.</p>
      <p>“We were here first.”</p>
      <p>Radko waved the blaster at them.</p>
      <p>Another squawk, but they scrambled out, grabbing their clothes as they
ran.</p>
      <p>EightFields stopped struggling. “You’re stronger than you look.”</p>
      <p>“You’re not so weak yourself. I’m going to step back, let you go. Do
anything stupid, and I’ll shoot.”</p>
      <p>EightFields stepped back into the alcove. “What will you do with me?”</p>
      <p>“Where is Adam?”</p>
      <p>“Why Adam, of all people?”</p>
      <p>Instead of answering, she said, “Did you sell the report to OneLane?”</p>
      <p>“What report?”</p>
      <p>They heard running footsteps, pounding toward them. Radko stepped into
the alcove beside EightFields. “Give us away, and I’ll kill you.”</p>
      <p>The footsteps stopped.</p>
      <p>“Radko?” Han’s voice.</p>
      <p>A bright light was shined into the alcove.</p>
      <p>“Turn the light out,” Radko said. She nearly added “no names,” but that
would draw attention to the fact that he’d used hers. “I said I’d call
if I needed help.”</p>
      <p>“Van Heel couldn’t see you out here,” Chaudry said. “This section’s not
covered. And H—”</p>
      <p>“No names,” Radko said, sharply. Between them, they’d give the whole
team away.</p>
      <p>Chaudry looked first at Han, then to EightFields. “He said Eightfields
pulled a blaster on you. We thought.” He didn’t say what he thought.</p>
      <p>If Han had recognized the movement, there was a good chance security had
seen it.</p>
      <p>“Let’s question him elsewhere.” Radko gestured with the blaster. There
was only one safe place, and that was the aircar. She called up van
Heel. “We’re bringing him in. Be ready for us.” He’d recognized them and
would be able to describe them, but she didn’t feel safe in this alley
right now. “Give me your comms,” she ordered EightFields, and waved the
blaster impatiently in his face when he didn’t hand it over immediately.</p>
      <p>He handed it over. She tossed it into the alcove, hard enough to shatter
it, then jumped on it as it bounced back, and kicked it back in.</p>
      <p>“She really likes to be sure,” Han said to Chaudry.</p>
      <p>“Comms are harder to destroy than you realize,” Radko said. “Come on.”</p>
      <p>The back door of the club opened as they reached the corner. Her heart
sped up. Two bulky security men made their way down to the alcove.</p>
      <p>Van Heel dropped the aircar into the street. “Hurry, this is illegal.”</p>
      <p>Radko waited until Han and Chaudry were in the aircar, then shoved
EightFields in and followed so close, she stepped on his heels.</p>
      <p>Van Heel took off straight upward. Han, Chaudry, and EightFields fell;
Radko, more used to speedy maneuvers, kept her feet. She patted
EightFields down, checking for weapons.</p>
      <p>EightFields hardly noticed. He was staring at Chaudry. “I know you.
You’re the people at Callista’s shop.”</p>
      <p>“You do not,” Chaudry said. “I don’t even look the same.”</p>
      <p>Radko moved the blaster threateningly up to EightFields’s throat. “Tell
us about the report.”</p>
      <p>“Go ahead, shoot me.”</p>
      <p>“I wouldn’t shoot you dead. Just enough to cause you so much pain you’ll
want to tell me.”</p>
      <p>“Go ahead. I’m used to pain.”</p>
      <p>It sounded like the truth.</p>
      <p>Chaudry made a sound that might have been shock. “Do you like pain?”</p>
      <p>“Of course not. But I’ve been beaten before. Starved. Burned. Shot.” He
looked at Radko as he said that.</p>
      <p>“I’m happy to shoot you, too,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>“Of course you are.”</p>
      <p>“If someone treated you so badly, why didn’t you report them?” Chaudry
asked.</p>
      <p>“Why would you care?” and there was bitter truth in the words.</p>
      <p>“If you allow yourself to be a victim,” Han said. “You will always <emphasis>be</emphasis>
a victim.” He seemed to have forgotten he was part of this mission and
reverted back to the policeman he would have been on Lancia. Radko
thought he might have been good at his job.</p>
      <p>What had Vega given her as a team?</p>
      <p>Linesmen. Who didn’t always make the best soldiers, but they were damned
good at what they could do.</p>
      <p>“I don’t care how much you were bullied,” Radko said. “And you don’t
either,” to Han and Chaudry. “We’re here to do a job. Let’s do it. Now,”
to EightFields. “Tell me about this report before I shoot someone in
frustration.”</p>
      <p>EightFields laughed. “I wish I’d never seen that report.” He sobered
quickly, then looked at them speculatively. “But you were buying it,
weren’t you?”</p>
      <p>There wasn’t any point denying it, and if he’d been jumping at Redmond
soldiers earlier, it was probably even beneficial. “Yes. Did you keep a
copy?”</p>
      <p>“I didn’t even know what it was. It was just a comms Adam was fussing
about.” He took a deep breath. “I have to explain some history;
otherwise, you’ll think I’m crazy.”</p>
      <p>Radko looked at van Heel. “Are we okay with pursuit?”</p>
      <p>“So far.”</p>
      <p>She was after Adam. She didn’t really care about the report Daniel had
sold to OneLane, but if they could relax him by letting him talk, maybe
he’d let slip where his brother was. Provided they didn’t run out of
time.</p>
      <p>“Go on,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>“Thank you.” He settled into his seat, lance straight, like a soldier.
“I hate Adam. I always have.” She heard the truth of it in his voice and
suspected that Adam might be the source of the pain EightFields had been
speaking about earlier. “He made my life a misery when I was a boy.
That’s why I joined the fleet. To learn how to fight.”</p>
      <p>If he was trying for sympathy, he was certainly getting it from Chaudry.
Radko couldn’t read Han’s face. Van Heel looked skeptical.</p>
      <p>“I’m doing okay, actually. I was up for team leader.” He stopped and
took three quick, shallow breaths. “I hated Adam so much that when I was
about fifteen, I spent three months following him around, trying to find
something I could use against him.”</p>
      <p>Radko hoped this story was going somewhere.</p>
      <p>“Back then, Adam was spending more than his allowance. Than both our
allowances combined. He stole one of Mother’s necklaces—Radiance of the
Night, it was called—and took it down to Callista’s shop. I followed him
there.”</p>
      <p>Named necklaces were priceless.</p>
      <p>EightFields’s voice turned reverential. “Have you seen Callista? Isn’t
she something? She was my first crush. I kept going back though I had no
money to buy anything. I must have spent my whole youth in that shop. I
propositioned her once.”</p>
      <p>Radko raised an eyebrow.</p>
      <p>“She turned me down. You remind me of her, actually. Ice queen.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you.”</p>
      <p>“I think she liked that I liked her. Adam visited occasionally. I was
there often enough. I saw him go out the back. I used to ask her what he
wanted, but she told me to mind my own business.”</p>
      <p>“So you tried to impress her by selling stolen goods?”</p>
      <p>EightFields shook his head. “Adam came home to attend a function. Two
hours before we were due to leave, a captain arrives with a full team as
an honor guard. He wants Adam to finish something because they were
about to get a twelve, and they—” He stopped, and stepped back. “What?”</p>
      <p>Radko hadn’t moved. At least, she hadn’t thought she had. “A twelve?”
The chase had suddenly become personal. Her pulse pounded from the
instant adrenaline rush.</p>
      <p>“I don’t know what it is, either. But Adam and the captain were excited
about it. There was this massive fuss as they signed over the comms,
like it was the most precious thing ever.”</p>
      <p>“Did Adam talk about it?”</p>
      <p>“To me? Of course not. But he boasted about how important the work was,
and it took a whole team to deliver it. Adam invited the captain to stay
for a drink.” EightFields paused, took a deep breath.</p>
      <p>“I was up for promotion. Team leader. The captain mentioned it. Adam—”
EightFields swallowed. “I turn up at work next day to start team-leader
training and find I’m out of the program. That I’m unfit to be in charge
of people. It’s signed by the captain from the night before.”</p>
      <p>“So you decided to get your own back?”</p>
      <p>“Not then. They placed me on special leave because no one knew what to
do with me. My old position had already been filled. So I go home, and
what should I see when I walk inside, but Adam’s precious comms on the
table. And no one around.” He scrubbed at his eyes with the heels of his
palms. “That’s when I took it. I went straight around to Callista’s
shop.”</p>
      <p>“Didn’t you think you’d get caught?” Radko asked.</p>
      <p>“I had proof he’d stolen the necklace. If they traced the comms, I’d
show them the proof about the necklace and say Adam had a history of
selling things off.” His mouth twisted down. “I didn’t think it through.
I was angry. There was this massive fuss about the missing comms, but
they assumed I’d been at work all day. I was ignored.”</p>
      <p>“And you’ve been jumping at Redmond soldiers ever since?”</p>
      <p>He nodded.</p>
      <p>And no wonder. “What else did they say when they delivered the comms?”
Radko asked.</p>
      <p>“They didn’t say anything. Except about how important and confidential
it was. And how time was so short.”</p>
      <p>She thought he was telling the truth. “And Adam. Where is he?”</p>
      <p>He shook his head and raised his hands when she instinctively raised her
blaster. “I truly don’t know. It’s supposed to be secret.”</p>
      <p>Han stepped forward to stand beside Radko. “We’ve spent all this time
hearing your story, and you haven’t got anything for us. Not even a
report.”</p>
      <p>“I don’t know for sure, but I can guess where Adam is. If you’ll listen
before you shoot me.”</p>
      <p>“Talk faster, then,” Han said.</p>
      <p>“Adam was late.” EightFields rushed the words out. “This function we
both had to attend. It was a major event. Everyone in the Founding
Families had to attend. You disgrace your family if you don’t. We never
miss it. But Adam nearly did this year. Because his lab was under
lockdown.”</p>
      <p>If a lab was under lockdown, it was usually for security reasons or
because something viral had gotten out of hand. Either way, the company
wasn’t going to publicize it. “We need more than that,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>“But Adam is also a name-dropper.” EightFields watched Radko’s blaster
warily. “When he dines with someone important, you know about it. And he
dined with the Factor of the Lesser Gods three times in the two weeks
before he came home.” He paused expectantly.</p>
      <p>“Connect it for us,” Radko said. “The Factor of the Lesser Gods isn’t
from Redmond.” In fact, he was supposed to be turning against Redmond by
marrying Michelle.</p>
      <p>“The lockdown,” EightFields said. “They had a lockdown at the Factor’s
palace on Aeolus. It made the news. The Factor had some important
visitor. So important they locked down the whole palace and the streets
surrounding it. No one could get in or out for two days. Timewise, it
matches perfectly.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel ran checks. “TwoPaths does have a lab there. Although it’s
listed more as a store nowadays. It is close to the palace. Right
against the walls, actually.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, but why put a comilitary operation on a world that’s not your own?
And why leave it there if the two worlds are close to being enemies
right now?”</p>
      <p>“Maybe that’s what the twelve is about?” Han suggested. “Their plans to
move.”</p>
      <p>Radko shook her head. “That’s something different.” She watched
EightFields carefully. She thought he was telling the truth. Otherwise,
he was an accomplished liar. “Anything else you want to tell us?”</p>
      <p>“No.”</p>
      <p>She looked at the others. Han shook his head. Chaudry didn’t respond.
Van Heel shrugged.</p>
      <p>“Take us down somewhere safe,” Radko ordered van Heel. “We’ll drop him
off.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_ten_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TEN: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Admiral Orsaya was delighted to be officially placed in charge of
security for linesmen. She came out personally to reassure Ean he was in
safe hands.</p>
      <p>“I know that.” Ean was on Confluence Station. The lines would look after
him.</p>
      <p>A pleased hum echoed through the station lines. <emphasis>“We’ll look after you
well.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Thank you. I know you will.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Sale was less happy. “We’re perfectly capable of looking after you. This
business with Radko had better not take long.”</p>
      <p>Vega had called Sale as Ean had arrived back on Confluence Station, told
her about Orsaya, then asked her to come in to the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis> after she finished work that day. Ean eavesdropped unashamedly
on the call. Sale had just clicked off when Ean and Bhaksir rejoined
them. Bhaksir had shrugged, and Sale had looked at her comms but hadn’t
asked anything else.</p>
      <p>“You’re coming out to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> with us today, Ean.” Sale looked
at Orsaya, who’d smiled, and said nothing.</p>
      <p>It had been a long night. Ean tried to doze while Sale and Bhaksir
talked quietly off to one side, and everyone else pretended things were
fine.</p>
      <p>“No idea,” Bhaksir said. “But everyone on board the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis> is on edge. Vega nearly bit my head off when I asked. It
doesn’t help that it’s happened at the same time as this business with
the Worlds of the Lesser Gods. That’s all anyone’s talking about on
ship.”</p>
      <p>“I imagine not.” Sale glanced over at Ean. He thought she was going to
come and talk to him after that, so he looked away.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> welcomed them. It was the only thing that seemed happy
today.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“We’ll have crew for you soon,”</emphasis> Ean said.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Crew is good. Lonely.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Ean knew that as well as the ships did. <emphasis>“I know. We’re doing what we
can.”</emphasis> He was trying hard not to promise something he couldn’t deliver,
but if the New Alliance didn’t make up its mind soon, he was going to
assign linesmen himself.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“We choose, too.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>He hoped he hadn’t committed to choosing linesmen without the council’s
agreement. “I’m going for a walk,” he told Sale. He needed to distract
himself and the ship.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir looked at Ru Li and Hana.</p>
      <p>“On it,” Ru Li said, and the two of them trailed after Ean.</p>
      <p>“You realize,” Ru Li said to Hana, “Bhaksir never made Radko take anyone
with her. That means she thinks we’re half the person Radko is.”</p>
      <p>“You are half the person Radko is,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“Oh, that’s mean, Ean. Especially when I know you really mean it.”</p>
      <p>He had meant it. Ean bit his lip. “Sorry. I didn’t mean it that way.”
Don’t compound your mistakes, Radko would say. Or would that be Sale? He
took a deep breath. “You know what I mean.”</p>
      <p>Luckily for him, they did.</p>
      <p>He stopped at one of the large crew rooms. On board the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>,
there were always things to do. Except he couldn’t think straight today.</p>
      <p>Protection. That would be a good start. Ean and the ships had to be able
to protect their people. Like he had before, with Radko, throwing the
enemy across the room but a controlled throwing.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“I’m going to practice with line eight,”</emphasis> he told the ship.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Practice?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>What had the aliens done when they wanted to practice? Or were the lines
so natural to them they didn’t need to? He searched for another word to
explain. <emphasis>“Work with,”</emphasis> he said finally. “Ru Li, Hana, you need to stay
behind me.”</p>
      <p>“What are you doing?”</p>
      <p>“Working with line eight.”</p>
      <p>“I’m not sure this is a good idea,” Hana said, as they both moved in
behind him. “Isn’t line eight the one that throws people around?”</p>
      <p>“That’s why I have to learn to use it.”</p>
      <p>How did you work with something you couldn’t see, you could only hear?
You listened to them. And you tried to explain what you were doing
because though you heard music, the general consensus seemed to be that
it wasn’t just music, it was your thoughts that conveyed the message.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“I want to build a field to protect us.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>It built a field all right. Ean recognized the tune. The protective
green field that surrounded the ship and when anything came within 9.7
kilometers of it, spread out, annihilating anything within two hundred
kilometers.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“No. Not that one.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>On the bridge, Sale grabbed her comms. “Ean. Whatever you did, don’t.
Turn it off.”</p>
      <p>Sale wasn’t a linesman, but she was a good ship person. Especially on
the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, which she and her team knew better than anyone else
alive, except Ean.</p>
      <p>The green field died. Cut off instantly.</p>
      <p>“It’s off.” Ean waited for his heart to stop racing. Thank goodness
Abram insisted no vehicle ever went within two hundred kilometers of any
of the alien ships without permission.</p>
      <p>“What did he do?” Hana asked Ru Li.</p>
      <p>Ru Li gave an elaborate, exaggerated shrug.</p>
      <p>How did Ean explain to the ship what he wanted? Then, last time he had
used eight that way, it had been on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>, which was a different
ship in a different fleet. Maybe only human ships did it. Maybe it was
their equivalent of the green shield. Maybe it was the only thing they
could do, for they didn’t have the equipment to produce the other.</p>
      <p>No. That couldn’t be it. Both times, the ship had been protecting
individual people.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“I was on the</emphasis> Gruen<emphasis>, and someone fired at Radko. And we—I—knew he
was going to kill her. So line eight made a protective field on the ship
and stopped the other man’s weapon.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>He still hadn’t made himself understood to line eight by the time they
left to go home.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Abram waited for him on Confluence Station.</p>
      <p>“Wouldn’t it be smarter for us to go to the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>?” Ean
asked, as they settled in with tea in Ean’s quarters. Michelle liked it
when Abram came back to her ship, and so did the crew. “Sattur Dow isn’t
there yet, and we’d know long before he arrived that he was coming.”</p>
      <p>Abram made a face that could have been a grimace. “Both Michelle and
Vega feel it is better for me to spend less time on the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis> for the moment.”</p>
      <p>That was like kicking Michelle herself off the ship. It was Abram’s home
as much as it was hers. Or it had been. “Sometimes, I don’t like change
much.”</p>
      <p>“Change is inevitable,” Abram said. “You go with the changes as they
come, try to control them.”</p>
      <p>Abram and Michelle were both masters at controlling change and making it
suit them.</p>
      <p>“Do you ever regret becoming an admiral? Do you ever think that if you
had to do it again you’d say no, and stay in your old job?”</p>
      <p>He didn’t have to hear Abram’s reply to know the answer—the lines told
him the truth.</p>
      <p>Abram sidestepped the question anyway. “Have you met the other
Lancastrian admirals, Ean? I can’t think of one I’d like to see in Alien
Affairs. Lancia’s reputation is not undeserved. We have been too long in
power. When we want something, we go out and get it, without thought to
the consequences.”</p>
      <p>“But you think of the consequences.”</p>
      <p>“I think of the future, Ean. That is all.” There was a strong sound of
Michelle in the lines now. “I want Lancia to have a future.”</p>
      <p>He wanted it for Michelle.</p>
      <p>“Emperor Yu is right to accuse me of controlling access to Haladea III.
I do. Because I believe that is best for Lancia’s future. I might be
wrong. There are plenty of people who believe what they are doing is
right, when it isn’t.”</p>
      <p>“You are not wrong. And keeping you off the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> is
crazy.”</p>
      <p>“Michelle has her reasons. And I trust Michelle implicitly. If she
thinks there’s a problem, there’s a problem.”</p>
      <p>What sort of problem would Michelle be worried about? It was Yu who had
accused Abram of working against him, not Sattur Dow. Was Michelle
expecting Dow to act as proxy for Yu? Or was there something more?</p>
      <p>“What does Lancia do to traitors, Abram?”</p>
      <p>Abram grimaced. “Treason has to be proven first.”</p>
      <p>That didn’t answer the question. Ean waited.</p>
      <p>“But that’s not what I came here to talk about.”</p>
      <p>Of course it wasn’t. Did Abram ever pay social visits?</p>
      <p>Abram blew out his breath. “We’re going to sing another ship into the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet.”</p>
      <p>“Into?” Ean asked, just to be sure. They asked him to sing the ships
out, which he couldn’t. Not in.</p>
      <p>“We are looking for the aliens.”</p>
      <p>Abram believed that if they didn’t find the aliens, the aliens would
find them one day. It was better, in Abram’s opinion, that humans were
the ones who did the finding. It gave them more control. Furthermore,
Abram believed that Kari Wang’s jump into alien space would have
triggered an alert, somewhere. Ean had told the ship to go somewhere
safe. Safe for an eleven ship was likely to be close to its alien home,
in a sector with other alien line ships.</p>
      <p>The aliens would have picked up the line signal. Especially if they were
looking for it, for no one, not even aliens, would lose an Eleven-class
ship and not be searching for it. Aliens would arrive one day, following
the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>’s trail.</p>
      <p>Humans didn’t know how old the war was that the alien ships had fled
from, or how close. All they knew was that the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> fleet had
accumulated a lot of damage, and anything that could do damage like that
would annihilate human ships. Abram’s job in the Department of Alien
Affairs wasn’t just to learn how to use the fleet ships to their
advantage, it was also to determine what threat—if any—the aliens were
to humans.</p>
      <p>Ean had heard other plans, too, at those interminable dinner parties the
councilors loved so much. Plans for trading, plans for expansion. Plans
for war.</p>
      <p>“We want to start with the place you sent the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> to.”</p>
      <p>Where, according to Abram’s theory, they would almost certainly meet
aliens.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> had been under attack. A new weapon invented by Redmond,
where four cloaked ships surrounded another ship they were attacking and
sent a wave through that sliced the ship they were attacking into
pieces. They had surrounded the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, and Ean had told the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>
to go “somewhere safe” until the field dispersed.</p>
      <p>“Suppose I can’t get back to the same place?” Ean didn’t know where the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> had gone.</p>
      <p>“We’ll work that out when we get to it. We’ve astronomers and
astrophysicists working on the images the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> brought back, to see
if they can identify it.” Abram smiled, a rare expression nowadays. “So
far they haven’t, but we’ll get there.”</p>
      <p>He blew out his breath again. “I want to send Wendell.”</p>
      <p>Wendell would be perfect for a trip like that.</p>
      <p>“I hear a but?” Ean wasn’t sure if it was in the lines or the way Abram
said the words.</p>
      <p>“Many of the New Alliance worlds don’t trust Wendell. Or his crew.”</p>
      <p>Wendell and his ship were prisoners of war. Normally, in cases like
this, they retained the ship but ransomed the crew back to their world,
but Ean had already sung the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis> into the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>’s fleet, and
the bond between ship and captain meant they couldn’t send Wendell home.</p>
      <p>They couldn’t send the crew home either. They knew too much.</p>
      <p>They were now dual citizens of Lancia and Yaolin, but really they were
loyal only to their ship and their captain. As for Wendell himself, Ean
had heard him say once that given the circumstances, he was loyal to
whoever paid his crew and kept his ship supplied and powered.</p>
      <p>“He’s part of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet. We’d know everything they did.”</p>
      <p>“That doesn’t matter to some people. Whether they believe it or not,
they see this as an opportunity to get one of their own ships into the
fleet, as a way to open up space for their world.”</p>
      <p>Or the mistake that brought an alien war to human space.</p>
      <p>Abram blew out his breath again. “They’d be right, too, because whoever
gets there first will have an advantage.”</p>
      <p>“So who?”</p>
      <p>“It hasn’t been decided yet. But it will be a functioning fleet ship. If
this war is over before we’ve got someone, it might even be a Gate Union
ship.”</p>
      <p>“Will the war be over?” No one else talked as if they thought it would
be.</p>
      <p>Abram shook his head. “And that’s worrying enough in itself. We’ve two
groups of aliens fighting each other, maybe more. I’d rather humans were
all allied before we come up against them. Instead, if the Redmond–Gate
Union split happens—as everyone expects it to—we’ll be three fragmented
groups. Not a good position to be in.”</p>
      <p>“Redmond is only six worlds. How dangerous are they?”</p>
      <p>“Line factories,” Abram reminded him.</p>
      <p>Other worlds had factories that grew individual lines, like
mass-producing line five for comms use, but now that the factories on
Shaolin and Chamberley were gone, only Redmond could produce the full
set of lines required to power a ship or a station. They couldn’t afford
to destroy Redmond.</p>
      <p>Not even if the Worlds of the Lesser Gods gave them a military base
close by.</p>
      <p>Ean turned his attention back to the thing he could control the most.
Another ship for the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet.</p>
      <p>“What about a Balian ship?” Admiral Katida supported Lancia—although she
claimed she didn’t always. Ean suspected it was less Lancia she
supported than Michelle and Abram. He was fine with that. It was his
definition of supporting Lancia as well.</p>
      <p>“Unlikely. We’re more likely to get someone who opposes Lancia. It won’t
be Nova Tahiti, for they have a captain on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. Maybe Yaolin,
if they can talk hard enough.”</p>
      <p>Admiral Orsaya’s passion was lines and linesmen. At least she’d want to
know more about the ships and their lines than she would about finding
new planets to explore. Or maybe not. Even Abram would be thinking about
exploration for Lancia.</p>
      <p>“Whoever we get,” Abram said, “I want them to join in line training
although most of them won’t be linesmen.”</p>
      <p>Ean nodded.</p>
      <p>“Speaking of line training. The events of the last two days have had
most worlds scrambling to get people for us. They don’t want to be left
without trained linesmen.”</p>
      <p>When he said “events,” Ean thought he meant the battle, and the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, but there was a strong sound of Michelle underneath Abram’s
words.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> would be happy. “Good. We need crews for the ships. All
of them. And captains.”</p>
      <p>“This batch of trainees will be bigger than the first group,” Abram
said. “We’ll house them on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> initially. Once it gets too many,
we’ll put them on Confluence Station, but that will take some
organizing.”</p>
      <p>How many could they train at one time? A group session, Ean supposed,
plus smaller groups. At least he had Hernandez and Fergus, and maybe
Rossi, to help. And some of the earlier trainees.</p>
      <p>Abram said, “We are also training paramedics from the different worlds
to deal with line-related problems. That’s going to be fun. We’ll send
them with the line trainees, but you won’t have to train them. The
paramedics who are already trained will do that.”</p>
      <p>“Do we have the room?”</p>
      <p>“Captain Gruen has already complained about her cargo holds being kept
empty for line training, rather than being put to use for storage now
she has a full ship. We’ve promised her supplies every three days.”</p>
      <p>Ean grinned. Gruen would milk that for everything she had.</p>
      <p>“As for the rest. We’ll take it as it comes.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_eleven_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER ELEVEN: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>Back at their temporary home, Radko considered what they knew.</p>
      <p>Callista OneLane’s premises had been protected by LoneField Security.
When OneLane had pressed the emergency button, the people who responded
should have been LoneField employees, not Redmond Fleet soldiers. Not
only that, if you were paid to protect someone’s premises, surely you
would know who they were, and not shoot them in the head the moment you
entered a room.</p>
      <p>OneLane had been Redmond’s first target. Protecting the report, Radko
thought. In case OneLane had read it? What was in that report?</p>
      <p>Stellan Vilhjalmsson had the report now, but Redmond Fleet headquarters
wouldn’t know that because OneLane didn’t have a camera in her office.
Unfortunately, the cameras Redmond would see showed Radko introducing
herself as Tiana Chen and saying she had come to buy something.</p>
      <p>EightFields might or might not go to the authorities. If the story he’d
told was true, he wouldn’t, but that didn’t stop the military putting
the same names together that Radko and her team had. They’d get to him
in the end. Radko wanted to be off world by the time they did. But
Aeolus wasn’t even a Redmond world. Why have a military operation off
world?</p>
      <p>“Do you think EightFields is sending us into a trap?”</p>
      <p>“Why would he?” Chaudry asked.</p>
      <p>“Don’t trust anyone, Chaudry.” But if EightFields had been telling the
truth, they could verify it easily enough. “Van Heel, find out about the
lockdown. It was supposed to be on the news. Han, see if you can find
the Factor’s guest list.” On Lancia, it was easy to find out with whom
Emperor Yu had dined. Most rulers had lists, and Han being who he was
would know where to look. “Let me know if EightFields dined with him
around the time or before the lockdown.”</p>
      <p>“What do I do?” Chaudry asked.</p>
      <p>“Make us look as different as we can without drawing attention to us.”
They’d already changed once, but if EightFields did go to the
authorities, he would describe them and what they were wearing. And he
had names.</p>
      <p>Chaudry seemed to have a talent for disguise. Anything would help, no
matter what, even if Chaudry himself stood out. EightFields had known
him, even without a layer of fake regenerated skin.</p>
      <p>“We need to look different,” Radko said. “Shower, change. Let Chaudry
make you up.”</p>
      <p>She dressed in the pants Chaudry had picked out for her, and a shirt she
thought might have been Han’s, then mulled over escape plans as she let
him slick her hair back and use something from the cupboard to add a few
dark streaks.</p>
      <p>“Here’s the lockdown,” van Heel said. “Two weeks ago, for four days.
Lots of speculation about who the Factor’s mysterious visitor was, and
the reason for the lockdown. All nonurgent staff were sent home. Staff
who stayed said the visitor was masked.”</p>
      <p>“And I’ve got EightFields,” Han said, not long after.</p>
      <p>Radko looked up once to see Han across from her, almost a stranger with
his hair flattened on top and his eyebrows clumping out. The droop to
one side of his face made him look as if he’d had a stroke. She looked
closer at the scab on the side of his mouth. It looked real and made her
want to look away.</p>
      <p>“I don’t want to know,” Han said. “Van Heel stared at me before, too.”
He looked back to his screen. “EightFields is a regular guest at the
palace. He dined there a month prior to that, and three times in ten
days before the lockdown.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel was not so much unrecognizable as noticeably older. Chaudry had
done something to her face to make her look ten years older than she
was. Her skin was a shade darker, and her nose and cheeks were red and
blotchy with the broken veins of an alcoholic.</p>
      <p>“Nicely done, Chaudry,” Radko said. She didn’t want to know what she
herself looked like.</p>
      <p>For his own disguise, Chaudry had paired his uniform pants with a loose
shirt and casual shoes, and spiked his hair with gel, arranged so that
it looked as if he’d lost a few clumps of hair. If he hadn’t been such
an obvious size, even Radko would have found it hard to recognize him.</p>
      <p>“You’re very good at this, Chaudry.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry frowned down at his trousers. “It feels wrong. Wearing part
uniform.”</p>
      <p>“It can get you court-martialed,” Han said.</p>
      <p>“Han,” Radko chided.</p>
      <p>“Seriously, I pulled someone in for that the other day.” Then Han
grinned. “I won’t tell. Your indiscretion is safe with me.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry tugged nervously at his trousers. “Maybe I should—”</p>
      <p>“Wear them,” Radko said. “It’s the best disguise we’ve got. If you’re
worried about repercussions, then I order you to wear them. Van Heel,
Han, witness that please.”</p>
      <p>“Duly witnessed.” Van Heel glared at Han. “Leave him be.”</p>
      <p>They were starting to bond as a team, at least.</p>
      <p>“Suggestions as to how we can get off this world,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>“Come in like we did to Bane,” Han suggested. “Find ourselves a cargo
port, and a shuttle that will collect us from there.”</p>
      <p>That had been organized by Vega, who had a whole fleet of resources
behind her.</p>
      <p>It wasn’t only getting off world. They had to get on to a ship
afterward. “We need that guy who delivers the shellfish,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>Maybe they could.</p>
      <p>Radko looked at Han. He had implied that Gunter Wong was a family
friend. Using contacts and calling in favors was a very Lancian way to
work. “How well do you know Gunter Wong, Han?”</p>
      <p>“Gunter?”</p>
      <p>“Gippian shellfish.”</p>
      <p>“I know what he does, it’s just unexpected you asking.” Han considered
it. “He’s more a friend of my father’s than he is mine. They’re
neighbors. They see each other often.”</p>
      <p>“What would he do if you asked him for a favor?”</p>
      <p>“What sort of favor?”</p>
      <p>“Send two orders of shellfish posthaste. One here to Redmond, the second
to the Worlds of the Lesser Gods. We’d pay him, of course,” as Han
opened his mouth. They had a budget. “He just needs to prioritize it.
And provide a ship that can carry four passengers.”</p>
      <p>“It’s something my father would ask, not me.”</p>
      <p>“We’ll try Wong first. If unsuccessful, we’ll ask Renaud to do it.”</p>
      <p>“Keep my father out of this.” Han’s eyes narrowed. “How do you know his
name anyway?”</p>
      <p>“She’s your team leader,” van Heel said. “She knows more about you than
your family does.”</p>
      <p>Did Radko imagine the whiteness around Han’s mouth? She was sure there
were things she guessed about Han that his parents didn’t know. Like the
fact that he wasn’t Yves Han at all.</p>
      <p>“My family knows yours,” Radko said. “If we have to, I’ll talk to
Renaud, but it’s best if we do it together.” She’d prefer he did it
alone, for Renaud was close to the Emperor. He wouldn’t normally talk
about Radko, but Michelle’s wedding would be the main topic of
conversation around Baoshan Palace. Someone might mention other
weddings, and Renaud might casually drop into the conversation that he’d
spoken to Sattur Dow’s betrothed recently.</p>
      <p>And if she was talking to Renaud, there was the other matter he might
mention, so it was best to prepare Han for that. “You and I go way back,
Han. One summer I smashed your face in. Did a lot of damage. I
appreciate your not mentioning it, but Renaud might find it surprising
we get along.”</p>
      <p>Han went still.</p>
      <p>“You were twelve.” She’d been nine. If this had been the Han she’d taken
on, she wouldn’t have beaten him.</p>
      <p>“I’ll get those numbers for you.” Han stood up and went into the other
room.</p>
      <p>Van Heel laughed. “He doesn’t like your remembering that, I take it.”</p>
      <p>“No. It was humiliating. I’m sure he didn’t need to be reminded of it.”
Radko stood up. “I’d best make amends.” She went inside, using the
laughter of van Heel to hide the fact that she was stepping quietly now.</p>
      <p>She came up silently behind Han, who was tapping something into his
comms.</p>
      <p>The comms in his hand wasn’t the brand-new, generic model they’d all
been issued, either. It was the high-end deluxe model she’d told him to
put away at the start of the mission.</p>
      <p>“Turn it off, Han. Before you compromise our location by sending an
unnecessary comms while we’re on a covert op, think about what you are
doing.”</p>
      <p>He yelped.</p>
      <p>“What were you planning? A message to your parents to find out
information you should already know?”</p>
      <p>“I don’t know what you mean.”</p>
      <p>“I told you because it’s an infamous incident in both our childhoods.
Yves would have remembered it. I was nine, he was twelve. I thrashed
him.”</p>
      <p>“You know, somehow I believe that.”</p>
      <p>Radko smiled. “You’d better believe it. Yves was a really unpleasant
boy.”</p>
      <p>“And I’m an unpleasant man?”</p>
      <p>“Yves might have been, but you’re not Yves, are you.” She watched his
eyes but kept part of her gaze on his hands, to see if he’d go for his
blaster. She nodded at the comms. “Doesn’t your family think it strange,
your calling them up to ask about yourself?”</p>
      <p>His gaze was watchful. “I was in an accident. I lost a lot of memory of
my past life. My memory’s still not good.”</p>
      <p>“How long ago?” Although she already knew.</p>
      <p>She thought he wasn’t going to answer.</p>
      <p>“Twelve and a half years.”</p>
      <p>Just after he’d completed training at House of Sandhurst.</p>
      <p>If he’d been going to shoot her, the danger was past. Radko sat down
across from him. “Your accent slips sometimes when you’re stressed.”
Like now. His vowels broadened the way Ean’s did, when Ean was tired.
He’d be tired right now—if he was awake—for it was 02:00 hours Haladean
sector time. “If I had to guess, I’d say you’re from the slums.”</p>
      <p>“I didn’t kill Yves if that’s what you’re thinking.”</p>
      <p>“I wouldn’t blame you if you had. He was a bastard when he was a child.
I imagine he grew into something worse.”</p>
      <p>Han made a wry moue. “How did you know?”</p>
      <p>“You’re right-handed.” Not that Radko remembered Yves as left-handed,
but he had been a linesman. “What happened to Yves?”</p>
      <p>“I used to be Yves’s stand-in.” Han stared down at his comms, which was
vibrating with an incoming message. He made another face, and held it up
so Radko could see the name of the caller. Renaud Han.</p>
      <p>Renaud could wait.</p>
      <p>“Back when Yves was six or seven, someone threatened to kill him, so
they found a double for public appearances. Me.”</p>
      <p>She nodded.</p>
      <p>“We could have been twins. His family taught me how to speak and behave
like him. I loved his parents better than my own. They would meet me
whenever they came to Baoshan, and they invited me to dinner a lot. All
<emphasis>my</emphasis> parents thought about was the credits I could make them.”</p>
      <p>“So what happened?”</p>
      <p>“Yves liked to hurt people.” It looked as if it took an effort to say.</p>
      <p>Radko nodded.</p>
      <p>“He got worse as he got older. The whole family was scared of him. My
parents, my sister.” Han rubbed his eyes. “Sorry, Yves’s parents, his
sister. Yet when he wasn’t being a monster, he was charming.”</p>
      <p>A lot of monsters were. “How did he die?” Han wouldn’t be running around
pretending to be Yves if Yves were still alive.</p>
      <p>“He hurt a young girl. Her mother tried to get him committed, but he was
a Han.”</p>
      <p>She didn’t need to interpret that. As a member of one of the Great
Families, he’d have gotten off.</p>
      <p>“She couldn’t get it to trial, so she tried to kill him. She tried a
couple of times. She nearly succeeded, so Yves asked me to stand in for
him at a function he had to attend. I needed the money. Except… the
girl’s mother was as insane as Yves was. She booby-trapped the hotel
where we were to change places. Killed herself and Yves and fifty other
people as well.”</p>
      <p>“So you pretended to be him?” She hadn’t known Han long, but he didn’t
seem the sort.</p>
      <p>“The hospital got the records mixed. They thought I was Yves. I spent
six months in hospital having my body rebuilt.”</p>
      <p>DNA was linked to one’s identity at birth. There was no way the hospital
could have mixed the records.</p>
      <p>Han finally looked at her. “It sounds like an excuse, I know, but I lost
my memory for a while. Or not so much lost it, but I got really confused
because everyone was treating me like Yves, and I <emphasis>knew</emphasis> these people. I
remembered them. I remembered having dinner with them. When I finally
realized what had happened, I tried to tell them. A number of times, but
something always came up, and we never got to the important part. Then
I… stopped telling them.”</p>
      <p>His comms vibrated again. Han cut the call off.</p>
      <p>“Sometimes I get a guilty conscience, but… I don’t know. They get
distressed when I talk about it.”</p>
      <p>Twelve years, he’d said. It was a long time to get away with pretending
to be someone else. A long time to do it without being caught. The notes
on Radko’s comms said Han had joined the Lancian fleet eleven and a half
years prior.</p>
      <p>“So you joined the fleet.”</p>
      <p>“I thought that would solve things. It made it worse. And every time I
go home—”</p>
      <p>“But you do go home?”</p>
      <p>Han shrugged.</p>
      <p>“How often?”</p>
      <p>“I’m at the barracks. We do three tendays, then ten days off.”</p>
      <p>Every break, in other words.</p>
      <p>“I know. But I couldn’t up and leave, and Annie is going through a stage
right now, and Mother gets worried if I don’t.” Han shrugged again.
“It’s hard to cut off.”</p>
      <p>Even if the hospital had mistaken his identity, the fleet had rigorous
security checks. The Great Families protected their progeny carefully.
The DNA check for entry to the fleet should have exposed Han as an
imposter. Yet it hadn’t.</p>
      <p>“Radko, court-martial me, do whatever you need to, but don’t tell my
parents. Please. They don’t deserve it.”</p>
      <p>What if his parents already knew? Someone like Renaud Han had the
contacts to change DNA records.</p>
      <p>She didn’t promise. She couldn’t, for after this, she planned on
visiting Amina and Renaud to see what they did know.</p>
      <p>If she was allowed back on Lancia.</p>
      <p>“I have to tell my boss,” she said. “I’m here to test out a particular
ability Yves had that you don’t.”</p>
      <p>“That he could torture people better than me?”</p>
      <p>Who knew what Han might do now that she knew his secret? Maybe it was
time to share some secrets of her own. “He spent ten years at House of
Sandhurst training to be a linesman.”</p>
      <p>“The doctors in the hospital explained that, before I regained my
memory. It was the shock, they said. I might never regain my line
abilities.”</p>
      <p>Radko laughed. “That won’t gel with my boss. She’ll observe you for five
minutes, then she’ll turn around and shoot you, for she’ll know you
never were a linesman, and therefore, aren’t Yves Han. I’d rather tell
her first. The Han family have influence.” She stood up and stretched.
“She’s not a bad boss. A bit crusty, but okay for all that.” Better than
anyone had expected, but they should have trusted Abram Galenos to pick
the right person. Even if, like everyone else, Radko would have
preferred that Abram had stayed.</p>
      <p>“That good, huh?”</p>
      <p>“She’s good, but everyone on ship will know. If—” She remembered in time
not to mention Vega’s name. Han had worked for Vega for two years. He’d
have noted her promotion, would know for whom she worked now. “If my
boss doesn’t kill you, the rest of my team certainly will.” In their
job, someone pretending to be a linesman would be trying to get onto one
of the alien ships.</p>
      <p>“All in five minutes?”</p>
      <p>“All in five minutes,” Radko confirmed.</p>
      <p>“What? They walk around with portable Havortian test kits?”</p>
      <p>“Nothing so overt as that.” She tapped the comms he was turning over in
his hands. “They will see that you are naturally right-handed. They will
ask what you see and hear.” If he was near an alien ship. “And they will
hear you sing.”</p>
      <p>“I’m doing the singing in five minutes?”</p>
      <p>“Most definitely.”</p>
      <p>“So I walk on ship. You said it was a ship?”</p>
      <p>She nodded.</p>
      <p>“Singing, and holding something.”</p>
      <p>“Han, you holster your blaster right-handed.”</p>
      <p>“Oh.” Han was quiet a moment. “And the singing?”</p>
      <p>“Maybe ten minutes.” More like an hour, given Vega would want to talk to
him first.</p>
      <p>“Seriously?”</p>
      <p>“Seriously.” She hoped her trust wasn’t misplaced. “Han. It’s a simple
test, but it’s classified. If you mention it to anyone, I’ll bring up
the secrecy act. And maybe I’ll shoot you.”</p>
      <p>He’d been smiling. He stopped. “And you tell me this secret just after I
tell you I’m not the person I’m pretending to be. Very funny. Even I got
taken in.”</p>
      <p>He’d come around. Radko made her voice hard. “Don’t mention what we
talked about to anyone but me, Spacer Han. That’s an order.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Van Heel found an old, out-of-the way shuttle field halfway across the
continent. It was busier than the one on Barth, but busy meant twenty
ships a week, and it was cargo only. Radko used van Heel’s comms—for her
own was the contact for Tiana Chen in Callista OneLane’s files—to order
a box of fresh shellfish to be delivered there. The shuttle pilot was to
collect a package from the same shuttleport. This parcel was then to be
delivered, along with another box of shellfish, to the Factor of the
Lesser Gods as congratulations on his forthcoming nuptials. The pickup
from Redmond was to ensure that the same ship carried both orders.</p>
      <p>Both orders were coded for urgent delivery.</p>
      <p>“I hope that’s not coming out of my credit,” van Heel said, as Radko
handed the comms back.</p>
      <p>“It’s coming out of our operations budget.”</p>
      <p>“You can always put in a chit for it if it does,” Chaudry said. “We get
that all the time in Stores. People charging things to the wrong
account. It’s form 55735.”</p>
      <p>“Wait,” Han said. “You’re telling me we have more than fifty-five
thousand forms?”</p>
      <p>“I’ve filled out about fifty thousand of them,” van Heel said.
“Intelligence likes to track where their money goes.”</p>
      <p>Radko had filled out the occasional order, but not many. “You should go
onto a battleship. Not as many forms there.”</p>
      <p>“Are you kidding? That’s worst of all.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry nodded glum agreement. “All the time. And we have to audit 5
percent of them.”</p>
      <p>“Audit?”</p>
      <p>“What ship do you come from?”</p>
      <p>Definitely not a ship where you filled out forms for everything. But
then, no doubt Captain Helmo had that in hand. Radko would have to find
out. “If anyone has to fill out a form for it, I’ll do it.”</p>
      <p>She turned to van Heel. “Can you disable the tracker in the aircar?”</p>
      <p>She nodded.</p>
      <p>“Good. Not in the city,” for in a populous area an aircar without a
tracker was guaranteed to draw the attention of the police. “We’ll stop
somewhere along the way and take it out.”</p>
      <p>It was crazy to realize that it would take almost a full day for them to
get to the cargo field. Around the same amount of time it would take a
spaceship to get to Lancia, load some shellfish, jump, and send a
shuttle to land on Redmond.</p>
      <p>“Han, you can call Gunter Wong on the way. Let’s go, people.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The call to Lancia had a lag time of fifteen minutes.</p>
      <p>That was unexpected. The lag between Redmond and Lancia had always been
at least two hours. In wartime, it should be longer still. Radko checked
to be sure the call really was going to Lancia. It was.</p>
      <p>“Han.” Gunter Wong’s smile was wide and relieved. “Your father has been
trying to contact you.” The smile changed to concern. “What’s wrong with
you? Are you in hospital? Who is your doctor?”</p>
      <p>Han looked startled.</p>
      <p>“You’re in disguise, dummy,” van Heel hissed.</p>
      <p>“Oh. No, Gunter, I’m fine. This is just a disguise. I’m supposed to look
like this. I’m working undercover, and have been out of contact.”</p>
      <p>Cross-sector messages were always a little schizophrenic. Because of the
lag, you fitted as much into the conversation as you could before the
other person received it.</p>
      <p>“We sent through an order.” Han glanced at van Heel’s screen.
“WhiteRiver Company has ordered some Gippian shellfish for their base
here at Redmond, and another order to go to the Factor of the Lesser
Gods on Aeolus. We’re hoping we can travel with the shellfish. That is,
four passengers.”</p>
      <p>Fifteen minutes later, Wong’s reply came back. Warm and reassuring, “Of
course, Yves. But where are you? Your family is frantic. Your father
called the barracks, and they told him you were on indefinite leave
owing to personal issues. Are you sure you’re well?”</p>
      <p>“I’m fine. I’m working.” That answer wouldn’t get back to Wong for
another fifteen minutes.</p>
      <p>“If you have problems, you know you can go home to them.”</p>
      <p>Han rubbed his eyes. “I’m fine, Gunter. I just need passage off Redmond
for myself and my friends. We’re hoping to catch the shuttle your pilot
brings the shellfish down in. It will need to carry at least four
people. And we’ll need to be able to book passage on the ship.”</p>
      <p>“I like your family,” Chaudry said, as they waited for the signal to
return to Lancia and for Wong to reply.</p>
      <p>“Me too, Chaudry. Me too.” Han glanced at Radko, looked away.</p>
      <p>If Renaud and Amina Han knew he wasn’t their true son, and were
complicit in whatever had happened, Radko wasn’t going to give him away.</p>
      <p>By the time the next message arrived, Gunter Wong had someone with him.</p>
      <p>“Papa,” Han said, but that wouldn’t get back for another fifteen minutes
either.</p>
      <p>How close were Gunter and Renaud, for Gunter to be able to call, and
get, his neighbor over in less than half an hour?</p>
      <p>Renaud Han looked haggard. “Yves. If there’s a ransom, we will pay it.”</p>
      <p>“A ransom?”</p>
      <p>Why would Han’s father assume such a thing?</p>
      <p>“No one said anything about a ransom, Papa. I’m working.”</p>
      <p>On a job that was getting more farcical by the minute. The longer this
call went on, the more likely Redmond was to track it. Radko made
winding motions with her finger.</p>
      <p>Han nodded. “We need.” His voice caught and he paused to breathe deeply
before he could continue. “We need to get off this world. We sent an
order through to Gunter. We want to travel with that order. We called
hoping to fast-track the order, and to ensure we could get passage with
it. Please, Papa.”</p>
      <p>Did he realize he’d added that last “please”?</p>
      <p>This time, while they waited for the reply, Han muted the microphone on
his comms. “I don’t know what to say.”</p>
      <p>“Whatever we do,” van Heel said, “let’s not tell anyone we called your
dad and asked him to get us out of trouble.”</p>
      <p>Even Radko managed a chuckle.</p>
      <p>Van Heel added, “Provided he stops panicking enough to help us out, that
is.”</p>
      <p>“I like him,” Chaudry said. “He’s worried.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, but why, Chaudry? It’s a simple request. Please can you use your
contacts to push this order through. Oh, and can you also make sure that
whatever ship you send to do it picks up four passengers as well.” Van
Heel held out her hands, palms up. “Yet this man is running around in
circles. Both of them are. Haven’t you ever been away from home before,
Han?”</p>
      <p>“Of course I have. I work in Baoshan. My family lives in Han Province.”</p>
      <p>“Never off world then?”</p>
      <p>“I’ve only been off world once,” Chaudry said. “When I went to…” He
trailed away. Radko strained to hear and thought the mumble ended in
“Isador.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry had spent six years as a trainee linesman at House of Isador.</p>
      <p>“We travel,” Han said.</p>
      <p>As van Heel had said, Han’s request was simple enough. So why had Renaud
and Gunter reacted the way they had? What was Radko missing?</p>
      <p>Han blew on his fingers as if they were cold. He said to Radko, “My
father’s not normally—”</p>
      <p>She nodded and cut off the rest of the apology with a motion of her
hand. “If you can find out why he’s concerned, do so, but I want you to
wrap it up next time through. We can’t talk much longer without Redmond
picking up the signal.” She looked at van Heel. “Let me know when they
do pick us up. And disable the tracker as of now.”</p>
      <p>Han and van Heel both nodded.</p>
      <p>It was closer to major population areas than she would have liked, but
it might delay anyone associating this particular aircar with the call
to Lancia. Redmond couldn’t track the signal through their ops comms,
for autolocation had been turned off, but they could triangulate the
call, then slowly check the aircars one by one.</p>
      <p>They waited in silence for the return message. It wasn’t any less
puzzling than the earlier communications.</p>
      <p>Renaud struggled to speak. “I don’t know what lies they used to get you
to Redmond, Yves, but they’re lying to you.”</p>
      <p>Gunter Wong cut in. “Don’t do what they’re asking, Yves. It’s a trap.
Cancel this order. They’re setting you up. The Factor is allergic to
shellfish. Sending a gift like this. It’s as if you’re threatening his
life. If you accompany that delivery, they’re sending you to your
death.”</p>
      <p>Maybe that was all they were worried about. If Wong was correct about
the allergies, then delivering the shellfish to the Factor would be
perceived as a threat. But why all the talk about ransom payments at the
start of the conversation? Worse, not only had Renaud confirmed that
they were on Redmond; Wong had told the enemy where they planned to go
next.</p>
      <p>“Yves,” Renaud said urgently, “I’ve contacted someone at Fleet
Headquarters. They’ll know what to do. They’ll get you out of it.”</p>
      <p>Radko nearly groaned aloud.</p>
      <p>Van Heel caught her eye, pointed to the screen. “Aircraft.”</p>
      <p>Closing in fast. That kind of speed meant military.</p>
      <p>It was too soon for the military to have triangulated them. Too soon,
even for Renaud Han’s well-meaning—if misguided—request for help from
Fleet Headquarters to have been intercepted by a Redmond spy.</p>
      <p>“Wrap this up, Han,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>Han swallowed hard. “Papa, Gunter, I have to go. But please don’t cancel
that shipment.” He clicked off.</p>
      <p>“What weapons have we got?” Radko asked although she already knew. One
tranq gun, six blasters, and a Pandora field diffuser.</p>
      <p>She switched to one of the downward-facing cameras, to see what type of
country they were flying over. Rocky outcrops.</p>
      <p>“Can you set us down anywhere, van Heel?” On the ground they’d be
stationary targets, but if the aircraft shot them out of the air, it
would be worse. “Better yet, how far away are we from a town or city?”</p>
      <p>Maybe they wouldn’t have to fight it out at all if they could hide.</p>
      <p>“Fifty kilometers from a twenty-person settlement, three hundred from
one with twenty thousand.”</p>
      <p>You couldn’t hide among twenty people.</p>
      <p>“They might not be after us,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>It wouldn’t matter. As soon as they got close enough to see the aircar,
they’d stop it because no one went anywhere without a tracker.</p>
      <p>“Maybe we should ask Han’s family to pay Redmond off,” van Heel said.
“Since they’re so ready to butt in.”</p>
      <p>“That was uncalled for,” Radko said. “Especially since I was the one who
asked for it.”</p>
      <p>“My family would help,” Chaudry said. “If they could.”</p>
      <p>“We don’t need amateurs,” van Heel said. “Not from anyone’s family, and
I’m pleased to say that mine wouldn’t. I haven’t spoken to my mother in
years, anyway.”</p>
      <p>“Clearly you don’t move in the circles I do,” Han said. “We ask each
other for favors all the time.”</p>
      <p>He was right. Life was one massive game of requests and counterrequests.</p>
      <p>Radko ignored the conversation going on behind her as she decided the
odds.</p>
      <p>The only weapon that might be of any use against another aircar was the
Pandora field diffuser. They were designed for use in space, placed on
the outside of ships to destroy tiny dust particles and meteor clouds
before they got close enough to damage the ship. Radko needed a stable
surface to concentrate the beam and to have something large to aim at. A
diffuser at its normal setting could destroy micron-sized particles but
nothing larger.</p>
      <p>“Keep going for the moment,” Radko said. “Head toward the larger town.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel changed course.</p>
      <p>The aircraft behind them changed course, too.</p>
      <p>Radko blew her breath out in a hiss. That wasn’t triangulation. “They’re
tracking us.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel checked. “The tracker is disabled.”</p>
      <p>“Something is emitting a signal. Change course to the smaller town. Then
see if you can find what it’s using to track us.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel reset the course. The aircars followed. She rummaged through
her bag of technology. “I’m sure I brought—” She pulled a small meter
out triumphantly. “I did.”</p>
      <p>She set it up rapidly.</p>
      <p>“Han, Chaudry,” Radko said. “Check your weapons. I want them ready to
use.”</p>
      <p>Han’s would be fine, but Chaudry wasn’t used to going armed, and she
didn’t want to single him out. Not at the moment.</p>
      <p>“Got it,” van Heel said triumphantly.</p>
      <p>Her mobile tracker pointed directly at Han.</p>
      <p>“Han,” Radko said. “Empty your pockets.”</p>
      <p>“I really didn’t think this day could get worse.” Han pulled everything
out of his pockets and dropped the contents onto the seat he’d been
sitting in earlier. Among them was his personal comms, which he’d pulled
out to check on Radko, back while they’d still been in the apartment.</p>
      <p>“You left your personal comms on. I should toss you out of this car.” In
a way, she was as much to blame as Han because Han had shown her Renaud
trying to call earlier. She should have insisted he turn it off. Of
course, Redmond would intercept calls to or from Lancia. They were the
enemy. The comms must have been transmitting ever since.</p>
      <p>“Yup. It just got a lot, lot worse.” Han picked it up to turn it off.</p>
      <p>“Wait,” Radko said. “Anyone else’s comms on? No? Good. Don’t switch it
off yet. We might be able to use it. Continue toward the settlement, van
Heel.”</p>
      <p>She made her take the aircar low, near ground that looked less rocky.
“As close as you can,” she told van Heel, “and override the door for
me.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel did.</p>
      <p>Radko opened the door, leaned out, dropped the comms, then leaned back
and wrestled the door closed again.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twelve_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWELVE: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>“That might fool them for a few minutes,” Radko said. And it seemed it
did, for their pursuers didn’t change course again.</p>
      <p>“I apologize for getting us into this mess,” Han said stiffly.</p>
      <p>“Don’t take all the credit, Han. Mistakes happen. We deal with it. Let’s
concentrate on staying alive now. Make for the town, van Heel.”</p>
      <p>If they were lucky, they’d get all the way there. It was simpler to hide
in a town of twenty thousand people than it was to hide in the rocky
terrain they were flying over.</p>
      <p>“I’m glad it was you and not me,” van Heel said to Han. “Being the first
to muck up on a job stinks.”</p>
      <p>“I’m glad it was you, too,” Chaudry said. “I’d have been devastated.”</p>
      <p>They could have made it worse by berating him, or by not saying anything
at all. Instead, they tried to help although Chaudry’s help could have
done with some finesse.</p>
      <p>They were fifty kilometers away from the town when van Heel said,
“They’ve resumed following. A classic sector-search pattern.”</p>
      <p>“All of you, keep a watch for some cover where we might conceal the
aircar.”</p>
      <p>“Have you looked at the terrain down there?” van Heel said. “We’ll be
lucky not to crash.”</p>
      <p>Rocky terrain made it harder to hide. Unless they could find overhanging
rocks. “Put us behind something that will block our heat signature and
get us down fast.”</p>
      <p>“Right.” Seemingly seconds later, van Heel said, “Strap in. I’m going
down fast.”</p>
      <p>Han would pull through, but it would be good to give him something else
to think about. Except she didn’t need to, for Han was watching
Chaudry’s white-knuckled grip on the seat.</p>
      <p>“You’ve never crashed before, Chaudry?”</p>
      <p>Chaudry’s grip became tighter.</p>
      <p>Van Heel pulled up in a hard reverse thrust only meters from the ground.
“I’m not that bad.” They hit the ground with enough force to bounce.
“She said go down fast.”</p>
      <p>“You know they have antigrav stabilizers,” Han said. “You won’t die,
Chaudry.”</p>
      <p>“The force of the antigrav kicking in can cause more damage than
outright impact. Because it kicks in so fast, it can cause trauma,
cardiac contusions and atrial ruptures, asthma, traumatic iritis, and
even orbital fractures.”</p>
      <p>“You know I only understood the first part.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel had brought them down in the center of a rocky outcrop. If
they’d had something to cover the roof of the aircar, it would have been
perfect.</p>
      <p>“Nicely done, van Heel,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>“It was, wasn’t it.” If van Heel sounded smug, who could blame her?
“Let’s see what we’ve got out here.”</p>
      <p>They had to pop the emergency top for Chaudry to exit because the door
didn’t open far enough for him to squeeze out. Even then, it was a tight
fit.</p>
      <p>It took the three of them to boost him up, with Han doing the bulk of
the work, grunting as he did so. “Lucky you’re not fat, Chaudry.”</p>
      <p>“Fat is less dense than muscle.”</p>
      <p>Outside, Radko took time to appreciate just how cleverly van Heel had
landed. They had cover from the rocks around them. The only thing that
could get to them was a direct, overhead shot. She turned her attention
to the Pandora field diffuser and started assembling the components.</p>
      <p>“You know,” Han said, “they set those things up on the outside of ships
to destroy small particles. If you’re thinking to use it to protect
humans, it needs a stable surface. Holding it won’t work.”</p>
      <p>Radko tapped the top of the aircar. “Define stable. Meantime, you and
Chaudry take a quick look around to find enough shelter for all of us.
If we bring an aircar down, it will fall right on top of us.”</p>
      <p>“Shelter. Right.”</p>
      <p>“Keep together and keep in constant comms.”</p>
      <p>“What’s she doing?” Chaudry asked, as they moved off.</p>
      <p>“I don’t know, Chaudry. But that’s a Pandora diffuser. She probably
plans to use it after they’ve blown us to bits, to destroy any evidence
we’ve been here.”</p>
      <p>Han would see.</p>
      <p>Radko calibrated the diffuser until the beam was only atoms thick. She
didn’t test it. A deep gouge in one of the rocks would betray their
location as fast as Han’s comms had.</p>
      <p>If they were lucky, the aircars would bypass them altogether. But they
weren’t going to be lucky. Redmond would have the technology to pick out
individual heat signals. They’d find them. It was just a matter of how
long.</p>
      <p>Han and Chaudry returned from their circuit. “Not much to hide behind,”
Han reported. “A few overhangs, but more for one person than all of us.
If they use lasers to cut into whichever rock each of us is sheltering
under, we’ll be crushed.”</p>
      <p>It would be safer if they moved away from the aircar. “Show me, Han.
Chaudry, keep watch here with van Heel. Van Heel, can you slave the
aircar screens to our comms?”</p>
      <p>“These comms? These screens? You’d better all start thinking positive
thoughts.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry looked as if he was doing exactly that. If he’d been on a ship,
it might have worked. He was, after all, a linesman.</p>
      <p>They set off together, Radko keeping an ear open for the sounds of
aircraft and a careful note of the quickest, safest way back to the
aircar. The ground was covered in loose rocks. It would be hard to run
without turning your ankle.</p>
      <p>The first part of their walk was silent. Radko nodded approvingly at one
outcrop that might shelter them from the first pass of a strafing
aircar.</p>
      <p>“My father’s going to the fleet?” Han asked eventually. “How bad is that
for us?”</p>
      <p>“It depends who he goes to. You know him better than I do. Whom would he
approach?”</p>
      <p>Han wrinkled his brow. “I can’t imagine. Papa didn’t have much to do
with the fleet. I think he was scared of them. Especially Commodore
Bach. He was always nervous around him.”</p>
      <p>Maybe Renaud had been worried Bach would find out he had changed Han’s
DNA, for the more Radko thought about it, the more convinced she was
that it had been done with Renaud’s knowledge.</p>
      <p>“Back when I first joined the fleet, I was sure Bach was blackmailing
him. I went to my father and asked.”</p>
      <p>“And was he?”</p>
      <p>“He was… shocked, I think. Said of course not. That Bach would only do
what was best for Lancia.” Han shaded his eyes and squinted against the
harsh sunlight, looking into the air for military craft. Radko could
believe he’d welcome them, rather than this uncomfortable conversation.</p>
      <p>Yet Han must have had a reason to suspect Bach. “So who was blackmailing
him?”</p>
      <p>“He never said. He changed the subject.”</p>
      <p>So Renaud was being blackmailed. Given it was around the time he’d
“adopted” his new son, it was likely someone had found out about it. And
was using it to what?</p>
      <p>Blackmail didn’t stop, not unless you stopped the blackmailer. Was that
why Renaud tracked his son so carefully? Why he assumed that Han’s going
to Redmond meant a ransom payment first, or at best a trap, when others
would assume a job for a soldier?</p>
      <p>Her comms sounded. Van Heel.</p>
      <p>“Two aircraft coming.”</p>
      <p>Two. Surely they could have come one at a time. Radko left Han behind in
her run back to the aircar.</p>
      <p>“Tell me where. Tell me when,” she ordered van Heel.</p>
      <p>Han arrived behind, breathing fast. “I never thought of myself as a slow
runner before.”</p>
      <p>“Han, Chaudry. Weapons ready. Head for the cover you found earlier. Be
prepared to avoid falling debris, and shoot everyone who exits.” If
anyone survived the crash, they would come out shooting. “Van Heel. Did
you manage to slave the comms?”</p>
      <p>“Yes.”</p>
      <p>“Good. As soon as I say, go with Han and Chaudry. If this thing comes
down, it will come down hard.</p>
      <p>Abram Galenos had always liked Pandora field diffusers. “They might not
be enough to destroy a ship,” he’d said, “but energy dispersed in a fine
beam will still damage a ship enough to give you an advantage.” They
were old technology, replaced on many ships by stronger, newer field
diffusers that you couldn’t tighten the beam on.</p>
      <p>Jiang Vega liked them, too, but that was because she considered them
antiques, and she collected antique weapons.</p>
      <p>Everyone on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> knew how to use them. And their
strengths and weaknesses. It was also a test of skill, for matching a
narrow beam to a high, fast-moving aircraft was well-nigh impossible.
“Give me the coordinates of the first aircar, van Heel. Keep reading
them out. One every two seconds.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel started to count off figures.</p>
      <p>Radko counted with her, calibrating the diffuser as she went.</p>
      <p>“Sixty eight five. Sixty eight four. Sixty eight three.”</p>
      <p>It was coming in a fast, straight line. “Go now. Quick.”</p>
      <p>She continued the countdown as van Heel ran. “Sixty seven nine. Sixty
seven eight.”</p>
      <p>She pressed the button.</p>
      <p>She couldn’t see the beam, which was like a microns-thick, hot, molten
wire. Didn’t know she’d intersected the aircar until Han’s, “Holy
Jackson and Philtre.”</p>
      <p>“Take cover.” And she raced for the nearest rocky overhang.</p>
      <p>Pieces of aircar fell around her. One spinning propeller bounced and
missed her by centimeters.</p>
      <p>“Watch for survivors.”</p>
      <p>There were none.</p>
      <p>The other aircar came down fast. Four soldiers exited.</p>
      <p>“Stay under cover as much as you can,” Radko said. “I’ll take whoever is
on the right. Han, take the left. Chaudry, center left. Van Heel, center
right. Don’t fire until we have to, for they’ll know our range then.”
The Redmond soldiers would have longer-range weapons and could pick them
off individually.</p>
      <p>She moved fast around the rocks, rolling on one and sliding down. She
waited, hardly daring to breathe, until she was sure the enemy hadn’t
heard her.</p>
      <p>It gave her an idea. She reached down and picked up one of the rocks.
She hefted it in her hand, guessing the weight and balance.</p>
      <p>She threw it as far as she could, off to the right of their attackers.
Two soldiers headed that way.</p>
      <p>Chaudry gave a small huff of understanding. Next moment another stone
whizzed past. A good strong throw, it landed way past hers.</p>
      <p>Radko waved her team on and out.</p>
      <p>Then it was blaster to blaster. Hiding behind what little cover the
rocks afforded. Firing when she could. She lost part of her sleeve
taking the first soldier down.</p>
      <p>Han fired past her, blaster melting the stone on the ground in front of
them.</p>
      <p>Radko ran forward. Again, and again.</p>
      <p>A bitten-off scream behind her. Van Heel.</p>
      <p>Radko took aim and fired.</p>
      <p>A rain of stones from Chaudry, behind her, kept the Redmond soldiers
occupied trying to defend their heads. She and Han picked the last two
soldiers off.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Van Heel was down. They’d deal with her when the site was secure.</p>
      <p>“Han, Chaudry, with me.”</p>
      <p>She entered the cabin of the Redmond aircar, fast, weapon ready to fire.</p>
      <p>It was empty.</p>
      <p>“Good. We’ll take this aircar.” It would be faster than their own, and
right now, speed was the most important consideration. “Cover us,” Radko
told Han. “Chaudry, come back with me to collect van Heel. Then get back
in here before any more aircars arrive.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry proved as strong as he looked. He picked van Heel up and ran.</p>
      <p>“She’s alive?” Han asked. He had the engines idling.</p>
      <p>“I’m still conscious, idiot,” van Heel said.</p>
      <p>The weapon had caught her across her chest, burning part of one breast
and the skin and flesh off the top of her arm.</p>
      <p>“Let me see,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>“Take it up.” Radko looked at van Heel. “Is there any chance that you
know how to disable the tracking on a military vehicle?”</p>
      <p>“Of course I can. But it will take hours and equipment we haven’t got.”</p>
      <p>They didn’t have the time, either. “When’s Gunter’s shuttle due?”</p>
      <p>“Six hours,” said van Heel.</p>
      <p>This aircar was fast. They’d be at the spaceport in two hours. They’d
have to hide for four. Even now, someone at Redmond headquarters—someone
like van Heel—would be tracing their route. They’d work out where they
were headed. Then they’d go through the expected deliveries at the
spaceport. It wouldn’t take much to associate Han’s Lancian comms with
an order coming from Lancia. They’d hack into Gunter Wong’s call, then
his sales records. They’d know where the shellfish were being delivered.
They’d know exactly what Radko and her team planned.</p>
      <p>What came after that would be far worse than anything they had
encountered so far. If they continued with this plan, they’d be dead in
four hours.</p>
      <p>It was time to revise their plan. “Let’s go steal a shuttle,” Radko
said.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The closest spaceport with shuttles currently on the ground was a
thousand kilometers away. Radko turned the throttle on full and set the
autopilot. They’d be there in twenty minutes.</p>
      <p>“Han, watch the boards, see if we’re being followed. While you’re doing
that, see what shuttles will be in port, and identify them and where
they’re going.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry had already found the first-aid kit. He handled van Heel with a
competence surprising for one who, according to his records, had been
stuck in supplies for the six months since he’d graduated from fleet
academy.</p>
      <p>Radko watched him while she picked the lock on the first weapons
cupboard. “You’ve seen action?”</p>
      <p>“No, ma’am.” Chaudry ducked his head and turned away, as if ashamed that
he hadn’t.</p>
      <p>“But you’ve treated injured people before.”</p>
      <p>He didn’t answer.</p>
      <p>“Chaudry. It’s not my business to know every personal detail of your
life.” Although a good team leader did. She was sure Bhaksir knew every
detail of hers. “But if I have a skilled medical practitioner on my
staff, I need to know it.”</p>
      <p>The cupboard door sprang open.</p>
      <p>“My parents were doctors.” She had to strain to hear Chaudry’s mumble.
“I was going to be a doctor.”</p>
      <p>Until he’d taken the Havortian tests. Did anyone ever refuse to go into
line training?</p>
      <p>Radko checked the contents of the cupboard. More blasters. Didn’t they
have better weapons? She moved on to the next cupboard.</p>
      <p>“Speaking of knowing people,” Han said. “You’re very handy with a
picklock.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you.” Personally, she’d prefer a level-twelve linesman to open it
for her. And what was Ean doing now, anyway?</p>
      <p>Thinking about that—she apologized to the next cupboard as she broke the
connection. “I am sorry, but we need the weapons.” She didn’t know if
the Redmond aircar cupboards were line three or simply mechanical.
Probably mechanical, and a linesman wouldn’t have been able to open
them.</p>
      <p>She looked up to see all of them staring at her. “It’s polite.”</p>
      <p>“Maybe I’m not the one you should be looking at,” van Heel told Chaudry.
She breathed in sharply as he sprayed painkiller on her wound, then out
on a long hiss as the gel hardened. “That feels so good.”</p>
      <p>Radko went back to the weapons cupboard. This one, at least, had a
long-distance armor-piercing gun. Not a big one, but large enough to put
a dent into anything that might come after them. She handed it to Han.</p>
      <p>The third cupboard held riot grenades. The smaller ones had a range of
three meters, the larger ones could clear a large cargo space. Radko
tucked all of them into her belt.</p>
      <p>“We’ve three possible shuttles,” Han said. “A small two-seater that will
arrive around the same time we do. It’s delivering machinery parts. A
ten-seater delivering a shipment of iced Karamba mangosteen. It will
arrive five minutes after we do. And a six-seater delivering passengers
and cargo from a regular run between the Redmond worlds. It’s been down
half an hour already.”</p>
      <p>“We’ll take the six-seater if we can.” It had two advantages. They’d all
fit, and it would be ready to leave—shuttles didn’t stay long because of
port charges.</p>
      <p>They just had to get there in time.</p>
      <p>Five minutes to go. Radko checked the location of the shuttle as the
aircar slowed to descend and set them to land as close to the shuttle
they wanted as she could.</p>
      <p>She switched to manual at four minutes, for the automatic traffic
controller would grab them if she didn’t, and it would move them to a
safer location. Five seconds later, the automated message came on.</p>
      <p>“Attention, you are entering restricted airspace. This is an automated
control area. Please hand control over to the automated controller.”</p>
      <p>She turned the volume down. “How’s van Heel?” she asked Chaudry. “Can
she run?”</p>
      <p>“I can run,” van Heel said.</p>
      <p>Chaudry shook his head.</p>
      <p>“Okay, you’re responsible for her then. We’ll try to stay with you. Get
something to cover your mouth and your eyes.” She tapped the gas
grenades on her belt. “I might have to use these.”</p>
      <p>He nodded.</p>
      <p>They were thirty seconds from landing when a human controller took over.
“Back off, moron. You’re in a spaceport, and you’re too close to the
shuttles.”</p>
      <p>She checked one last time to see if the shuttle was still on the ground.
It was.</p>
      <p>“The shuttle’s there.” She pointed in the direction the shuttle would be
when they landed. Head for it.” If they were lucky, the door would be
open, and they could storm it. “Chaudry, get van Heel settled and
strapped in. Han and I will take the shuttle.”</p>
      <p>Han looked at the weapon in his hands. “That’s our plan?”</p>
      <p>“The best plans, Han, are the ones you make up as you go along. They
have an element of randomness. If you don’t know what’s coming, other
people don’t either.”</p>
      <p>They landed fifty meters from the shuttle. Better, it was partway
through being loaded, so the doors were open. “Let’s go.” Radko set her
blaster on stun and led the way down.</p>
      <p>“I can walk,” van Heel insisted, but was soon leaning heavily on
Chaudry.</p>
      <p>As they made their way across the tarmac, a ground car sped up from the
other end of the field.</p>
      <p>Radko waited until they’d slowed, then stunned the four occupants with
her blaster. The ground car rolled to a halt.</p>
      <p>“A bit extreme,” Han said.</p>
      <p>“Any closer, and they’d be in the shuttle blast when we take off. This
way it’s safer.”</p>
      <p>Radko quickened her pace. At the door to the shuttle, they were greeted
by a blaster—not on stun. “I’ve called the authorities,” the pilot said.
“They’ll be here soon.”</p>
      <p>Radko shot him. He toppled backward.</p>
      <p>Chaudry made an inarticulate sound.</p>
      <p>Radko hauled the pilot back into the shuttle. “Han, can you disengage
the robots loading?”</p>
      <p>“I—”</p>
      <p>“I’ll do it.” Chaudry passed van Heel over to Han and moved over to the
boards. Radko watched his swift hands as she prepared for takeoff. This
was one thing he was used to doing.</p>
      <p>“They do this in Stores?”</p>
      <p>“All the time,” Chaudry said. “It’s Stores, after all.”</p>
      <p>She locked each door as the robots disengaged. “Han, disarm the pilot
and strap him in.” They could have ditched him, but it would take too
much time to drag the body a safe distance.</p>
      <p>Radko checked the fuel. Half-full. Enough for what they needed. She
hoped.</p>
      <p>“Pilot secure,” Han said, at the same time as Chaudry said, “Robots
clear.”</p>
      <p>Radko snapped the last door shut and fired the engines. Five seconds
later, they started to rise.</p>
      <p>How long before anyone came after them? It depended how long it took
Redmond to link their missing aircraft with the stolen shuttle. Radko
guessed they had an hour’s lead, at best. She hoped it was enough.</p>
      <p>In that time, they had to find the ship Gunter had arranged to transport
the shellfish, intercept the shuttle pilot—who would already have
started the delivery to Redmond—and convince him to collect them and
return to his ship without making the delivery.</p>
      <p>She counted on three things. First, that Renaud Han was genuinely fond
of his son-who-wasn’t; second, that Renaud and Gunter Wong were close
friends; and lastly, that because it had been arranged at such short
notice, the ship Gunter had called in to do the job was one that spent a
lot of time ferrying shellfish for him. Which meant, she hoped, that
Gunter had influence with the ship captain. Enough to convince him to
pick up four strangers out of space, and order another jump, hours
earlier than the one he already had.</p>
      <p>She identified the ship. The <emphasis>Mikasa</emphasis>. The ship they’d caught off Lancia
to Barth. How much was this diversion costing Gunter, for that had been
a full passenger ship?</p>
      <p>Half an hour. The timing was close.</p>
      <p>“Han, I want you to call Gunter.” Maybe it would have been smarter to
call Renaud Han, but Renaud was probably still with Gunter anyway. “Tell
him you have escaped from Redmond and that we’re in space. We want to
rendezvous with the shuttle that’s delivering the shellfish to Redmond.
We want the pilot to pick us up and return to his ship. We want the
captain of that ship to organize his jump for as soon as we get on
board.”</p>
      <p>They only had one chance at this. Further, they could only do it because
the lag time between the two sectors was so short. Surely, someone had
reported that by now. Radko couldn’t see any reason for such rapid
communication, yet someone had paid hefty premiums for that type of lag.</p>
      <p>If this worked, Radko owed Gunter Wong and Renaud Han. A debt she’d be
happy to repay.</p>
      <p>Han opened his comms. “I hope no one at the barracks ever gets to hear
about this.”</p>
      <p>So did Radko, but not for the same reason Han was hoping. She had to
remember that Renaud had contacted someone at those barracks. Whoever
he’d contacted would be looking out for Han.</p>
      <p>If Renaud had convinced them it was serious.</p>
      <p>“I mean it.” Han looked at Chaudry and van Heel. “One word passes either
of your lips, and you’re totally dead. Or arrested on a trumped-up
charge, at least.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry mimed zipping his lip. “Not from me.”</p>
      <p>“Van Heel?”</p>
      <p>Van Heel struggled to reply, and when she did speak, it was through
gritted teeth. Her wound must be bothering her more than she admitted.
“I’ll keep silent if you introduce me to your father. After all, I have
to thank him for saving our lives.”</p>
      <p>Han looked at Radko.</p>
      <p>“If you think this reflects badly on you,” she asked, “how do you think
it reflects on your team leader?”</p>
      <p>“Badly,” everyone agreed.</p>
      <p>Radko laughed and checked the emergency suits as Han called Gunter.</p>
      <p>There were six suits. Four of them were simple emergency suits with
twelve hours of air and an emergency beacon. The other two were full
suits, with controls. That was standard in a shuttle like this. The
shuttle pilot always had a full suit—in case he had to do emergency
repairs outside—and a standby suit in case that first one failed.</p>
      <p>It was better this way. Han and Chaudry had probably never used suits
outside of training. Ean had said his first time in space was
terrifying.</p>
      <p>“Yves.” Gunter seemed to have aged in the time between calls. “We
thought something went wrong.”</p>
      <p>“We were on Redmond. Have to avoid the enemy. Hello, Papa,” as Renaud
moved into sight as well. “I apologize for worrying you.”</p>
      <p>“We called Fleet Headquarters,” Renaud said. “They will get you out.”</p>
      <p>Han kept talking, for they couldn’t wait for the lag to catch up. “We
got ourselves off Redmond. No need to stress, Papa. But I do need
another favor from Gunter. I know it’s a big ask, but people are chasing
us. We need to get away.</p>
      <p>“We booked passage on the ship that is taking the Gippian shellfish.” He
grimaced as he said it, but they all knew he had to mention it. “We’re
about to meet up with the shuttle. We want it to pick us up and take us
back to the ship. We need you to tell the captain what’s happening and
that it’s okay. We’ve less than half an hour before we intercept the
shuttle. We need to do it fast. And you’ll need to ask the captain to
organize another jump. Before they realize what we’ve asked and stop
him.”</p>
      <p>The delay for a reply took forever. Radko had time to think of five
thousand ways that all this could go wrong. Renaud had a contact in the
Lancian fleet. They might be listening to this call—but that could be
advantageous. They might convince Gunter and Renaud to act fast.</p>
      <p>Even if Lancia wasn’t listening in, Redmond would certainly be. The only
reason this plan might work was because even the military had to work
with bureaucracy of the jump gates, and a captain who used the gates all
the time might get precedence over someone who was trying to prevent
that.</p>
      <p>Chaudry moved over to check van Heel’s wound again.</p>
      <p>After the wait, it was Renaud who answered rather than Gunter. “Yves.
We’ve organized a rescue. You’ll be rescued soon.”</p>
      <p>Thankfully, in the background, they could hear Gunter talking. “Collect
them and take them where they need to go.”</p>
      <p>“We don’t need rescuing, Papa. It’s a job. We ran into a little
difficulty.”</p>
      <p>“Understatement of the century,” van Heel murmured quietly to Chaudry.</p>
      <p>“They might even compromise the mission if they try to help.”</p>
      <p>Radko nodded approvingly.</p>
      <p>“We are nearly at the shuttle. We need to intercept it now.”</p>
      <p>Whoever Gunter was talking to was arguing back.</p>
      <p>Gunter cut him off. “If you still want my business, you’ll do this.”</p>
      <p>They were in range of the other shuttle and were out of time.</p>
      <p>Gunter said in the background. “I’ll give them the codes, Captain
Engen.” He repeated them aloud, much to Radko’s relief. “The numbers are
436-243-043-341-094-334-234.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you,” Han said, though the message wouldn’t get back to Gunter
for fifteen minutes. “We appreciate this, Gunter. And we’ll repay any
expenses as soon as we get home. Look after Papa and Mama for me,
please.” He clicked off, then sagged into his seat.</p>
      <p>They had to keep moving. “Suit up.” Radko chose the full suit for
herself and gave van Heel the second full suit.</p>
      <p>“I like your family,” Chaudry told Han.</p>
      <p>So did Radko, but this still had to be the strangest operation she’d
ever been on. She punched in the code.</p>
      <p>“Captain Engen. Gunter Wong called you a moment ago, asking you to
change some plans.”</p>
      <p>Engen had a broad, flat face and a yellow net covering her brown hair.
At least, Radko thought it was a net until it moved a tendril.</p>
      <p>“You’re not who I’m expecting.”</p>
      <p>Thank the lines for instantaneous communication within a sector. Han
leaned into the call with her. “That would be me. I won’t introduce
myself, as I suspect people are listening.”</p>
      <p>“We’re nearly at your shuttle now,” Radko said. “As soon as your shuttle
acknowledges it’s ready to collect us, we’ll suit across.”</p>
      <p>Captain Engen nodded and opened another comms line. “Come in, Leonard.
Change of plan.”</p>
      <p>“These babies have a restricted shelf life. We can’t change too much.”</p>
      <p>It was the same shuttle pilot who’d brought them on planet initially.</p>
      <p>“This one pays more,” Captain Engen said. “You’re about to receive some
visitors. Let them in, then return to ship.”</p>
      <p>“I’m in space.”</p>
      <p>“So are they.” The captain clicked off, clicked back on again. “If the
port authorities call, ignore them.” She turned back to Han and Radko.
“Here’s the code for the shuttle.” She pushed it through. “Tell Leonard
to let me know when you’re on board.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you.” Radko clicked off and turned to check each suit before she
clipped them into a line. Chaudry behind her, then Han, and lastly van
Heel. Van Heel might be injured, but at least she’d done some ship work.
“I’ll do all the work. You stay put. If it gets too bad, close your
eyes.”</p>
      <p>“What about him?” Han asked, looking at the still-unconscious pilot.</p>
      <p>“We put the ship on auto and set a beacon. He’ll come around in two
hours.” The biggest danger for the pilot was that Redmond would reach
the shuttle before he returned to consciousness and blast him out of the
sky. Unfortunately, she wasn’t going to stay around to ensure he was
okay. And she definitely wasn’t going to mention that possibility to the
others.</p>
      <p>She zipped him into one of the remaining emergency suits. At least that
way, he’d have a chance.</p>
      <p>“You said he was staying here,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>“Just in case,” Radko said. “Are we ready?”</p>
      <p>The air lock was too small to fit all four of them. She broke the link
between Chaudry and Han. “We’ll go first.”</p>
      <p>Outside, through her helmet, she heard Chaudry swallow.</p>
      <p>“Keep still, Chaudry,” and made her voice commanding, and hoped he’d
instinctively follow the order. “Close your eyes.”</p>
      <p>She linked herself magnetically to the side of the ship as she waited
for the air lock to recycle, and listened to Chaudry gag in his suit.
She’d once told Ean how important it was not to be sick in your suit,
but if she even mentioned the word, then Chaudry’s stomach would rebel
properly.</p>
      <p>“Are your eyes closed?” She snagged Han as he exited and clipped his
line to Chaudry’s belt. “If any of you have problems, close your eyes.”</p>
      <p>“But you still know.” It was little more than a whisper from Chaudry.
“You can’t hide from it.”</p>
      <p>Radko fired her jets. The sooner they were in the other shuttle, the
better.</p>
      <p>The trip took seven minutes. Behind her she heard nothing but heavy
breathing and choked-off gasps. One of them was hyperventilating,
probably Chaudry. “All of you, keep your eyes closed.” Didn’t they take
the trainees out into space anymore during training?</p>
      <p>It felt like the longest suit journey Radko had ever undertaken.</p>
      <p>She called Leonard when they were close enough for Leonard to track them
from the shuttle. “Leonard, Captain Engen told you to expect us.”</p>
      <p>“Don’t know that I’d like to be doing what you’re doing.”</p>
      <p>Radko didn’t mind. She liked space. She shifted, and changed direction
to aim for the air-lock door she could see. “We’re close to your hull.
Can you let us in, please?” She turned her magnets on and clicked onto
the hull.</p>
      <p>The air lock opened. “Two of you at a time,” Leonard said.</p>
      <p>She unclipped Han from Chaudry again and pushed Han and van Heel into
the air lock. “Be gentle. One of them is injured.”</p>
      <p>Outside, while they waited for the air lock to recycle, she said,
“Chaudry, are you listening to me,” and kept saying it until he was.
“We’re up against the side of a shuttle now, and I’m attached to it
magnetically. You’re safe.”</p>
      <p>As safe as he could be in a suit without any controls. It was for
emergencies, after all.</p>
      <p>“Ready?” Leonard asked, and opened the outer air lock.</p>
      <p>Radko made her way in and dragged Chaudry in with her. “You’re safe
now,” she said again. “You’re in the shuttle.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry didn’t relax until they were in the shuttle cabin proper.</p>
      <p>“It’s not how I’d choose to travel,” Leonard told them, as Radko
stripped off her suit, and helped Chaudry, then Han, out of theirs. Van
Heel was struggling out of her own. “Hello, I remember you lot. I told
you San See was a better port.” He called up the ship. “Captain, I have
our passengers. Heading back to the ship now.”</p>
      <p>“You realize,” he told them, “that we spoiled an order of shellfish for
you.”</p>
      <p>“They were our orders,” Radko said. “I don’t see why we can’t eat them
at dinner. We owe you.”</p>
      <p>“As if,” Leonard said.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_thirteen_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER THIRTEEN: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Worlds that had stalled on providing line trainees suddenly managed to
find extra linesmen in their fleet. There were so many trainees that
eventually the Department of Alien Affairs put a hold on arrivals while
new modules were ordered for Confluence Station because the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> was
full.</p>
      <p>“One can only imagine,” Ean heard Helmo say wryly to his
second-in-command, Vanje Solberg, “how they’ve all scrambled to get this
far.”</p>
      <p>Fergus was a lifesaver. He organized the groups, organized which
trainers were training who, and kept Ean sane.</p>
      <p>He’d been Jordan Rossi’s assistant before he’d come to work with Ean.
“Rossi must be really sorry you’re not still working with him,” Ean
said.</p>
      <p>“Jordan’s life isn’t the same as it used to be. He hasn’t got the same
need for an assistant.”</p>
      <p>Ean couldn’t see that Rossi was doing much different than what he’d
always done. Fixing the lines. True, he was behind a protective curtain
of military security now, but he was working harder than ever. Although,
from what Ean could gather, a lot of Rossi’s old life involved
politicking, for it was no secret Jordan Rossi had wanted to be Grand
Master of the line cartels.</p>
      <p>Leo Rickenback—Rossi’s old cartel master—was Grand Master now.</p>
      <p>“Does Rossi still want to be Grand Master?” Ean asked.</p>
      <p>“Even if he could, Orsaya wouldn’t allow it,” Fergus said, which wasn’t
an answer at all. “Not unless it benefits Yaolin.”</p>
      <p>Rossi as Grand Master of the line cartels wasn’t as useful to a world
going to war as a level-ten linesman who could communicate with the
lines.</p>
      <p>“Does he mind?”</p>
      <p>“More important is do we think he’s ready to train linesmen on his own?”</p>
      <p>Ean could take a hint.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The trainees were personally escorted and introduced by admirals of the
fleet. Ean hadn’t expected that.</p>
      <p>“Let them come,” Orsaya said, when Sale protested. “Don’t hide him away
like some relative you’re ashamed of.”</p>
      <p>“The whole point of putting Ean on Confluence Station is to keep him
away from people.”</p>
      <p>“Specific people. Let these people have their say. He’s proxy for the
one person they can’t say it to.”</p>
      <p>The first to arrive was Admiral Trask of Xanto.</p>
      <p>“Governor Shimson sends his regards,” Trask said, as he looked around
the area Sale had made public. It was bleak at the moment, with
temporary chairs and tables bolted onto the floor, the only furniture in
the room.</p>
      <p>“And please pass my regards back to him,” Ean said warmly. He liked
Governor Shimson. Most people did, which was rare this high in politics.
“Tell him he’s welcome out here anytime he wishes to come,” for Shimson
was a single-level linesman himself.</p>
      <p>He could feel Sale’s disapproval right through his bones but ignored it.</p>
      <p>“Allow me to introduce you to the Xanto linesmen.” Trask moved over to
where four soldiers stood at attention. “Spacer Thomas Peacock,
Engineer, currently stationed on the <emphasis>Foundation</emphasis>.” Peacock had six bars
under his name. “Group leader Lina Vang, currently part of our own
training team at Xanto barracks.” Vang also had six bars under her name.
“Spacer Alex Joy, also of the training department.” Joy had no bars
under his name. “And team leader Nadia Kentish, from the <emphasis>Elysium</emphasis>.”
Likewise, no bars.</p>
      <p>“I’m delighted to meet you,” Ean said. “I look forward to seeing you all
at line training.”</p>
      <p>Kentish’s stare back at him was more of a glare. Ean and Fergus had
planned on splitting the linesmen into smaller groups for future
training. They’d already worked out the groups, and they’d put Kentish
under Hernandez. Maybe they should rethink that. Two strong
personalities might clash.</p>
      <p>Who would have thought, twelve months ago, that juggling people based on
how well they got on with other people would be part of Ean’s job
description?</p>
      <p>He said, half to Trask, half to the trainees, “We’re putting the initial
batch of trainees on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>.” It had worked last time, and it would
get them used to being on line ships while he, Ean, still had control of
the ship.</p>
      <p>“So I hear.” Trask looked at the soldiers. “Dismissed.”</p>
      <p>They marched out. Ean was glad to see Sale, and Captain Auburn—from
Orsaya’s staff—intercept them at the door and lead them down to a
smaller room, where they could wait for their admiral in comfort.</p>
      <p>“Can I offer you a drink? Tea?” Ean asked.</p>
      <p>“A whiskey would be nice.”</p>
      <p>What did he do about that? He looked at Bhaksir, standing on guard with
Hana, Gossamer, and Ru Li. Bhaksir tapped something into her comms.</p>
      <p>“Please, won’t you sit down,” Ean said, before the wait got too long.</p>
      <p>Trask sat. “So what level do you think the two singles are?”</p>
      <p>The admiral hadn’t given them a chance to speak. “I won’t know until I
hear them sing.”</p>
      <p>Trask nodded. “They have a choir on the <emphasis>Elysium</emphasis>. They put on two
concerts a year for the crew. Team Leader Kentish was in that choir and
most upset that we pulled her off two weeks before the show. Her captain
wasn’t happy either. Tried to get us to wait two weeks.”</p>
      <p>“It must be a good concert.”</p>
      <p>“Their captain thinks so. Thinks it is good for the ship. Morale is high
for weeks afterward.”</p>
      <p>“Interesting.”</p>
      <p>“I thought so, too,” Trask said. “Thank you,” to Bhaksir, as she came
across with the whiskey.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir brought one for Ean as well. He didn’t know what to do with it.</p>
      <p>“Kentish was the lead female voice in that choir. Her opposite, the
male, is left-handed as well, although he didn’t do any line training.
He should have been invalided out of the fleet years ago. A nerve in the
left hand was severed, and the regen didn’t take. Not a problem if he
were right-handed, but a big issue when it’s his primary hand. The
captain downplayed the damage because apparently the ship is calmer when
he’s there.”</p>
      <p>What role did a captain have in retaining linesmen on his ship? If a
ship liked a soldier because he or she was a linesman, was the captain
more likely to keep them on? If so, maybe they should look at the more
stable ships.</p>
      <p>Trask gave a grim smile. “We’d never have known if we hadn’t been
looking for linesmen. Handedness is faster to search for than who did
line training. It’s in the crew medical records.”</p>
      <p>If Trask asked what level Ean thought the other man was, Ean would evade
the question by saying he’d need to test the linesman, but he already
knew he’d be a one. The ones monitored line and crew health. Combine
that with a man who had a natural affinity for working with people, and
no wonder the captain wanted to keep him there.</p>
      <p>“You should have brought him in with the other line trainees.”</p>
      <p>Trask scowled into his whiskey. “I should discipline the captain.”</p>
      <p>How did you discipline a good captain without their ship taking umbrage?
“How do his crew feel about him?”</p>
      <p>“It’s my most stable ship.” He tossed the whiskey back in one swallow.
“I wouldn’t mind a little more stability in the New Alliance council
right now.”</p>
      <p>Neither would Ean.</p>
      <p>“Bringing in the Worlds of the Lesser Gods is a clever idea. With
Redmond trapped between us and them like that, we might get rid of
Redmond once and for all. But it was poorly done.”</p>
      <p>Orsaya must have known this was coming. She could have warned him. He
might have known what to say. Ean swirled the drink he didn’t want, then
cupped it in his hands.</p>
      <p>“Personally, I hadn’t realized the split between them and Redmond was
quite that bad, but sometimes the luck runs our way. Even so, we—as a
council—could have offered the Factor enough if he had shown any
interest in joining the New Alliance.” Trask put his glass down
carefully and stood up. “Unfortunately, the way it was done makes it
look like a power grab by Lancia.”</p>
      <p>Ean stood up, too. What did Trask want him to say? “I’ll mention your
concerns to Abram and Michelle.”</p>
      <p>“I’d appreciate it if you did. Maybe not mention any names. Only that
some people are concerned.”</p>
      <p>Ean nodded.</p>
      <p>“I’d best get these linesmen across to the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>.” And Trask and the
new trainees were escorted down to the shuttle by two members of Craik’s
team and two of Orsaya’s.</p>
      <p>Ean looked at the whiskey in his hand, looked at Bhaksir.</p>
      <p>“Don’t give it to me,” she said. “I’m on duty.”</p>
      <p>Ean went to find Orsaya.</p>
      <p>“Did you know he was going to say that?”</p>
      <p>“People are concerned. <emphasis>I’m</emphasis> concerned. It was badly done, and
exceedingly poor timing, with Lancia just managing the numbers.”</p>
      <p>“It wasn’t Mi—” He stopped. Orsaya wasn’t his friend, and he had to
remember that.</p>
      <p>The lines around Orsaya’s mouth tightened. “That’s what we’re afraid
of.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Trask wasn’t the last. A steady stream of admirals brought their
linesmen along to meet him, and, “By the way, while I’m here, I’m a
little concerned with Lancia’s handling of the Worlds of the Lesser
Gods. We’re happy the Worlds of the Lesser Gods are considering joining
the New Alliance, but the way it was done, allying Lancia with the
Worlds… You might mention that it looks like a grab for power on
Lancia’s part.”</p>
      <p>Not mentioning any names, of course.</p>
      <p>Sale took her concerns to Vega. Ean heard it through the lines.</p>
      <p>“I don’t know why we bothered taking Ean off the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>
if Orsaya lets in all and sundry.”</p>
      <p>“Believe me, I don’t like it any better than you.”</p>
      <p>“Then I can stop it?”</p>
      <p>“Admiral Galenos thinks it is beneficial.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Damage control,”</emphasis> the lines sang underneath Vega’s words.</p>
      <p>Sale might have talked to Abram as well, for she disappeared for hours
one day, and when she came back, she stopped complaining about the
visits.</p>
      <p>Damage control.</p>
      <p>The one person he could talk it over with was on a special mission. And
Vega still hadn’t told him where she’d gone.</p>
      <p>Radko could look after herself. But still… <emphasis>“If Radko calls Vega—or
anyone on the ship—I want to know about it. If anyone mentions Radko, I
want to know about it.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>The fleet ships hummed in assent.</p>
      <p>So far, all his snooping had done was pick up Hana saying to Ru Li, “If
Radko were here, you wouldn’t dare say that.”</p>
      <p>Ean had no idea what Ru Li had said.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Ean was pleased when Admiral Katida joined them for dinner.</p>
      <p>“It’s like a flipping public house,” Ean heard Sale mutter to Craik, out
in the main watch room. “He’d be safer on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. We
should open a bar and charge for the drinks.” She came over to the arch
between the mess hall and the watch room proper. “Everyone who comes
here hands over <emphasis>all</emphasis> weapons, Admiral Katida. Even you.”</p>
      <p>“Sale. Katida’s a friend.”</p>
      <p>“Sale is doing her job.” Katida handed over her blaster. Her lines were
stronger today, more in tune with Confluence Station.</p>
      <p>“You’re listening to the lines,” Ean said. She hadn’t come to him for
training, but her lines skill had improved. Hernandez? “Why didn’t you
come to me?” Ean had offered. Plenty of times.</p>
      <p>“Lancia cannot be seen to favor Balian, Ean. Balian cannot be seen to be
too close to Lancia.” It was what she had always said. “But I am
exceptionally happy I chose Hernandez for that first group of line
training. She was my strongest linesman although at the time I wondered
if I should have chosen someone with more stability.”</p>
      <p>Hernandez had certified as a level-seven linesman. She was, in fact, a
ten.</p>
      <p>“How long has she been training you?” Ean couldn’t imagine Hernandez
with the patience to teach anyone. Especially not an admiral of the
fleet.</p>
      <p>“Since you started training her. With time out when she was on the
<emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>Ean spent dinner quizzing Katida about her training and how she was
doing. He made her sing to the lines and listened critically, gently
nudging her lines straight when they needed it.</p>
      <p>“Not bad,” he conceded eventually.</p>
      <p>If Hernandez could teach Katida, she was certainly ready to train
others. And if she could, then so could Rossi. Their plan of combined
initial training until the linesmen could hear the lines, then splitting
them into groups, should work well.</p>
      <p>“High praise indeed. But how have you been, Ean? Without Radko when you
need the support?”</p>
      <p>Was she getting that from the lines?</p>
      <p>“I’ll be glad when she’s back,” he admitted. He could speak honestly to
Katida. “Sometimes I want to—” He stopped. Admitting the urge to do harm
to another person wasn’t something one should say aloud. “The other part
of it doesn’t help.”</p>
      <p>“Other part?” Katida’s voice was sharp suddenly.</p>
      <p>Sale came to stand in the archway again.</p>
      <p>“The Worlds of the Lesser Gods and Yu.”</p>
      <p>Katida’s eyebrows rose at that.</p>
      <p>“It’s not really part of it, it just happened at the same time.” It
would be forever ingrained in Ean’s mind as one thing, not two. “And
while no one knows for certain, everyone thinks Yu told Radko she was to
marry Sattur Dow in exchange for the mine Yu is going to give the Worlds
of the Lesser Gods. Sattur Dow’s mine, I mean.”</p>
      <p>Sale sighed.</p>
      <p>Let her sigh. Katida would already know this. Abram and Radko both said
she ran the best covert ops of any world.</p>
      <p>“And everyone is telling me how foolish the whole thing is and how it
could have been handled better. Abram and Michelle already know this.”</p>
      <p>“They come to you because they see the three of you as representing
Lancia here at the New Alliance. If, as they fear, Lancia is moving to
strengthen its power base and become de facto leader of the New
Alliance, then saying it to Galenos or Lady Lyan will weaken their own
position in the future.”</p>
      <p>“It wasn’t Michelle’s idea.”</p>
      <p>The song that was Katida’s lines drooped and slowed. “Ean, that’s the
last thing anyone needs to hear.”</p>
      <p>“Why?”</p>
      <p>“Because that means Emperor Yu is behind it, and Lady Lyan can’t stop
him.”</p>
      <p>“She <emphasis>is</emphasis> trying,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“Perhaps if <emphasis>someone</emphasis> shared her problem, she’d get more support.”</p>
      <p>He didn’t need Sale’s, “Ean,” to know not to say any more. He shook his
head.</p>
      <p>Katida sighed. “I’ll be around if you need to talk, Ean,” and moved on
to discuss the line training that was to commence the following day.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>As they arrived on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>, the antagonism of the first batch of
trainees hit Ean like a wall of sound. It was a rancid taste at the back
of his throat, a dizzying buzz that kept trying to pull the lines out of
tune.</p>
      <p>“Phwagh,” Hernandez said. Ean had Hernandez and Sale with him but was
without the support of Fergus, who was running experiments on the
<emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>, and Rossi, performing emergency line repairs on a badly
damaged warship. Right now, Ean would have preferred to be doing the
repairs, leaving Rossi here with the mob.</p>
      <p>Captain Hilda Gruen accosted Ean as soon as he stepped out of the
shuttle. “I don’t want these people on my ship.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir and her team moved in to surround him. He was grateful for the
protection.</p>
      <p>“They’re linesmen,” Ean said. “This is the training ship.”</p>
      <p>“They’re breaking my ship lines.”</p>
      <p>They certainly were. There were strong linesmen in the group, and some
of them really didn’t want to be here. What had they been told? “I’ll do
what I can.” He sang line one as straight as he could. <emphasis>“As soon as
these people know who you are, they’ll be better.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Sale set the pace to the large cargo hold that was the de facto training
area. “I’ll talk to them first.”</p>
      <p>Ean nodded. Sale would give the usual pretraining spiel. “These are the
oxygen tanks, here’s what to do if someone is overcome by the lines. Oh,
and by the way, if the person next to you isn’t looking at me, nudge
them,” for some multilevel linesmen got caught up in the ecstasy of line
eleven and stopped thinking about anything else.</p>
      <p>The first time he’d run line training, a Gate Union ship had tried to
destroy the fleet. Today, at least, should be quieter.</p>
      <p>He moved in to stand quietly behind the group while Sale gave her talk.
He nudged one of the linesmen caught up in the ecstasy of line eleven
and found it was Lina Vang. All four of the Xanto linesmen were
together, Nadia Kentish looking as if she wished she weren’t, the others
looking just as aggressive.</p>
      <p>He couldn’t have familiar trainers at his back all the time, but today
he wished for Fergus Burns and Jordan Rossi. And Radko, of course.</p>
      <p>Sale followed the regular spiel with an extra talk. “I remind you that
this program is top secret. The penalty for giving away these secrets is
death. You have all signed agreements to this effect.” She looked toward
Ean. “Linesman Lambert. All yours.”</p>
      <p>He moved up to stand on the podium after Sale stepped down. Sale
shouldn’t be here either. Normally, she’d be out at the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>,
and he could hear that the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> wasn’t happy about her and her
team not being there.</p>
      <p>Nobody was happy today, it seemed.</p>
      <p>“I’m going to sing a greeting to the lines,” Ean said. “I want you to
sing back, exactly the same tune. Don’t be surprised if the lines answer
back.”</p>
      <p>“Why is Lambert training us?” one of the linesmen demanded.</p>
      <p>Ean hadn’t been introduced to him via admiralty, but he knew him anyway.
Arnold Peters had trained at House of Rigel. He’d made the first five
years of Ean’s stay there miserable. Or tried to, but Ean had been too
happy just to be training.</p>
      <p>“Lambert’s not a linesman,” Peters said. “He does everything wrong.”</p>
      <p>Sale moved back to stand on the podium beside Ean. “What’s your name?
Peters? Lambert is the leading linesman for the New Alliance. He is your
senior. Treat him as such. Continue with the attitude you have now, and
you will be kicked off the program.”</p>
      <p>Not a good start at all.</p>
      <p>Not for him, and definitely not for Peters, for the lines could feel the
animosity, and the music was starting to change.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Gently,”</emphasis> Ean sang. <emphasis>“They’re new. They’re not sure what they’re
doing.”</emphasis> Then he said to the trainees, “Introducing you to the ships,
one line at a time. I’ll name the line and the ship first, then I’ll
sing hello to them, then you sing back. Match my tune exactly.”</p>
      <p>He was used to the sea of faces looking up at him, wondering what was
going on.</p>
      <p>“Line one, the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>.” He sang hello to the line. “You sing now.
Remember, exactly the same tune.”</p>
      <p>“I’d rather be at my own choir practice,” Nadia Kentish whispered to
Alex Joy.</p>
      <p>“Everyone sing,” Ean said, for some of them hadn’t. “Don’t insult the
lines by being rude to them.”</p>
      <p>“He is seriously as crazy as he used to be,” Peters muttered to the
linesman next to him.</p>
      <p>Ean tuned him out. “Line one, Confluence Station.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_fourteen_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER FOURTEEN: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>As expected, when Ean introduced the trainees to line eleven, the surge
sent most of the multiple linesmen to the floor. Even Hernandez.</p>
      <p>Especially Hernandez.</p>
      <p>Unfortunately, there were more linesmen than they’d ever had before, and
half the paramedics were trainees as well. They’d trained in the
techniques, but experiencing it firsthand was something else again. They
struggled, because there was little you could do to help a linesman
whose heart was trying to change its rhythm—except give them oxygen and
wait until things settled back to normal.</p>
      <p>Ean grabbed an oxygen tank and moved over to the closest linesman having
trouble. It was Lina Vang. He pushed the mask over her face. Mind over
matter, where the linesman’s mind was trying to control the body.
Luckily, human bodies were resilient.</p>
      <p>“It’s important to ensure they get oxygen,” Ean told the two Xanto
singles. He nodded at the other Xanto multilevel. “See how he’s having
trouble breathing. If you’re not sure, oxygen never hurts.”</p>
      <p>Kentish grabbed another canister.</p>
      <p>There were still a lot of unattended multilevel linesmen with breathing
difficulties.</p>
      <p>Ean raised his voice, amplified it through the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> speaker system.
“Those of you who are still standing. You all know the theory about what
to do for line-related incidents like this. If you’re still standing and
not administering oxygen, why aren’t you?”</p>
      <p>For a while, attending trainees was all he had time to do.</p>
      <p>Afterward, he sat on the dais, elbows on his knees, and watched the
paramedics attend the final few who still needed attention. Four
paramedics attended one linesman. Ean could hear the distress in her
lines. She was a four.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Fix,”</emphasis> the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> offered, and the other ships in fleet agreed.
<emphasis>“Fix.”</emphasis> Ean could feel the ship lines tapping at the edges of the line
four.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“No, no. You’re too strong.”</emphasis> He could taste the strength and the
alienness in the lines, even those of the human ship, who were learning
fast from their fleet parent. Ean could almost see the linesman turning
gray. He jumped up, but even as he stood, the four lines disappeared.</p>
      <p>No.</p>
      <p>He hurried across.</p>
      <p>Sale stepped in front of him. “You can’t do anything, Ean.”</p>
      <p>He knew he couldn’t. The lines were gone. “But—”</p>
      <p>“They sign a waiver. They know the danger.”</p>
      <p>No one expected to die from a line-induced heart attack, even if it
sometimes felt as if you were going to.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>“I hear you’re killing off linesmen now,” Rossi said at dinner.</p>
      <p>They were all there tonight. Orsaya, Rossi, and Orsaya’s people; Sale,
and Craik and Bhaksir with their teams.</p>
      <p>“Only the ones he doesn’t like, Rossi,” Ru Li said.</p>
      <p>“I’ll be careful, then,” Rossi said.</p>
      <p>Ru Li looked at Hana. “Did he just—?”</p>
      <p>Orsaya took a sip of Yaolin whiskey and visibly savored it. Everyone had
alcohol tonight. Nearly everyone, anyway. Hana and Ru Li weren’t
drinking, and nor was one of Rossi’s minders. Ean wasn’t sure if
everyone else was drinking because Orsaya was there, because they were
off duty, or because it had been a truly bad day.</p>
      <p>“We’ve had preliminary results from the autopsy,” Orsaya said. “Linesman
Park showed evidence of narrowed arteries. Her medical records show no
indication of it.”</p>
      <p>“Those medical requirements aren’t there just so we have the healthiest
crew in the fleet,” Sale said.</p>
      <p>Orsaya knew that already, and Ean could hear through the lines that Sale
was only saying it to vent some of her own frustration.</p>
      <p>“The medic on her last ship but one—six months ago now—recommended
surgery. She was booked to go in after her current tour.”</p>
      <p>Until the alien ships had come along, and everyone wanted linesmen. Or
maybe they had planned all along she would arrive after her surgery,
only there’d been this mad scramble to supply linesmen since Emperor Yu
had announced Michelle’s engagement.</p>
      <p>Ean hated Yu more than he hated anything in his life.</p>
      <p>Except, perhaps, Sattur Dow.</p>
      <p>Rossi gripped the table. “A little strong, Linesman. We don’t all need
to share.” He gritted his teeth, and Ean could hear the effort it took
to loosen his hold.</p>
      <p>“Sorry.” But Ean couldn’t stop it all, for little eddies of anxiety
about Yu—and yes, some hatred, too—whirled around him and the ship.</p>
      <p>Orsaya watched them.</p>
      <p>Sale leaned across. “Are you okay, Ean?”</p>
      <p>“Fine.” It was a lie. Ship was agitated, and he with it.</p>
      <p>Except, he wasn’t on the ship. He was on Confluence Station, and the
agitation was coming from the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. Coming from Ship
himself.</p>
      <p>Ean had never heard Captain Helmo express such strong negative emotion.</p>
      <p>“If you—”</p>
      <p>He held up a hand to silence Sale.</p>
      <p>Whatever had caused Captain Helmo to momentarily lose his customary
calmness was gone.</p>
      <p>“Nothing,” Sale said, putting away the comms Ean hadn’t seen her take
out.</p>
      <p>“Nothing on my end either.” Orsaya had her comms out as well.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> was a flurry of activity. Ean could hear it,
but couldn’t tell what was happening. He asked the lines, and got
literal answers.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“VIP module brought online.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>He could tell that for himself.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Welcome. Unwelcome welcome.”</emphasis> The kitchens were busier than normal.
Preparing for something.</p>
      <p>Visitors. Unwelcome ones. Sattur Dow was the most unwelcome person Ean
could think of.</p>
      <p>“Sattur Dow is coming.” Surely he didn’t warrant that much activity. And
not only from the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. The linesman on the Galactic
News ship was getting excited.</p>
      <p>“Coop, you have got to see this.”</p>
      <p>“I’ve a news show to deliver.”</p>
      <p>“No, no. You have to see this. A ship’s arrived.” He put it on Cooper’s
screen.</p>
      <p>It was a massive fleet carrier, bearing the colors of Lancia. Apart from
the mother ships—which were too expensive and big to move around
much—this was the largest ship in the Lancian fleet.</p>
      <p>“So,” Cooper said. “Another warship. We’re surrounded by the line-blamed
things, Christian, and I have a show to get out.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang the image onto the main screen. If the other linesman were
interested, so was he.</p>
      <p>Everyone around the table stopped and watched, seemingly transfixed.</p>
      <p>“But look, Coop.” Christian zoomed in to a close-up of the ship, where
there was an enormous pattern of light displayed on the hull.</p>
      <p>A familiar pattern. Ean saw it every day on the shoulders of his
crewmates.</p>
      <p>“That is the Lancian flagship. That’s—”</p>
      <p>“Emperor Yu,” Orsaya said.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Judging from the grim look on Orsaya’s face as she rose and went into
her apartment, closing the door behind her, Yu’s arrival wouldn’t be
well received.</p>
      <p>Ean left, too, into the semiprivacy of his own room, where he could
still see—and hear—the others, silent at the table.</p>
      <p>Michelle was sitting on Abram’s couch in her workroom, staring at
nothing. He heard a song of resoluteness, and a whiff of steely gray
determination. Michelle had known her father would come. That was why
she had insisted Abram stay away from the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, as
well as Ean.</p>
      <p>He sang gently to the comms lines. Yu would be hours yet. He got that
from the ship chatter.</p>
      <p>Michelle looked up. “Ean.”</p>
      <p>He could smell the fizzy citrus smell the lines associated with her.
“Are you okay?”</p>
      <p>She gave a smile that came out more like a grimace. “I’ll be happier
when it’s over.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“One way or another,”</emphasis> the lines whispered underneath her.</p>
      <p>Whose thoughts were they picking up? Ean shivered.</p>
      <p>Michelle had never been one to let depression get in the way of
practicality. She said now, “Sometime soon, I will invite you to a
function to welcome my father and to introduce the Factor. I know you
will be too busy to attend.”</p>
      <p>He didn’t need the stress on “too busy” to understand what she meant,
but right now he was more concerned about other things. “The Factor is
here, too?”</p>
      <p>“Of course. That is why my father has come. To introduce me to my
betrothed.” And by the sound of it, to make himself wildly unpopular.
“No doubt, while he’s here, he will petition to address the council.”</p>
      <p>Which, from the way she said it, was the real reason she thought the
Factor and her father had arrived.</p>
      <p>“But, Ean—”</p>
      <p>“I understand. I’m a busy, busy linesman.”</p>
      <p>It got a smile out of her even if it didn’t have a dimple. “Take care of
yourself.”</p>
      <p>“I will. The lines will take care of you, too, Michelle.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The <emphasis>Lancastrian Emperor</emphasis> departed as soon as Emperor Yu had settled
into quarters on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. How long did he plan on
staying?</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow arrived with the royal party. A day earlier, that would have
been the worst of Ean’s problems. Now it was the least of them. Radko
was safely away. Ean hoped it was safely, anyway.</p>
      <p>Dow brought his own entourage. Two servants and two assistants. With
Emperor Yu’s own Royal Guard, and the Factor’s guards and support staff,
the ship was nearly as full as it had been when Michelle and Abram had
first gone chasing the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>How many support staff did one need?</p>
      <p>Commodore Bach, in charge of the Emperor’s security, didn’t need the
sophisticated surveillance equipment he set up in the VIP area Helmo set
aside for him.</p>
      <p>“I am sure we’ll be aware of any security issues that crop up long
before Bach is,” Helmo had said, aloud on the bridge, the day after that
had been set up.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Naturally,”</emphasis> Ean sang, through line one.</p>
      <p>Vanje Solberg, Helmo’s second-in-command, looked at him in query.</p>
      <p>Helmo smiled. “Message received, Vanje.”</p>
      <p>Solberg didn’t ask. He and Helmo weren’t as close as Wendell was with
his second, Grayson. One day, Solberg would take a promotion and captain
his own ship. The lines would notice his going, but they wouldn’t miss
him the way they missed Abram’s not being there.</p>
      <p>What made specific humans important to the lines on a ship?</p>
      <p>Ship itself—the captain—was always important. But the ship singled out
specific members of the crew as well. Esfir Chantsmith, for example, was
a <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> favorite. And no doubt Trask’s singer with the damaged arm was
a favorite on his own ship.</p>
      <p>Sometimes, the lines didn’t have anyone else. The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> looked
favorably on Sale and the team she took across with her, but they were
the ones who spent most of the time on ship. Who else did the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> have? Would the ship give up Sale when it got a new
captain? Ean didn’t think so. That was something else he would have to
talk to Abram about.</p>
      <p>But not right now, not while Yu and the Factor were here. Nor while
Sattur Dow was, either.</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow’s staff’s whole job seemed to be to find Radko. One—a youth
named Ethan Saylor—kept calling Vega and demanding to see Radko.</p>
      <p>“Spacer Radko is on special duties,” Vega said, every time. “As soon as
she arrives back on ship, I will notify Merchant Dow.”</p>
      <p>Saylor said the same thing every time after he clicked off. “Stupid
bitch. You won’t last long. I’ll be sure Merchant Dow personally
requests your dismissal.”</p>
      <p>Ean never heard him ask it of Dow, so he didn’t know if Saylor meant it,
but he wasn’t above a little petty meanness of his own in return.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Too cool,”</emphasis> he sang to line two, directing heating into Saylor’s room;
and when Saylor complained about that, <emphasis>“Too hot.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Which lasted until Captain Helmo twigged to what was going on, and said
sternly to both Ean and the ship, “Not on my ship, you don’t.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_fifteen_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER FIFTEEN: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Ean had just strapped himself into the shuttle on his way to training
the next day when a request came through from Abram.</p>
      <p>Linesman Lambert, as the senior New Alliance Linesman, you are required
to attend the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> today.</p>
      <p>Ean wasn’t sure if it was a real summons or another of those he was
supposed to be too busy to attend.</p>
      <p>“Do I say I can’t go?” he asked Bhaksir.</p>
      <p>“You can’t ignore a summons from Admiral Galenos.”</p>
      <p>“But suppose he doesn’t want me to go?”</p>
      <p>“He wouldn’t have asked you if he didn’t, would he?”</p>
      <p>Ean checked the whereabouts of Michelle. She could tell him if he was
supposed to attend or not.</p>
      <p>Michelle was breakfasting with her father. Talking reasonably, but the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>’s lines had a faint brown taint that told Ean she
was choosing her words carefully.</p>
      <p>“Everyone who visits the alien ships must request to, and be cleared by
the committee. I cannot send Merchant Dow with the Factor.”</p>
      <p>“And who controls this committee, Daughter?”</p>
      <p>Not a good time to interrupt her.</p>
      <p>“Shuttle’s waiting for you, Ean,” Sale said, through the comms. “We need
to get there before the main party.”</p>
      <p>He still didn’t know if Abram meant him to go or to refuse. He called
Fergus and Hernandez. “Can you run line training today, please? I need
to go out to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“The grand tour,” Fergus said. “We heard about it. We’ll treat your
trainees gently.”</p>
      <p>Ean jogged down to the shuttle bays, Bhaksir’s whole team behind him.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> was happy to greet them.</p>
      <p>It had been a patient ship, waiting for its crew, and there were some
people Ean didn’t want on it. Like Arnold Peters. Maybe he could
convince Abram to let the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> choose its own crew. It wouldn’t
choose Peters.</p>
      <p>The song of the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> changed to a pleased purr.</p>
      <p>“Ean. What did you do?” Sale asked.</p>
      <p>Ean was glad Sale’s comms beeped then. “<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> Shuttle
Four requesting permission to dock.”</p>
      <p>A team of Yaolin guards stepped out, followed by Admiral Orsaya.</p>
      <p>They’d left Orsaya on Confluence Station. Shuttle Four must have
collected her on the way. Why hadn’t she come with Sale and Ean? How
close behind them had Shuttle Four been all this time?</p>
      <p>Governor Jade of Aratoga stepped out next, then the Factor of the Lesser
Gods. It was hard to pick who wore the most gold jewelry. The Factor was
followed by his bodyguards—six of them—and after him, Abram.</p>
      <p>The Lancastrian soldiers on board the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> saluted. Ean didn’t.</p>
      <p>One of the bodyguards was smiling.</p>
      <p>The Factor moved up to where Governor Jade halted.</p>
      <p>“Linesman,” Governor Jade said to Ean, and the chill that had come in
with the visitors rolled away with the warmth of her words. “Allow me to
present the Factor of the Lesser Gods. Factor, this is Linesman Ean
Lambert, leading linesman for the New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>“Welcome to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>Abram nodded at Ean, as if he was supposed to be there. Ean was
relieved.</p>
      <p>“A ten.” The Factor glanced at the bars on Ean’s shirt. “I thought all
the higher-level linesmen worked with Gate Union.”</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t need the lines to know he was lying. It was common knowledge
that both Ean’s contract and Jordan Rossi’s belonged to the New
Alliance.</p>
      <p>“We have two level-ten linesmen working with the New Alliance.” You
couldn’t hear the smile in Abram’s voice, but it came through clearly on
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> line one.</p>
      <p>Abram wasn’t lying, for if you took Ean to be a level twelve they still
had two other tens. Jordan Rossi and Ami Hernandez. Not that Grand
Master Rickenback had certified Hernandez yet. For the moment, Admiral
Katida preferred that no one knew the Balians had a ten as well.</p>
      <p>Abram indicated the cart that waited for them.</p>
      <p>Sale didn’t like the cart. She made her crew march to the bridge most
days. “If you exercise while you’re here,” she’d said once, “you don’t
need to go back to ship and spend hours in the gym.”</p>
      <p>Ean thought it was because the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> didn’t like the cart, but
he’d never told Sale that. The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> didn’t see the point of the
cart. <emphasis>“Not need. Faster,”</emphasis> and showed an image of something that looked
like a pipe. He’d drawn a picture of the image and shown it to Sale,
who’d shaken her head. She’d not seen anything like it. Maybe Ean had
misinterpreted the image. Whatever it was, one day he’d find it. Or Sale
would.</p>
      <p>The cart was a long box with an electronic motor at the front, a seat
for a driver—Craik—and a long, flat tray at the back others could stand
or sit on. A raised bar along the center allowed you to hold on.</p>
      <p>“I hate these things,” Governor Jade said, stepping on and gripping
tight. Two of Craik’s team stepped up either side of her. The others
stepped on as well, all except the bodyguard who’d been smiling.</p>
      <p>His face was alight with wonder.</p>
      <p>A linesman, though he didn’t have bars on his shirt.</p>
      <p><emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> line eleven surged—not Ean’s doing.</p>
      <p>The linesman gasped and tried to breathe. Sale reached for the nearest
oxygen with a scowl, while Craik and Losan stretched the linesman out on
the floor. Craik placed the oxygen mask over the man’s face.</p>
      <p>Abram’s voice was hard. “There is a reason we asked you not to include
linesmen in your party.”</p>
      <p>“A linesman.” The Factor looked bemused. “Surely you are mistaken.” The
overriding emotion emanating from him was irritation rather than
surprise. He glanced at the bodyguard beside him.</p>
      <p>The bodyguard’s nod was so slight, Ean wondered if he had imagined it,
but he’d had a lot of practice lately interpreting the secret deals
people in power made. He recognized an agreement when he almost didn’t
see it.</p>
      <p>“Our linesmen undergo rigorous training before we allow them on board
the alien line ships,” Orsaya said. “The lines are too strong for them.
We need to acclimate them first. Without that training, the strength of
the alien lines can be incapacitating on occasion.”</p>
      <p>Training Ean should have been conducting right now. Hernandez was
berating the linesmen for their sloppy responses. Or she had been, until
the surge of line eleven. Now she was waiting for the paramedics to
declare everyone all right. It was another new batch of paramedics. Ean
would be glad when they were all trained. He hadn’t realized how much
they had come to rely on the paramedics Abram had supplied, or how
skilled those paramedics had become.</p>
      <p>“Given that this gentleman is here without bars on his shirt”—Orsaya
indicated the linesman on the floor—“one can only assume he is here
dishonestly.” She looked directly at the Factor as she said it.</p>
      <p>“So it would seem.” The Factor frowned down at the gasping linesman.</p>
      <p>“I take full responsibility for this.” The bodyguard looked at the
Factor. “My apologies for the deception, sir. I was aware of what this
man was. I’d heard about the ban. I thought it was a security measure. I
didn’t realize it was for their own safety.”</p>
      <p>He couldn’t say anything else, could he. Not if the Factor still wanted
to see the ship.</p>
      <p>“I am disappointed in you, Captain Jakob,” the Factor said. “We had
strict instructions to bring no linesmen.”</p>
      <p>Jakob bowed in apology.</p>
      <p>If it had been Michelle in the Factor’s place, she would have admitted
she’d been part of it and not made Abram—for Ean was sure from the way
he moved and spoke that Jakob was more than a simple bodyguard—take the
blame.</p>
      <p>The linesman improved enough for Sale to help him sit up. “The
confluence. I thought it had gone. It’s… amazing.”</p>
      <p>Ean knelt beside the other man. “Linesman?” He made it a question.</p>
      <p>“Glenn. Linesman Glenn. House of Sandhurst. Level seven.” It was an
automatic reply, one linesman to another.</p>
      <p>Ean hid the disquiet the information gave him. Linesmen level seven and
above remained with the cartel houses. They also wore house colors. The
fact that Glenn hadn’t meant what?</p>
      <p>“How do you feel?”</p>
      <p>“I’m fine, I think.” Glenn smiled again. “I was at the confluence, but
it was nothing like this.”</p>
      <p>Sometimes, it seemed to Ean that he was the only linesman who’d never
visited the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> back when no one had known it was a ship
trapped in the void. “Good.” He stood up. Based on his experience with
linesmen, Glenn would be fine.</p>
      <p>“The linesman stays with the shuttle,” Orsaya said. “The stronger lines
on the bridge could kill him. We had an incident yesterday where the
lines accidentally killed a linesman.”</p>
      <p>The Factor nodded, as did Governor Jade. News traveled fast.</p>
      <p>“So how dangerous are these ships?”</p>
      <p>“You saw the news the other night, Factor,” Governor Jade said. “Deadly,
I’d say.”</p>
      <p>“To their own side, I mean.”</p>
      <p>“Dangerous,” Ean said, because he wanted them to realize that.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Dangerous and deadly.”</emphasis><emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>’s lines sounded smug.</p>
      <p>There might have been a bit of miscommunication there. Not to its own
side, surely. <emphasis>“Surely that’s not how you want to be thought of?”</emphasis> But
he’d forgotten, this was a warship.</p>
      <p>He’d also forgotten he hadn’t planned on singing in front of the Factor.</p>
      <p>“The singing, Linesman?” the Factor asked. “What does that signify?”</p>
      <p>He’d jumped on a single tune very fast. Almost as if he’d been waiting
for a song so he could ask the question. How much did he know?</p>
      <p>“Are you kidding?” Linesman Glenn said. “That’s Crazy Ean Lambert. He
always sings.”</p>
      <p>“Sings?” the Factor asked. Did Ean imagine it, or was it taking an
effort to keep up the friendly facade?</p>
      <p>“And he’s famous right now,” Glenn said. “Because the New Alliance is so
desperate for tens, Lady Lyan paid millions of credits for him. Even
though he sings. The linesmen are still talking about it.” He looked at
Ean. “Sorry, I didn’t mean that the way it came out.”</p>
      <p>But he had, and everyone on ship knew it, including the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>,
and the ship didn’t like it. Or was reflecting someone else’s dislike of
it, rather. Ean guessed it was Sale, and was warmed by her unspoken
defense.</p>
      <p>“I’m used to it,” Ean told Sale though Glenn had been the one to speak.</p>
      <p>“We’re not. And we don’t appreciate the insult to our linesman.”</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Not here. Wrong place. Wrong time.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Something must have got through, for Sale straightened and looked at
Abram. “Sorry, sir.”</p>
      <p>Yes. The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> was listening too much to Sale, and she was
listening back.</p>
      <p>“We should move on,” Abram said with a slight smile. “We’ve a trip ahead
of us.”</p>
      <p>And Abram would have shut down the conversation long ago if he hadn’t
wanted to hear it.</p>
      <p>Sale looked at Bhaksir. “Leave someone to guard Linesman Glenn.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir chose Ru Li and Gossamer, and she stayed as well.</p>
      <p>Ean listened to Glenn talk to them as the tour made the long trek up to
the bridge.</p>
      <p>“It’s hard, not wearing the uniform when you’re from a cartel house. You
feel as if you’ve suddenly become invisible.”</p>
      <p>Ru Li danced around the shuttle bay, seemingly unable to keep still. “I
hope they paid you a lot of money to do it, then. <emphasis>I</emphasis> wouldn’t become
invisible for anyone.”</p>
      <p>The dance took him around the whole bay. It was a Ru Li-style sentry
march.</p>
      <p>“They’re not paying money.” Glenn rubbed his hands together. “I get to
take part in an experimental program House of Sandhurst is supplying
linesmen for.”</p>
      <p>Captain Jakob let go of the center rail momentarily, grabbed it again as
Craik turned into another corridor. Ean leaned over. “Are you all
right?”</p>
      <p>Jakob didn’t pay any attention to Ean.</p>
      <p>“I get to work with people like Dr. Quinn, who’s done so much to open
line theory recently,” Glenn said.</p>
      <p>“How do you open line theory?” Ru Li asked. “Make it available to the
public?”</p>
      <p>Jakob twitched.</p>
      <p>He couldn’t be listening to Glenn. Could he? How?</p>
      <p>“Of course not.” Glenn looked at Ru Li as if wondering if he was a
little simple. Which was exactly what Ru Li would have been aiming for,
knowing Ru Li. “Information like this is so classified even the linesmen
don’t know about it.”</p>
      <p>Ru Li and Gossamer would find out what they could from Glenn. Ean’s job
was to stop the snooping. He sang under his breath, searching for
unknown line fives on the ship. Yes. There.</p>
      <p>And there. And there.</p>
      <p>Someone was leaving listening devices along the way. He was tempted to
send a high-pitched noise through line five, to see what Jakob would do.
No, it was better if he didn’t know they had been discovered. Not yet,
anyway.</p>
      <p>They stopped and stepped off the cart to look at the immense image on
the wall of the crew room. Another listening device joined the others.</p>
      <p>“Impressive, isn’t it,” Governor Jade said. “I predict a new art
movement will sweep the galaxy over the next few years.”</p>
      <p>One of the Factor’s bodyguards stepped close. The ship seemed to
consider him while he considered the image.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“No, not that one,”</emphasis> line one said, and the other lines agreed.</p>
      <p>That was strange. The whole ship was a little strange today. Ean would
be glad when the Factor and his people were off the ship.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Or that one,”</emphasis> as they moved on and another of the party stopped to
inspect a door.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Not that one, either,”</emphasis> the other lines agreed.</p>
      <p>If Ean had been alone, he would have asked what the ship was doing. But
he wasn’t alone, and he didn’t trust the Factor or his so-called
bodyguard.</p>
      <p>Back at the shuttle bay, Ru Li was saying, “According to Jordan Rossi,
the only good line scientist is a dead one.”</p>
      <p>“You’ve met Jordan Rossi.” The lines were full of Glenn’s awe.</p>
      <p>“A couple of times. Haven’t you?”</p>
      <p>“Not Jordan Rossi. Or Rebekah Grimes, either. What’s she like?” He asked
the question as if he thought she was still alive, working for the New
Alliance.</p>
      <p>Ru Li looked at Bhaksir and Hana.</p>
      <p>“I don’t think we met her,” Bhaksir said.</p>
      <p>Beside Ean, Jakob relaxed.</p>
      <p>The group moved on, Sale, Abram, and Orsaya answering questions.</p>
      <p>Another five joined the chorus of strange line fives. Should Ean do
something about it? Like ask Jakob to empty his pockets? Not yet. Wait
until their visitors were gone. Otherwise, they’d plant something else,
something harder to detect.</p>
      <p>They reached the bridge. Sale and Abram started explaining the setup to
the visitors. Only one person really saw anything. The woman who’d
stepped out of the shuttle in front of Glenn. Ean was certain she could
hear the panels.</p>
      <p>The Worlds of the Lesser Gods had come well prepared. A multilevel and a
single-level linesman.</p>
      <p>Should Ean say anything? Or pretend he hadn’t noticed?</p>
      <p>Orsaya came over to stand beside him. “Is everything all right?”</p>
      <p>Ean looked at the single-level linesman.</p>
      <p>“I hear you.” Then, as the Factor came over to join them, “How are you
finding it so far, Factor? Somewhat of a letdown when you cannot even
read the boards.”</p>
      <p>“It’s impressive just in the size,” the Factor said. “I have warships
whose whole crew would fit onto this bridge. And everyone on board would
be deaf and blind to it. As am I. Tell me, Linesman,” to Ean. “What do
you see?”</p>
      <p>The correct question was, “What do you hear?” but Ean chose to interpret
it literally. He knew what Sale couldn’t see. “Flickering lights. A
starfield.”</p>
      <p>“And only linesmen can see this?”</p>
      <p>Most people didn’t yet know about single-level linesmen. “Certified
linesmen, and those who failed certification,” and Ean looked
deliberately at the single level the Factor had brought with him.</p>
      <p>The Factor followed his gaze. “I see.”</p>
      <p>“We all see,” Orsaya said. “Let’s ensure it doesn’t happen again. You
won’t get off so lightly another time.” She smiled, all teeth. “You have
used up some goodwill already.”</p>
      <p>Governor Jade was talking to Sale. “I’m not sure,” Sale said. “Ean?”</p>
      <p>He moved across to them.</p>
      <p>Behind him, the Factor turned to Orsaya. “I believe you made a study of
linesmen, Admiral.”</p>
      <p>“I have, yes.”</p>
      <p>“Particularly the higher-level linesmen. Did you study Lambert at all?”</p>
      <p>“Of course.”</p>
      <p>“He came out of nowhere to become the leading linesman for the New
Alliance.”</p>
      <p>If the Factor had been a linesman—which he wasn’t—he would have felt the
chill sweep the ship though Orsaya’s voice retained its normal crusty
tone. “Out of nowhere, Factor? He was the only linesman working with
high-level lines for six months.”</p>
      <p>Had the Factor timed his question so that only Orsaya and some of the
guards were close?</p>
      <p>Abram moved to join Orsaya and the Factor. Jakob intercepted him, asking
about something on the wall. Abram stopped to answer him.</p>
      <p>Deliberate? Or coincidental.</p>
      <p>If it was deliberate, then the Factor hadn’t heard Ean could listen
through the lines, for otherwise he’d know that no matter how he kept
his voice down, or how many people Jakob kept away, Ean would hear him.</p>
      <p>“So Lambert was lucky. In the right place, at the right time. The rumors
of his abilities…” The Factor let the words trail off.</p>
      <p>Yes, he had been in the right place, and no one could deny that. Ean
couldn’t help his smile.</p>
      <p>“It depends what you mean by rumors, Factor. Maybe if you asked straight
out what you want to know, I could answer your question.”</p>
      <p>The Factor looked at her as if no one had spoken to him bluntly before.
Maybe they hadn’t.</p>
      <p>Orsaya waited for his response.</p>
      <p>“Admiral Orsaya, you have a level ten of your own under contract. Surely
it irks you that Lambert was elevated above him merely by a combination
of circumstance and birth. Jordan Rossi is a strong ten. Possibly the
strongest now that Rebekah Grimes has gone.”</p>
      <p>He knew Grimes was dead even if Glenn didn’t.</p>
      <p>“Yes, Rossi is strong.” Orsaya bared her teeth in another smile. “But
Factor, don’t make the mistake of assuming Lambert is weak simply
because of his reputation. It takes resilience and determination to get
where he is.”</p>
      <p>Was it a warning? Or a threat?</p>
      <p>Abram joined them. The Factor nodded and turned to where Sale was
explaining how they had integrated the human equipment alongside the
alien boards. The guards were asking plenty of questions. Intelligent
questions. Expert questions. Ean was pleased when Sale gave one of them
a flat stare.</p>
      <p>“That’s classified.”</p>
      <p>Eventually, Abram glanced at his comms. “I’m afraid that’s all we have
time for on this visit.”</p>
      <p>“Surely a few more moments,” the Factor said, although Ean had the
feeling he was as impatient as Ean was for this trip to be over.</p>
      <p>Abram sounded regretful. “Apologies, but our time is heavily scheduled.
I am sure your time is, as well. Governor Jade is to address the council
this afternoon, and Admiral Orsaya and I have a meeting with Admirals
MacClennan and Katida.”</p>
      <p>“Of course.” The Factor smiled although his smile didn’t reach his eyes.</p>
      <p>Jakob secreted one final device, and they all stepped back onto the
cart.</p>
      <p>Governor Jade gripped tight. “Surely the aliens had a better transport
system than this. Or did they run all the way to the bridge?”</p>
      <p>“We don’t know, Governor,” Abram said. “We certainly haven’t found
anything we identify as transport yet.”</p>
      <p>The ship was considering the single-level linesman again.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Yes?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p><emphasis>“No,”</emphasis> Ean said. <emphasis>“She’s banned.”</emphasis></p>
      <p><emphasis>“But she is promising,”</emphasis> the ship said.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“No.”</emphasis> He was singing in front of people he didn’t want to sing in
front of, but he couldn’t stop there. <emphasis>“She works for bad people.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“We like her.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Ean sighed. “What’s your name?” he asked the single-level linesman. If
Michelle did marry the Factor, then theoretically she could be one of
the crew. And why was the ship suddenly considering who was suitable and
who wasn’t?</p>
      <p><emphasis>“You said we could,”</emphasis> the ship reminded him.</p>
      <p>He had?</p>
      <p>The linesman didn’t give her name. Ean didn’t care. He’d get it later.
Abram would know.</p>
      <p>“I realize this is a miracle ship,” Governor Jade confessed to Sale, as
the cart made its way back the way it had come. “But it still scares me.
I’m happy to get back to something human.”</p>
      <p>She didn’t have to say it aloud.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“We don’t mind,”</emphasis> the ship lines said comfortingly in Ean’s mind. <emphasis>“We
don’t want her anyway.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Ean didn’t answer that. There was nothing he could say.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> responded more to nonlinesman than the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> did.
Was that because most of the people who came to it were nonlinesmen? Or
was it because—being a larger ship—it had housed nonlinesmen in the
past?</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>After the shuttle had left, Ean said, “Jakob is not coming back on this
ship.”</p>
      <p>“Give us a reason. We can’t ban someone just because you don’t like
them.” Sale paused to think about that. “Or can we?”</p>
      <p>“What about leaving bugs around?”</p>
      <p>Ean sang them through the ship, finding the tiny line fives. As he found
each one, he channeled the signal back to the other devices that had
been placed. When he was done, the only things these little lines were
communicating with were each other. Sale picked them off the wall as he
located each one.</p>
      <p>“Normally we’d leave them.” She tossed the last of them into a
container. “Doctor them to send back misinformation. Are you sure that’s
all, Ean?”</p>
      <p>“I think so.”</p>
      <p>“We’ll take these back as evidence. That woman. She was a linesman?”</p>
      <p>“Did you know?”</p>
      <p>“A blind man could have seen the way she reacted to the boards.”</p>
      <p>Smugness washed through the lines. It came from the ship, not from Sale.
You couldn’t fool its people.</p>
      <p>Its people? <emphasis>“These are not your people. They’re Helmo’s.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Did he imagine that the ship deliberately ignored that? Could lines
indicate deliberate ignoring anyway?</p>
      <p>“This ship,” Ean told Sale, “is acting strangely.”</p>
      <p>“You have to expect that, Ean. It’s just had unpleasant visitors.”</p>
      <p>Sale was as bad as the ship.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>When he got back to Confluence Station, Ean called Vega. He made the
line secure.</p>
      <p>“No,” Vega said. “I haven’t heard anything. On jobs like this, Lambert,
you don’t, and you don’t want to, either.”</p>
      <p>He hadn’t been calling about that, but it was good to have the report.</p>
      <p>“What if she’s in trouble?”</p>
      <p>“We expect her to get out of it herself. The only time she’ll send a
message is if she’s in so much trouble she can’t get out of it. It’s
called a dead man’s message, for obvious reasons, so you’d better hope
we don’t hear from her.”</p>
      <p>Ean fervently hoped they wouldn’t, and equally fervently hoped she’d be
back soon. “I need to talk to Linesman Glenn.” Glenn had mentioned an
experimental line project, and Ean wanted to know more. He might not
tell Ean, but he would tell Jordan Rossi. If Rossi chose to cooperate,
and given it was line business, he would.</p>
      <p>“You’re too late.”</p>
      <p>He hoped she meant they’d sent Glenn home, and not the way she’d made it
sound.</p>
      <p>“Glenn had a line-induced heart attack on the way back in the shuttle.
They couldn’t do anything for him.”</p>
      <p>Ean stared at her image. “Line eleven’s been quiet all afternoon.”</p>
      <p>Lemon-sour Vega washed over him. “So say the linesmen on board this
ship. Someone didn’t like his being outed as a linesman.”</p>
      <p>A heart attack. Someone had come well prepared.</p>
      <p>“We’re going over ship records now,” Vega said. “If you can think of
anything he said or did that might have triggered an outcome like that,
let me know.”</p>
      <p>“Glenn was about to start working on a top secret line project. House of
Sandhurst was involved. And someone called Dr. Quinn. It’s probably not
important, but Jakob didn’t like his talking about it.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll see what I can find out,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>The first thing Ean did after he clicked off was send a request to all
the fleet lines. If Radko called, he wanted to know the instant it
happened.</p>
      <p>Vega called back half an hour later. “You have good instincts. We’ll
never make a decent soldier of you, but you can be useful on occasion.”</p>
      <p>That was just Vega’s manner. Ean could hear through the lines that she
was pleased with what she had discovered. “Your friend Dr. Quinn works
for TwoPaths Engineering.”</p>
      <p>TwoPaths Engineering was a Redmond company. They made spaceships based
on the plans of the <emphasis>Havortian</emphasis>, the alien spaceship that had been
discovered five hundred years earlier. They didn’t realize the New
Alliance knew that. Or the fact that TwoPaths’ sister company—FiveTrees
Consolidated—was building weapons based on those same plans.</p>
      <p>“Aren’t the Worlds of the Lesser Gods enemies with Redmond now?”</p>
      <p>“Supposedly,” Vega said. “Which makes you wonder why the Factor is
running around with a Redmond-based linesman on his staff.”</p>
      <p>Ean sighed, and Confluence Station sighed with him. And speaking of
which, Confluence Station was still too chirpy for a station whose
equivalent of its captain was in intensive care.</p>
      <p>“Are you still there?” Vega asked. “Because I’ve nothing else to say.
I’ll keep you informed.” She clicked off.</p>
      <p>Ean stared thoughtfully at the comms. The ships were quiet. The
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> was the most uneasy. Helmo—and Michelle’s—worry
about what would happen now permeated the whole ship. On the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>,
Wendell was dyeing his hair, and everyone on the ship exuded
satisfaction about that. What was the story there?</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> was content. Hilda Gruen was pacing her ship, pulling the
occasional trainee into line. “I don’t care if you’re a level twenty. On
my ship, you do as I command.”</p>
      <p>Ean had always thought linesmen were treated as special. It didn’t seem
to be the case on fleet ships. Or maybe it was because Gruen didn’t have
any crew but the trainees.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“We’ve got crew,”</emphasis> the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> lines told Ean, and showed him. The two
original Aratogan teams who’d been assigned to the ship. Along with
Esfir Chantsmith.</p>
      <p>The Blue Sky Media ship’s captain was drunk again. He always drank.</p>
      <p>The Galactic News ship buzzed with enthusiasm. Christian, the engineer,
was talking to Cooper, the producer, about something.</p>
      <p>And Confluence Station was going along as if everything was normal.</p>
      <p>Maybe, for the station, it was.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Where is Ship?”</emphasis> Ean asked, and used the tune that denoted the
station. Had he upset the station by asking the obvious, when the
station commander was still unconscious in hospital?</p>
      <p>Confluence Station obligingly showed him a dimly lit passage where the
tired, older man Ean recognized from Patten’s heart attack was talking
to a mechanic.</p>
      <p>That was Ship?</p>
      <p>Ean could sense, roughly, where on the station it was. <emphasis>“I need to talk
to him.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Line five obediently opened a line.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“It’s okay,”</emphasis> Ean sang. <emphasis>“I’ll do it face-to-face.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Face-to-face?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p><emphasis>“Human to human,”</emphasis> and Ean tried to convey the idea of two physical
beings talking together. He wasn’t sure he succeeded.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Why, when you have the lines?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p><emphasis>“Because.”</emphasis> Why? <emphasis>“Because Ship doesn’t have lines like we do. Not the
same.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>He got brown confusion and the scent of eucalyptus.</p>
      <p>He looked around for Radko, remembered she wasn’t there. “I’m going for
a walk,” he told Bhaksir.</p>
      <p>“Do you need to?”</p>
      <p>Did he? He was doing his job, finding out more about the lines. “Yes.”</p>
      <p>“Where, and for how long?”</p>
      <p>“I need to talk to the man who was in Patten’s office when he had the
heart attack.”</p>
      <p>“Can’t you use the comms?”</p>
      <p>“You sound like the station.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir gave him a look that showed she didn’t understand what he said.
“It would be safer.”</p>
      <p>“I’ve a station of lines to protect me.”</p>
      <p>“That doesn’t stop you getting into trouble,” Ru Li said. He snapped to
attention as Bhaksir glared at him. “Sorry, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>“For that, you’re on bodyguard duty,” Bhaksir said. “You and Gossamer.
Keep your comms open, and I want to hear from you every five minutes.”</p>
      <p>“Five minutes is a little excessive, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>“Why don’t I show you my route, so you can see us all the time.” Ean
sang it up on screen for her. “And hear us.”</p>
      <p>“Did you just volunteer for bodyguard duty?” Gossamer asked Ru Li, as
the three of them left. “You knew she would pick you because of what you
said.”</p>
      <p>“It’s more fun than being stuck in a boring control room,” Ru Li said.</p>
      <p>Should Ean remind them that Bhaksir could hear everything they said?</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Confluence Station Ship had moved on to the engine room by the time Ean
caught up to him.</p>
      <p>Bose engines were reputedly quiet, but they still made a lot of noise up
close.</p>
      <p>A station didn’t need a Bose engine for everyday running, but it needed
one for the initial jump through the void to position the station, and
since the biggest cost was the engine itself, the Bose also powered the
station.</p>
      <p>Ean looked at the line chassis. Where did it end if they didn’t have a
bridge?</p>
      <p>Up close, the man the station had identified as Ship looked more tired
than he had the other night, if that was possible. The name on his shirt
was Ryley.</p>
      <p>“Nonstation personnel aren’t allowed in this area,” Ryley said.</p>
      <p>“We’re part of the fleet,” Ean said. Did Ryley know that he meant
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>’s fleet?</p>
      <p>“Even fleet personnel need clearance.” Ryley turned and led the way
back. “I don’t know how you even got through the doors.”</p>
      <p>“I do,” Ru Li murmured, as they turned to follow.</p>
      <p>Ean hurried to walk abreast of Ryley. “How long have you been on this
station?”</p>
      <p>“Is that any of your business?”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Twenty years,”</emphasis> the Station sang in his mind, and Ean smelled
eucalyptus again, only this time it was younger eucalyptus.</p>
      <p>Ean blinked. Twenty years. These were human-built lines, cloned from the
<emphasis>Havortian</emphasis> and from the <emphasis>Havortian</emphasis>’s descendants. They’d had five
hundred years of human conditioning. Unlike alien lines, they understood
the concept of years.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“I didn’t know you were that old.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Ryley looked at him.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Older,”</emphasis> the lines said.</p>
      <p>Ean got a black sense of a long period of time. Alien, yet familiar,
intermixed with human years. That, and something he’d experienced not
all that long ago, a time when he’d been talking to Katida. He frowned,
trying to place it. And got it. The fresh, new-cloned feeling of the
station Governor Jade had co-opted for Aratogan use before the fleet had
moved to Haladea III.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“You can remember what you were before? The</emphasis> Havortian<emphasis>?”</emphasis> All human
line ships had been cloned from the <emphasis>Havortian</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Havortian?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Ean sang the tune that had recognizably been the freshly cloned station
he remembered from months earlier. He was unsuccessful, for all he got
was lime-green uncertainty in return.</p>
      <p>“How old is the station?” Ean asked Ryley.</p>
      <p>Ryley looked at him again. “Thirty-six years.”</p>
      <p>“And you’ve been on it for twenty?”</p>
      <p>A strong, purple unease flooded the lines. This man was Ship all right.</p>
      <p>So Ship didn’t have to be the captain. Which meant Sale might still be
able to be Ship on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, if she wanted to be.</p>
      <p>“If you knew that already, why did you ask me earlier?”</p>
      <p>“I didn’t know before. The station told me.”</p>
      <p>The purple unease grew.</p>
      <p>Ryley stopped at a door. “Here’s the no-go zone.” He tapped the yellow
warning sign. AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY BEYOND THIS POINT. “See that. It
means you.”</p>
      <p>“I don’t think that’s going to stop him,” Ru Li murmured.</p>
      <p>He got a sharp glance from Ryley. “Or your friends.”</p>
      <p>“I am a linesman. My responsibility is the welfare of the lines on this
station.”</p>
      <p>“Jordan Rossi looks after the lines on station.”</p>
      <p>He did. And he was doing a good job. Say what you might about Rossi,
where lines were concerned, he delivered. Especially now he’d started
singing to them.</p>
      <p>“And as for being a linesman,” Ryley said. “I spent six months on this
station with linesmen like you.” He glanced contemptuously at the ten
bars above Ean’s pocket. “Not one of you lifted a finger to do any work
on the lines in all that time.”</p>
      <p>Ean bit his tongue, so he didn’t say that Rossi had been one of the
linesman here then, and he hadn’t.</p>
      <p>“This is <emphasis>our</emphasis> linesman,” Ru Li said. “He’s not like the others.”</p>
      <p>“I don’t want to see you down here again,” Ryley said. “If I do, you can
be sure I’ll have a word with your team leader.” He looked at the bars
on Ean’s shirt. “Or your cartel master.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you for your time.” Ean led the way back, aware of Ryley, staring
after them, a little cloud of purple unease.</p>
      <p>“That seemed pointless,” Ru Li said. “Bhaksir’s right. Couldn’t you have
done that through the comms?”</p>
      <p>“No.” Because what would he have learned through the comms? Nothing.
Instead, he now had a strong sense of the man who controlled the
station.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Back in his temporary new home, Ean called Abram. He made the line
secure from habit although today he could feel something tapping at the
edges, asking to be let in. It was a familiar sound—the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis> — and for a moment Ean almost let it hook in.</p>
      <p>Except… why was the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> listening in?</p>
      <p>“How are you, Ean?” Abram asked.</p>
      <p>Ean held up a hand to silence him and sent a quick query down to
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>’s line eight. Was the ship asking to listen in?</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“No.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>He followed the tentative whisper of sound back. It was on the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. There. And there.</p>
      <p>By now Helmo had heard what was happening, and the sudden surge of
fury—they were doing this on his ship, his beautifully protected
ship—galvanized line eight.</p>
      <p>Eight surged. The lines trying to listen in disappeared.</p>
      <p>Ean’s comms chimed. Helmo. He sang Helmo into the connection with Abram.</p>
      <p>“What’s going on?”</p>
      <p>“I’m checking to see if the lines are secure now,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>He sang every single line on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> and got answers
from them all. There was no untoward activity. He sang to the other
lines in the fleet. Nothing on the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>, nothing on the <emphasis>Kari
Wang</emphasis>, nothing from Confluence Station. There were two illegal comms on
the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>. Both of them with trainees. Ean got the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> to short
them out. The media ships were sending to their usual spies, but nothing
that the New Alliance wasn’t aware of.</p>
      <p>“All clean,” he said, eventually. “The <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> was the
only affected ship.”</p>
      <p>Helmo, his arms crossed, looked and sounded the unhappiest Ean had ever
seen him. “Our security is usually good.”</p>
      <p>“Yes,” Abram said. “I almost wish you hadn’t destroyed them. I suspect
if we’d been able to investigate the codes, we’d find they came out of
Palace Security. No one else would have been able to slip anything in.”</p>
      <p>Palace Security. Vega was Palace Security. But then, Ean realized after
one horrified moment, so was Commodore Bach.</p>
      <p>“Bach is spying on you?”</p>
      <p>“He won’t be doing it without a specific request.” Abram’s tone was
grim.</p>
      <p>“Yu?”</p>
      <p>“Yes. Spying on his daughter.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll ask Vega to investigate,” Helmo said, and Abram nodded.</p>
      <p>Ean said, “I’ll ask the ship to let you know if it happens again,
Helmo.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you.”</p>
      <p>After he clicked off, Ean realized he hadn’t talked to Abram about
Confluence Station. Or about Sale.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_sixteen_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER SIXTEEN: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>After the discovery of the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> fleet, the Alliance—as it had
been then—had taken control of Confluence Station, and the New Alliance
had used it for a temporary headquarters until they’d moved to Haladea
III. Most people believed it had been handed back to its former owners
afterward, and that its owners had continued to lease it out. After all,
it wasn’t needed at the confluence anymore. There was nothing there now.</p>
      <p>They were wrong. The station was an official spoil of war, and though
Patten and his staff retained corporate dress, they were employed by the
combined governments of the New Alliance. The governance fleet, Kari
Wang had called it. It was an appropriate name.</p>
      <p>Access to the station was restricted.</p>
      <p>The Factor requested permission for Captain Jakob to meet with Linesman
Rossi. Orsaya couldn’t see it, but Jakob was with the Factor, sitting
out of sight of the screen.</p>
      <p>Ean heard the request, for he was listening carefully to all comms to
and from the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. And Orsaya’s frosty reply.</p>
      <p>“Our linesmen are busy, Factor. It might have escaped your notice, but
we have a lot of ships to repair and limited access to cartel linesmen.
I cannot approve of anything that takes them away from their work.
Especially not Linesman Rossi, who is one of only two tens we have
available.”</p>
      <p>“Admiral Orsaya, why not let Jakob tag along when Linesman Rossi is
repairing lines, then. That way, he could work while they talked.” The
Factor’s smile was meant to charm, Ean could tell.</p>
      <p>“I have just explained, Factor. He is <emphasis>busy</emphasis>. I don’t need him
distracted by foolish questions.”</p>
      <p>“I am sure they wouldn’t be foolish questions, Admiral.”</p>
      <p>“To a linesman, talking to a nonlinesman, every question about lines is
foolish. Or haven’t you noticed.”</p>
      <p>“We would not annoy him.”</p>
      <p>Orsaya snorted. “Everything annoys him.”</p>
      <p>“Surely one visit.”</p>
      <p>“Factor. There is a war on, and every single member of the New Alliance
wants access to my linesman. I am pleased he is popular, but tell me why
I should put you ahead of them?”</p>
      <p>She clicked off.</p>
      <p>She didn’t see the expression the Factor made afterward. Ean did.</p>
      <p>“I doubt you’ll charm that one,” Jakob said.</p>
      <p>“If she didn’t have a linesman, I wouldn’t care.”</p>
      <p>Ean should let Orsaya know about this conversation. Or maybe Vega would,
for she was listening as well.</p>
      <p>“She won’t be a problem,” the Factor said. “We can get at Rossi anytime,
no matter what she says. I am sure you can get to Confluence Station. We
only need to find out when he’s there.”</p>
      <p>Jakob nodded. “What about line training? He assists there, doesn’t he?
Why don’t we go along to that? It should be easier.”</p>
      <p>Not if Ean had anything to do with it.</p>
      <p>It wasn’t the only conversation Vega was listening to. She was listening
in on Michelle, entertaining Sattur Dow in one of the VIP lounges. Vega
looked to be giving that conversation more attention.</p>
      <p>“I had thought to see my betrothed here.”</p>
      <p>“My cousin Dominique?”</p>
      <p>“Yes.”</p>
      <p>“Sattur.” It was strange to hear him called by his first name. Ean had
never heard him referred to as anything but his surname or his full
name. Even the media used his full name. “Dominique is a soldier. You
need to talk to her commanding officer, Commodore Vega.”</p>
      <p>“Commodore Vega is being particularly obstructive. I was hoping you
might do a friend of your father’s a favor and perhaps intercede for
me.”</p>
      <p>Ean was sure the “friend of your father” was a pointed reminder that
Sattur Dow was, in fact, a close friend, and that Michelle would do well
to remember that.</p>
      <p>“I could do that. Although I must warn you, I have little to do with the
soldiers who run this ship.” Which was an out-and-out lie, but Ean would
bet she’d pass any lie-detector test they cared to use on her.</p>
      <p>Michelle nodded to Lin, who tapped something into his comms and brought
it over to her.</p>
      <p>In her office, Vega switched both channels off and sat up straighter—if
she could sit straighter than she normally did—before answering Lin’s
call. “Vega.”</p>
      <p>“Her Royal Highness, the Crown Princess Michelle,” Lin said, and handed
the comms to Michelle.</p>
      <p>If they had to go through that process every time Michelle answered her
comms, she’d never get much work done. Lin wouldn’t either.</p>
      <p>“Your Royal Highness.” Vega’s voice became respectful. She inclined her
head in a half bow. “What can I do for you?”</p>
      <p>They hadn’t talked to each other like that since the first day Vega had
come on board.</p>
      <p>“My guest, Sattur Dow, would like to meet his betrothed, my cousin
Dominique. I believe she is part of your staff. He is upset you have
denied access to her.”</p>
      <p>Vega didn’t pretend not to know who she meant. “Your Highness. I have
already explained to Merchant Dow that Spacer Radko is away on a covert
operation.”</p>
      <p>Her tone wasn’t exasperated, which it should have been. Or would have
been if she’d been talking to anyone else. Who was the act for? Sattur
Dow? Emperor Yu? Or both?</p>
      <p>“Surely you can send her a message to contact us. Or bring her back and
put someone else in her place.”</p>
      <p>Surely, Sattur Dow wasn’t fooled by this farce.</p>
      <p>But they kept on going.</p>
      <p>“Unfortunately, no,” Vega said. “On a covert operation, you do not
contact the operatives. It endangers the mission.”</p>
      <p>“My Lady Dominque is in a unique position. Surely, once you knew she was
betrothed—by the decree of the Emperor himself, no less—you would have
reconsidered.”</p>
      <p>“Had I known about it, yes.” Some of Vega’s natural bite was back. “But
this mission was planned two weeks beforehand. Spacer Radko always meant
to leave after seeing her family. Maybe if she had mentioned her changed
circumstances, I might have reconsidered. Unfortunately for you, she
omitted to do that.” She quivered with apparent righteous indignation
that didn’t come through the lines. Line one reflected wariness more
than anything else.</p>
      <p>“My Lady Dominique is a low-ranking spacer,” Sattur Dow said, and Ean
had to hold his own lines in at the insult. “Surely it is unusual to
send a spacer on a covert mission?”</p>
      <p>“Not that unusual. On operations like these, you take the one with the
strongest abilities in the area. Not to mention I also wanted to see how
she would perform as the leader of a team.”</p>
      <p>“Abilities.” Sattur Dow’s eyes gleamed. “So it was to do with line
ships?”</p>
      <p>“Why ever would you assume that? Especially on a covert op. No, sir.”
Vega’s tone was flat. “Radko has more specialized skills than that. She
speaks perfect, unaccented Redmond.”</p>
      <p>“Redmond.” Sattur Dow started.</p>
      <p>His reaction triggered a response in Vega—and maybe in Michelle, too—for
line one jangled. Strong enough and loud enough for Helmo, eating a late
meal in the mess, to pull up a screen of the bridge and watch what was
happening there while he ate. He was looking in the wrong place. He
should have been looking in Vega’s office.</p>
      <p>“Apparently her parents planned for her to be a diplomat. Instead, she
joined the fleet.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The first thing Vega did after she clicked off was call Ean. “Lambert,
were you listening?”</p>
      <p>“Why would you think that?”</p>
      <p>“Names were mentioned. I’ll assume that’s a yes. I want to know everyone
that man calls, and I don’t want him to know we’re checking him.”</p>
      <p>How did you explain that to the lines? “I’m not sure I—”</p>
      <p>Vega might have been reading his mind. “You won’t be the only one
looking. I want the stuff others are unlikely to catch.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll do what I can.” Ean clicked off. So he was a spy now. And Vega was
getting very used to the tools at her disposal. Which weren’t even her
tools, they were Michelle’s.</p>
      <p>Still, Vega had given him something.</p>
      <p>Michelle and her people lied by telling the truth, most of the time, and
Vega had told Sattur Dow that Radko was somewhere her language skills
were required. Therefore, she was on one of the six Redmond worlds.</p>
      <p>How could he use that to find out more?</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Today, Jordan Rossi accompanied Ean to training. Fergus was there, too,
along with Hernandez.</p>
      <p>“This ship smells like it’s been through a sewer,” Rossi said.</p>
      <p>Captain Gruen bristled. “Are you insulting my ship, Linesman?”</p>
      <p>“The people on it are polluting your lines.”</p>
      <p>“Exactly. I have tried telling Linesman Lambert that. He doesn’t
listen.”</p>
      <p>“You’re not a line, sweetheart. He doesn’t hear you.”</p>
      <p>“She <emphasis>is</emphasis> a captain,” Ean said. He heard her all right, and Rossi knew
that, so it was just another pointless point-scoring exercise.</p>
      <p>“They’ll come around,” Fergus said.</p>
      <p>Maybe. The antagonism crackling through the lines wasn’t helping, for
the lines considered Ean as one of their own. His biggest worry right
now was that the trainees would make enemies of the fleet lines before
they did come around.</p>
      <p>Even now, the lines were promising, <emphasis>“We’ll protect you.”</emphasis></p>
      <p><emphasis>“Thank you.”</emphasis> For you couldn’t turn their protection away.</p>
      <p>At least Rossi’s brooding presence kept most of the trainees awed and
cowed today.</p>
      <p>Everyone except Arnold Peters.</p>
      <p>“Why is Lambert training us, when Linesman Rossi is here?” Peters
demanded.</p>
      <p>Rossi, who was close to the Xanto quartet at the time, listening to
Nadia Kentish, narrowed his eyes. “Are you talking to me, or about me?”</p>
      <p>“I’m just saying—”</p>
      <p>“You think, I, Jordan Rossi, should waste my time on a level-six
linesman like you.”</p>
      <p>A chorus of something defensive washed through the lines. No linesman
liked the implication he or she was inferior.</p>
      <p>“If you think you’re so good,” Nadia Kentish said, “why are you here?”</p>
      <p>Rossi turned his narrowed gaze on her. “I am here because some bastard
sold my line contract, and my new contract owner demands I come.”</p>
      <p>Ean seized the silence that followed. “You are <emphasis>all</emphasis> here because you’ve
been ordered to come. It’s part of your job.” He watched them think
about that, heard the song of the lines change. “If you’d rather be
elsewhere, let me know, and I will arrange to have you returned to your
fleet.”</p>
      <p>“That is a joke,” Peters said.</p>
      <p>“What, that I can’t have you returned to your fleet?”</p>
      <p>“You know, and we know, that you can’t back out of a top secret project
like this unless you’re kicked out.”</p>
      <p>“So put up with it, then, or you will be kicked out.” Maybe even for
their own safety, for the lines were starting to pick up on Ean’s
exasperation. “Now. We have training.”</p>
      <p>It wasn’t the best training session. The only thing of interest that
came out of it was that Jordan Rossi spent a lot of time listening to
Nadia Kentish.</p>
      <p>“She’s not Jordan’s type,” Fergus said, later. “He likes his women
curvy.”</p>
      <p>Nadia Kentish had no curves at all.</p>
      <p>Ean laughed and felt in control for the first time since the start of
the session. “Fergus, there’s only one thing a linesman really cares
about.” Especially at line training. “It’s not her body he’s interested
in. I will bet you she’s a high-level line.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Sale had been out on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> all day. “How was training?” she
asked at dinner.</p>
      <p>“Okay.”</p>
      <p>“Only okay?” Sale made a face at what was on her plate. “Who is cooking,
these days?”</p>
      <p>“Ru Li and Hana,” Bhaksir said. “I think they do it badly deliberately,
hoping we’ll get someone in.”</p>
      <p>“We can suffer bad food for a while,” Sale said. “It’s just until we get
rid of the tourists. Only okay, Ean?”</p>
      <p>Maybe she’d already heard how bad it had been.</p>
      <p>“They’re still antagonistic. A couple of them, especially.”</p>
      <p>“Your old cartel mate being one of them?”</p>
      <p>Peters wouldn’t like being called a cartel mate. Why single him out,
particularly?</p>
      <p>“If he gets to be a real problem, let me know. You can get him kicked
off the project.”</p>
      <p>What he’d really like is for Peters to accept the new way of
communicating with the lines and to come on board. Ean would just have
to work out some strategies for doing it.</p>
      <p>And as for strategies. “If you wanted to find out who on your ship
called anyone in Redmond, Sale, how would you do it?”</p>
      <p>“Redmond.” Sale pushed her bowl away and stretched her legs out. Radko
used to do that, too. Ean missed her suddenly, so much it hurt. “Am I
doing it, or you?” Sale asked.</p>
      <p>“Both of us.”</p>
      <p>“Me, I’d go to Vega. She’ll be looking for anything like that. She’s got
access to all the messages that go out and come in, and she’ll be
checking their origin and what they say.”</p>
      <p>“And me?” It would be interesting to have Sale’s view, given she’d
worked so closely with lines over the last six months.</p>
      <p>“I’d ask the lines, of course.”</p>
      <p>“How do you recognize something from Redmond? I mean, how do you know
it’s not from Lancia, say? Or Aratoga?”</p>
      <p>“Identifying Redmond. Are they talking or not?”</p>
      <p>“Maybe.”</p>
      <p>“Well, there’s the language. Redmond uptrill at the end of their
sentences.” She tried to put an uptrill at the end of her own, failed
miserably. “You get the gist.”</p>
      <p>He nodded.</p>
      <p>“Otherwise, you can’t pick them. Not like Lancastrians, who are racially
distinct.” Then Sale looked Ean over. “Mostly, anyway.”</p>
      <p>Ean nodded again, not really hearing her. Suppose he asked the ship to
listen for words. Or sounds. Would it work?</p>
      <p>Back in his room, he settled down with a primer on the language of
Redmond and memorized a hundred basic words. He turned it into a song,
to make it easier to remember. When he had it down well enough, he
turned to the lines. All ships, on both eleven fleets.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Tell me when you hear sounds like these.”</emphasis> He concentrated on getting
them right, for with the lines, the sound had to be exact. <emphasis>“Greetings,
yes, no, today…”</emphasis></p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Ean was in the fresher, seriously considering whether he could convince
one of the ships to jump to Redmond and back to see if he could identify
it as a place, when the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> said in his mind,
<emphasis>“Words,”</emphasis> and suddenly he was looking at a place on ship he’d never
been but recognized as part of the VIP area that was set aside for
visitors. Of whom Vega had said, fervently, she hoped there were no
more.</p>
      <p>Jakob’s room, and Jakob was there, speaking into a comms.</p>
      <p>Ean stopped the fresher midcycle.</p>
      <p>Every sentence had an uptrill at the end of it.</p>
      <p>Afterward, he watched Jakob slip the comms into a side pocket of his
bag, pick up the bag, and walk down to the shuttle bay. Vega waited
there, two guards beside her, along with the woman they had identified
as a single-level linesman.</p>
      <p>Jakob indicated to the linesman that she enter the shuttle.</p>
      <p>“I’m sorry to hear about your mother,” Vega told Jakob. “I hope she
improves soon.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you, Commodore.” Jakob disappeared into the shuttle as well.</p>
      <p>Neither of them mentioned the linesman. Moments later, the shuttle was
gone. Vega watched it go.</p>
      <p>Ean called Vega. “Where did Jakob go?”</p>
      <p>“He’s going home. His mother is ill.”</p>
      <p>That was as likely as Sattur Dow’s being a suitable partner for Radko.</p>
      <p>“And the linesman?”</p>
      <p>“He offered to take her. Said he hadn’t known she had failed line
certification.”</p>
      <p>“And you believed that?”</p>
      <p>“I believe they didn’t expect us to pick up on it so easily. She’s a
virtual prisoner here. What else could he do but send her home?”</p>
      <p>Where she would tell everyone what she’d seen. Single-level linesmen
wouldn’t be a secret much longer. If they were now, for why had the
Worlds of the Lesser Gods brought a single-level linesman if they didn’t
think there was good reason to?</p>
      <p>“Are you listening to Jakob’s cabin?”</p>
      <p>“Naturally.”</p>
      <p>“You should listen to the last fifteen minutes then.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll do that.”</p>
      <p>Ean was in the fresher again when Vega called back. He sighed and
stopped the fresher. At least this time, it was nearly at the end of the
cycle.</p>
      <p>“You might tell me what happened in Jakob’s cabin,” Vega said. “For I
can’t see a problem.”</p>
      <p>She couldn’t? Maybe he was wrong about the language. He didn’t know it
really. But he had recognized the sound of some words.</p>
      <p>“Not even what he said?”</p>
      <p>“He didn’t say anything.”</p>
      <p>“But what about—?” Vega must have heard him talking into his comms. “I
want to see the security tape.”</p>
      <p>He thought for a moment she was going to refuse. Instead, she said,
“This had better be a secure line.”</p>
      <p>He sang it as secure as he could, then watched, disbelievingly, as Jakob
settled onto his bunk with a tired sigh, closed his eyes, then lay there
for fifteen minutes before getting up—with another tired sigh—and
leaving the room.</p>
      <p>“That wasn’t what I saw.”</p>
      <p>“So I gathered. Security on this ship is badly compromised.” He could
feel the rage coming through on line one. It wasn’t directed at him.
Vega liked to be in control.</p>
      <p>The ship—and thus Helmo, too—didn’t like it either. And the emotion was
building.</p>
      <p>“How do I tell the ship what to watch for?”</p>
      <p>“First we work out how he did it. Then we can work out how to prevent
it. Now, I’d like to hear what Jakob said.”</p>
      <p>Maybe Jakob’s people were listening in. But, <emphasis>“No,”</emphasis> from line eight,
<emphasis>“Secure.”</emphasis> Ean tried to stop worrying and concentrated on remembering
what he could. “He was talking into a comms. Words like… ” He gave what
he could remember, which wasn’t much. “Then he put his comms in his bag
and went down to the shuttle bay. Can you check if his mother really is
sick and that he is going home to see her?”</p>
      <p>“No. The Worlds of the Lesser Gods don’t like strangers, and to date,
they’ve never been considered a threat.”</p>
      <p>“So you don’t think it’s important?”</p>
      <p>“I’m saying Lancia doesn’t have anyone on the ground there, and even
with this alleged marriage coming up, they’re still blocking us sending
anyone in. Subtly, of course, but we know we’re being put off.”</p>
      <p>So they couldn’t check. Ean clicked off and spent the rest of the night
wondering how he could protect the ships from people like Jakob.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_seventeen_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>“I think you should run the training today,” Ean told Hernandez and
Fergus. He thought about including Rossi, who was there as well, but
that was something to keep in reserve. Right now, having Rossi listening
from the sidelines was just as good.</p>
      <p>“Can’t take the pressure?” Rossi asked.</p>
      <p>“No.”</p>
      <p>Sometimes, with a short answer like that, Rossi would go for the
jugular. Today, he just sniffed. “Radko’s a long time coming back, isn’t
she.”</p>
      <p>And sometimes he simply attacked from a different angle. Then, so could
Ean.</p>
      <p>“I’m glad you’re missing her, too, Rossi.”</p>
      <p>Rossi’s eyes narrowed.</p>
      <p>“You must be. You keep talking about her.”</p>
      <p>“It’s nice to see you get in a hit occasionally,” Bhaksir said,
approvingly, as Rossi turned away.</p>
      <p>Rossi probably did miss Radko. She was strong enough to stand up to him,
and Rossi had to respect that. Maybe he should work with Rossi to get
rid of Sattur Dow.</p>
      <p>As if.</p>
      <p>Although if Rossi could be persuaded, it was to his advantage.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“If you’re making plans”</emphasis> — from Rossi — <emphasis>“you shouldn’t do it in a room
full of raw linesmen in the middle of line training.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Ean turned his attention back to the lesson, where Peters was
complaining that now they had a seven running the training.</p>
      <p>Hernandez, who was a ten, but still wore the seven bars she’d been
certified with, bared her teeth. “If you think you can do better, why
not come up and do it?”</p>
      <p>Ean made his way to the front.</p>
      <p>“And not just a seven,” Peters said. “Aided by a linesman’s assistant.”</p>
      <p>One of his companions nudged him. Ean heard through the lines the quiet
warning Peters’s friend gave him. “Fergus Burns is Jordan Rossi’s
assistant.”</p>
      <p>Hernandez seized on the silence that followed. “Line one,” and started
greeting the lines.</p>
      <p>Ean moved to stand with one foot raised back against the wall. He
couldn’t do it for long. Radko did it for hours. What was Radko doing
now? Who was she working with and did she like them as a team?</p>
      <p>Did she ever think about him?</p>
      <p>Peters started arguing again.</p>
      <p>This was something Ean had to control. Even though Sale had hinted, the
previous night, that they would take care of it for him if he needed
them to.</p>
      <p>“Linesman Peters.” He used Gospetto’s training to increase the sound,
and pushed it out through the lines as well. “If you have issues, bring
it up with me and your commanding officer outside of the scheduled
training sessions. There’s a war on, and the sooner you learn these new
techniques, the sooner you will become useful to the New Alliance. Don’t
hold everyone else back because <emphasis>you</emphasis> don’t like what you’re doing.”</p>
      <p>The lines on all ships on both fleets joined in, for Ean hadn’t stopped
to target the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> lines only. It was so strong that all the trainees
stepped back. And, of course, all the captains checked to see what was
happening.</p>
      <p>“I’m holding us back?” Peters said. “What about what we were promised?
We were promised alien ships, but we’re stuck here on a piece of Gate
Union junk.”</p>
      <p>The captain of that piece of “junk” was listening in right now. Peters
had just made himself an enemy.</p>
      <p>“You’re not going anywhere until you learn correct line technique.”</p>
      <p>“Correct line technique. That’s a joke.”</p>
      <p>Nadia Kentish said, “So we come all this way off our own ships—at great
inconvenience to us—and we won’t even get to see the alien ships.”</p>
      <p>“I didn’t say that.” Of course they would introduce them to the ships,
and most of them would end up as crew. “But no one, especially not me,
will take unwilling linesmen onto a ship that uses lines like the alien
ships do.” For their own benefit, rather than the ships’. “I’m not
taking you anywhere until you show some appreciation of the lines.”</p>
      <p>“<emphasis>You’re</emphasis> not taking us.” That was Peters again. “Who made you the
arbiter of what we can do and can’t do?”</p>
      <p>“The New Alliance council,” Rossi said, before Ean could say anything.
“They made Lambert senior linesman. All line matters go through him,
particularly anything to do with the Department of Alien Affairs.” He
glanced at his comms. “And most of us have better things to do than sit
around making power grabs.”</p>
      <p>It quietened them, although Ean wasn’t sure it helped. Wasn’t sure it
was meant to. It definitely gave them more to complain about though at
least they did it quietly. Except, of course, Ean heard muttered
comments through the lines.</p>
      <p>“The Department of Alien Affairs is controlled by Lancia.”</p>
      <p>“Jordan Rossi should be the senior linesman.”</p>
      <p>“They’re using a junior to train us.”</p>
      <p>He made a point of moving over and standing close to each mutterer, to
listen to their singing.</p>
      <p>Hernandez continued with the greetings.</p>
      <p>In the middle of the trainees’ chorused reply, one of the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>
fleet ships joined in. A song of welcome.</p>
      <p>They usually restricted training to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet.</p>
      <p>First, the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> itself tried to choose its own crew, now this
ship was doing its own thing. Ean checked which one it was. That one,
the little scout right on the edge of the fleet. Scout Ship Three.</p>
      <p>Ean changed his song to target that specific ship. The lines answered,
happy at the attention. Happy to be getting visitors.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Visitors?”</emphasis> Ean heard air being cycled out of the shuttle bay on the
scout, then being cycled back in.</p>
      <p>A shuttle had landed.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Who?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p><emphasis>“Lines.”</emphasis> And there were lines. Ean could hear them as they made their
way onto the ship. The single-level linesman from the Factor’s trip to
the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. Another single. Plus a third with the characteristic sound
of a trained, multilevel linesman.</p>
      <p>Ean sang the lines open to the fleet ships. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>, the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>, and the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. “Someone has boarded a scout ship.” He pushed the image up
onto the main screens of each bridge.</p>
      <p>“Do we know who?” Captain Helmo asked.</p>
      <p>On the scout ship the boarders were using in-suit comms to talk to each
other. That was line five. Ean pushed the comms through as well.</p>
      <p>“Never mind. Anyone know Redmond?” for there was a distinctive uptrill
at the end of each sentence.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> and the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> both nudged Ean. <emphasis>“That sound
you were looking for.”</emphasis></p>
      <p><emphasis>“Thanks.”</emphasis> Wasn’t it obvious he was already listening?</p>
      <p>“That is too advanced for these trainees,” Hernandez said.</p>
      <p>Ean blinked at her.</p>
      <p>“How long?” Helmo asked the other captains.</p>
      <p>“Four hours for me,” Kari Wang said.</p>
      <p>“Five.” “Five point six,” from Wendell and Gruen. Wendell’s navigator
was already calculating the fastest way.</p>
      <p>“And six for me,” Helmo said. “Can they jump the ship, Ean?”</p>
      <p>“I don’t think so.” And Ean said to the ship, <emphasis>“Don’t let them take you
away from the fleet.”</emphasis> He changed the tune to talk specifically to line
eight on the scout and on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. <emphasis>“You’ll keep the ship
safe.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>A ragged echo followed his song. <emphasis>“Keep the ship safe.”</emphasis> The trainees.</p>
      <p>Hernandez threw up her hands.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Safe,”</emphasis> promised the eights, while the scout showed Ean its new lines.</p>
      <p>Without a level-seven linesman—and one who knew what he was doing—they
couldn’t jump the scout ship without jumping all the ships. The question
was, did they know how to jump the ships at all? And if they didn’t,
what was the point of boarding it? Did they think they could camp there
while their linesmen worked out what to do?</p>
      <p>“Boarded safely,” said one of the suited figures, this time in Standard,
and Ean recognized the speaker. Jakob. “Come in <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“Receiving you loud and clear.”</p>
      <p>Ean was getting used to juggling multiple ships and lines. While he
concentrated on the scout and its immediate lines, he heard Vega call
Helmo. “The <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> is the ship Jakob caught to go home. It jumped at
23:11 hours last night.”</p>
      <p>The communication was real-time. How long had the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> been in this
sector?</p>
      <p>He knew one person who would know, for she was paranoid about strange
ships.</p>
      <p>“Captain Kari Wang. When did the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> arrive?”</p>
      <p>“Five days, twenty-three hours, and six minutes ago.” Kari Wang knew the
exact date and time of arrival and departure for every ship in the
Haladean cluster. “It arrived with the <emphasis>Lancastrian Emperor</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>Vega said, “Yet to all intents and purposes, it jumped at 23:11 hours
yesterday.”</p>
      <p>“No it didn’t.” Kari Wang was positive.</p>
      <p>“Redmond has a cloaking device,” Wendell said. “And some of these people
were speaking Redmond. They would have cloaked, then moved away.”</p>
      <p>But the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> wasn’t a Redmond ship. It was registered to the Worlds of
the Lesser Gods; for otherwise, it would never have been allowed
anywhere near the New Alliance headquarters. Although, given that Jakob
had sent Redmond a message, it was likely Jakob was working with them.</p>
      <p>“Ten minutes to jump,” the captain on the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> said.</p>
      <p>On the scout ship, there was a flurry of activity. Two of the linesmen
held a U-shaped bar—as big as they were and twice the length—against the
wall. Their knees were bent, their faces red with the effort.</p>
      <p>The third linesman gave a thumbs-up.</p>
      <p>“Electromagnetic loops in place,” Jakob said. “Decloak when ready.”</p>
      <p>“Acknowledged,” from the other ship. “Decloaking. Engaging magnets from
this end.” Whatever the linesmen were holding thumped against the wall,
dragging them with it, nearly knocking them off their feet.</p>
      <p>The linesmen stepped away.</p>
      <p>“Enemy ship has decloaked,” Helmo said. “We can all see it now.”</p>
      <p>“Run test,” the captain of the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> said. “Reverse thrusters at 0.01
speed.”</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t notice anything, but a minute later Captain Helmo said,
“Scout ship moving at same speed and direction as enemy ship.
Electromagnetic field detected. Strength, forty Tesla.”</p>
      <p>It must have been a strong magnet, for no one commented on how close the
ships were.</p>
      <p>“Eight minutes to jump,” the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> captain said.</p>
      <p>Last time Ean had prevented a ship jumping, it had been with the
cooperation of all the line eights in the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet. Could he do
the same thing with the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> fleet?</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Can you hold the ship?”</emphasis> he asked the eights.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Hold?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>How did he explain it? <emphasis>“Stop the</emphasis> Iolo <emphasis>jumping through the void.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“But they’re not jumping.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>The lines didn’t understand the concept of future. They understood now.</p>
      <p>On another ship—seemingly forever away right now—the engineer for
Galactic News was calling his producer.</p>
      <p>“We’re recording,” the producer said in an angry whisper.</p>
      <p>“Coop. Something’s happening. Something big. You’ve got to check it
out.”</p>
      <p>“We’re on air.”</p>
      <p>“Coop, you have to listen to this.”</p>
      <p>“Take over,” the producer told his assistant, and stalked out of the
studio.</p>
      <p>Ean had to meet that linesman one day. He should be here, training. “The
media’s about to get involved.”</p>
      <p>Someone, he wasn’t sure who, pushed that through to Abram.</p>
      <p>Six minutes.</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t know what he had done last time to hold the ship in their
space, and he didn’t know how to convince the lines to do it. If he
couldn’t prevent the ship from jumping, what could he do?</p>
      <p>What did he know?</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> had one jump. If they couldn’t get a jump, they wouldn’t move
their ship. Therefore, Ean only had to hold it until the jump window was
gone. Or until their own people could capture the ship. Which was four
hours for the <emphasis>Kari Wang</emphasis>, more for the other ships.</p>
      <p>Unless he moved the ship closer. Which would prove, once and for all,
that ships <emphasis>could</emphasis> jump cold.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Move that ship cold, bastard, and I’ll kill you myself.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Jordan Rossi had never trusted the ships the way Ean had.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“If I don’t, Redmond will get the scout.”</emphasis> And possibly, the whole
fleet.</p>
      <p>“You’ll kill us all,” Rossi said.</p>
      <p>Rossi was wrong. Ean wouldn’t kill them. The lines would ensure ships
didn’t jump into each other. He changed his song to target the enemy
ship.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“I need you to come.”</emphasis> He tried to visualize the place in space that
the ship needed to come to. He could hear the ships in his mind. A
symphony of sound, where each sound placed the ship in a certain
position, and he could tell where they were in relation to each other.
<emphasis>“When they tell you to jump—”</emphasis> But he couldn’t tell them where yet
because they’d jump there now, and that meant the jump would be wasted.
He had to make the captain of the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> think his jump was gone.</p>
      <p>Rossi grabbed Bhaksir’s blaster. “If you won’t stop him, I will.”</p>
      <p>“Jump in four minutes,” the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> captain said.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir grappled for her blaster. But Rossi was determined. Ru Li and
Hana came running to assist.</p>
      <p>“You have no idea how dangerous he is.” Rossi managed to get his finger
through the trigger of the blaster. He fired as Bhaksir chopped her hand
down on his.</p>
      <p>Hot pain lanced Ean’s thigh. The bulk of the burn went onto the deck,
left a sizzling hole in the floor.</p>
      <p>Gruen would kill them.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir chopped down again. Something cracked, and Ean shared the pain
of Rossi’s broken wrist as it washed through the ship. It didn’t stop
him. Not until Ru Li and Hana wrestled Rossi’s arms behind his back and
put them into a restraining band.</p>
      <p>“He’s got a broken wrist,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“I don’t care what he’s got,” Bhaksir panted. “He’s insane. And I am
more than happy to kill him right now.”</p>
      <p>Two minutes. Ean’s leg was agony, and he could feel waves of pain from
Rossi as well.</p>
      <p>“I’m not the insane one,” Rossi said. “He has no right to play with our
lives like that.”</p>
      <p>Nadia Kentish snatched Bhaksir’s blaster off the floor and pointed it at
Bhaksir’s throat. “You have no right to treat a level-ten linesman like
that.”</p>
      <p>The trainee linesmen surrounded Bhaksir and her crew. Many of them had
their own blasters out now. The only ones who stood apart were the three
Lancastrian linesmen. But they didn’t help their fellow Lancastrians
either.</p>
      <p>“One minute to jump,” the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> captain said.</p>
      <p>Peters turned his blaster onto Ean. “I don’t know what he was doing, but
if Linesman Rossi didn’t like it, then I don’t like it either.”</p>
      <p>Line eight couldn’t protect them all. Or could it?</p>
      <p>The paramedics, waiting around the walls, drew their own weapons.</p>
      <p>The paramedics. Here for line eleven. Yes, Ean could use that.</p>
      <p>“All blasters on stun,” Bhaksir said, to her own team and the
paramedics. “No unnecessary injuries.”</p>
      <p>Ean called up the two elevens. <emphasis>“Talk to me. Strong, please. Stronger
than you’ve ever been.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>The two lines came in loud and clear, felling half the trainees. Even
Ean, who was expecting it, fell to his knees.</p>
      <p>It stretched the skin on his leg tight, pulling the skin where his leg
was burned.</p>
      <p>He couldn’t breathe. Except he had to, for the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> captain said,
<emphasis>“Jumping now.”</emphasis></p>
      <p><emphasis>“Here. Jump to here,”</emphasis> and Ean sang a position to the ship. He had no
idea where it was, he just knew it was close.</p>
      <p>“Jump complete,” the navigator on the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> said.</p>
      <p>“Confirm position,” the captain said. “Jakob, we have—”</p>
      <p>“Sir.” Something in the navigator’s voice stopped the captain.</p>
      <p>Behind it all, Ean could hear the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet captains swearing.
“I’ll kill Ean personally one day,” Kari Wang said. “I wish he’d tell us
what he’s doing before he does it. Mael, change course for the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>Gruen burst in with a team of soldiers. She was already firing. Blasters
on stun. Trainees went down under the combined onslaught of the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, Bhaksir’s team, and Gruen’s team.</p>
      <p>“Get me the local gate station,” the captain of the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> said.</p>
      <p>Ean redirected the request—and the signal from the bridge on that
ship—to the only place he could at the moment. The other fleet ships.</p>
      <p>Kari Wang answered the call. “Captain, your message isn’t getting
through. You are in New Alliance space, attempting to steal New Alliance
property. Prepare to be boarded.”</p>
      <p>The captain ignored her. “How long till they get here?” he asked one of
his crew.</p>
      <p>“Thirteen minutes.”</p>
      <p>“Damn.” He called Jakob.</p>
      <p>Ean thought about rerouting that one as well, but what was the point.</p>
      <p>“Jakob. The jump didn’t work, and they’re jamming our comms. The nearest
ship will be here in thirteen minutes. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. I’ll give you five
minutes to get your shuttle here.”</p>
      <p>“Thirteen minutes should be enough to get another jump,” Jakob said.</p>
      <p>“They’re jamming our comms.” Did Ean imagine the gritted teeth that went
with it? “You’ve four minutes, forty-five seconds to get your shuttle
here, or I’ll abandon you.”</p>
      <p>Because Jakob was on the scout ship, Ean knew how seriously he
considered staying. The decision to leave was a bitter chocolate on
Ean’s tongue.</p>
      <p>“Get to the shuttle,” Jakob told the linesmen.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“No,”</emphasis> wailed the scout ship.</p>
      <p>It wouldn’t take much for Ean to hold them there, but that would mean he
was giving the ship to these linesmen, effectively giving the enemy a
ship.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Let them go. They’re not yours. They’re trying to take you from your
rightful crew.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Who is our crew?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“You have to wait your turn. But it’s coming.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> came in loud and strong. <emphasis>“You promise and promise, but
we never get anything. Make good on your promise. Lines for my ship,”</emphasis>
where “my ship” was the distinctive sound of the scout ship.</p>
      <p>If he didn’t give them something, they’d take the enemy linesmen. They
couldn’t afford to do that. Ean looked around. Two of the Xanto
linesmen, Alex Joy and Thomas Peacock, helped Lina Vang to her feet,
while Nadia Kentish, bound with the same restraining tags as Rossi,
scowled at them.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“These. What about these ones?”</emphasis> The ships were to go to individual
worlds, weren’t they? Well, Xanto had got itself a ship.</p>
      <p>“Shuttle leaving Scout Three,” Kari Wang said.</p>
      <p>Ean sagged with relief.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Ours.”</emphasis> Scout and parent ship inspected the four. The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>
didn’t complain about the scout getting assigned linesmen before it did,
which was worrying. But then Ean already knew the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> was
choosing its own crew.</p>
      <p>Rossi started laughing.</p>
      <p>“What’s wrong with him now?” Bhaksir asked.</p>
      <p>“You’re out of control, Lambert. You’re as crazy as the <emphasis>Balao</emphasis>, and
you’re in charge of all this.”</p>
      <p>Ean ignored him, listening instead to the talk between the ships as they
discussed battle tactics. “Too close to fire,” Kari Wang said. “And I
don’t know these weapons well enough yet. We’re as likely to hit one of
our own ships.”</p>
      <p>“They’ll cloak as soon as the shuttle is on board,” Wendell said. “Make
us think they jumped.”</p>
      <p>Which was exactly what they did.</p>
      <p>“Ship has disappeared,” Captain Wendell said.</p>
      <p>“No it hasn’t,” Kari Wang said, and a surge of ferocious joy swept the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. “You can’t hide a line ship from us.”</p>
      <p>“What do you need me to do?” Ean asked. He didn’t want to think about
the mess here on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>. Not yet.</p>
      <p>“Keep us linked to the cameras and sound on the bridge of the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis>,”
Captain Helmo said promptly. “Prevent them calling the gate station.
We’ll do the rest. Nicely done, Ean.”</p>
      <p>Ean looked around the cargo bay, at the stunned bodies lying on the
floor, at Gruen and her crew with weapons poised to shoot anyone who
made a wrong move. It wasn’t nicely done at all.</p>
      <p>At least Rossi had stopped laughing.</p>
      <p>Out in the corridor, Bhaksir was supervising the return of the trainees
to their cabins, talking quietly through the comms to Sale, on the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. “It blew up out of nowhere.”</p>
      <p>“Is everyone okay?”</p>
      <p>A paramedic came over to Ean, checked his leg, sprayed painkiller onto
it. The cessation of pain was so good it hurt. The dull throb of Rossi’s
wrist became the dominant pain. “You need to look at Rossi’s wrist,” he
told the paramedic.</p>
      <p>“I don’t need help from you,” Rossi said.</p>
      <p>The paramedic finished dressing Ean’s leg, then moved over to Rossi. “I
have to cut the restraints,” he told Captain Gruen.</p>
      <p>She nodded, then glared at the final person still under restraint. Nadia
Kentish. “If we let you go, will you behave like a rational human
being?” And to the other Xanto linesmen who were hovering close. “You
three as well.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, Captain,” Lina Vang said although the words came hard.</p>
      <p>Kentish looked at Rossi, whose wrist had swelled up around the
restraint. “He’s a level-ten linesman. You’re treating him like a—” She
stopped, as if she couldn’t think of anything bad enough.</p>
      <p>Gruen pointed to the damaged floor. “Nobody damages my ship and gets
away with it.” She moved on to help with the cleanup, and to ensure all
the linesmen were taken back to their rooms. “You’re all under lockdown
until this is sorted.”</p>
      <p>Rossi laughed again. “She’s as crazy as he is,” he told Kentish.</p>
      <p>Gruen was a little unbalanced where her ship was concerned, but who
could blame her since it had been taken away from her once before.</p>
      <p>“If this is what the New Alliance line program is about, then no wonder
we’re losing the war,” Kentish said.</p>
      <p>“You’re part of that program, Kentish,” Ean said. “If you stay in it,
you’ll have a say in how it goes.” He sounded like Sale. “You can change
it from the inside once you’re in, but if you get kicked out, you lose
your chance.”</p>
      <p>“It’s self-destructing from the inside. It has been ever since they put
a nobody in charge instead of a respected linesman like Jordan Rossi.”</p>
      <p>Fergus, who’d been nearby checking the last of the downed linesmen,
stood up and came over to join them. “Yet without that ‘nobody,’ people
like you and me wouldn’t be linesmen, Nadia.”</p>
      <p>The other Xanto linesmen moved in front of Kentish, as if she was under
attack.</p>
      <p>“So they say. I haven’t seen any evidence of line ability yet.”</p>
      <p>“Maybe because you haven’t listened.”</p>
      <p>“I still wouldn’t pass line certification.”</p>
      <p>“That’s because line testing is flawed.” How many times did he have to
say it before they would believe him? “You’re a single-level linesman.
You’ll never pass certification because current testing starts at one
and goes up. But you’re a linesman all the same.”</p>
      <p>“And you know this. How?”</p>
      <p>“If you listened to the lines, you’d know it yourself. But you won’t.
Instead, you listen to people like Peters spouting poison and choose to
believe them instead.” Ean forced himself to calm, for the lines were
getting agitated, and that was sure to bring Gruen back with a demand
they all get off her ship. “You won’t allow yourself to hear. Your mind
is closed. Your ears are closed. And as long as they’re closed, you’ll
never make it as a linesman in this fleet. Because the lines have no use
for someone who doesn’t listen.”</p>
      <p>Rossi sniggered.</p>
      <p>“And you need to learn some things, too,” Ean told him.</p>
      <p>“What, listening?”</p>
      <p>“You need to learn to trust the lines. You’re as paranoid as these
people. You can’t try to kill me every time we attempt something new
because you’re scared.”</p>
      <p>“You can’t blame me for being scared. You are out of control.”</p>
      <p>He should shut up now, or otherwise the whole thing would escalate
again. Ean gritted his teeth. “You have to trust the lines.”</p>
      <p>“I trust the lines. What I don’t trust is some crazy, out-of-control
<emphasis>human</emphasis> line twelve who has no idea what he’s doing. You’ve been lucky
so far, Lambert, but one day you’ll be wrong. And I don’t want to be
near you when you are wrong because you have so much power, you’ll
destroy us all. Including the elevens. My job”—he thumped his chest with
the arm the paramedic had splinted for him; Ean felt the twinge of pain
that came with it—“is to keep us alive since you obviously don’t care if
we live or die.”</p>
      <p>He did care. “There’s a war on.”</p>
      <p>“What did I miss?” Fergus asked.</p>
      <p>“You jumped a ship cold into the middle of a fleet of ships.”</p>
      <p>“What <emphasis>did</emphasis> I miss?” Fergus asked the Xanto quartet. Lina Vang shook her
head.</p>
      <p>“The alien ships don’t jump into each other.”</p>
      <p>“Wait.” Fergus held up a hand to both of them. “Just wait. Ean, why did
you jump a ship?”</p>
      <p>“Redmond was trying to steal it.” Jakob and the linesmen were from the
Worlds of the Lesser Gods, but the captain had been speaking Redmond.</p>
      <p>“As if,” Nadia Kentish said. “We haven’t heard about it. And we were in
line training when all this happened.”</p>
      <p>Rossi pulled himself to his feet. “On the contrary, sweetheart. No one
is disputing that Redmond attempted to steal a line ship. They’re still
chasing the thieves now. It’s on the news vids.”</p>
      <p>Galactic News had picked up the story—Ean could see them running the vid
of Scout Ship Three appearing in the midst of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet. Then
the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> disappearing.</p>
      <p>“Your ship, incidentally. Which you are ignoring.” Based on Rossi’s
malicious smile, that barb was for Ean, though he’d been talking to the
Xantos. “No. What we are arguing about is the high-handed way Lambert
deals with problems like this. He’s like a loaded weapon with all the
safeties off. One day, you’ll pick it up, and it will discharge.”</p>
      <p>Ru Li, Hana, and Hernandez came in then. “Linesmen lockdown,” Ru Li said
to the Xantos. “And you’re the last four not in your cabins.”</p>
      <p>They went silently.</p>
      <p>Out in the corridor, Bhaksir finished her call to Sale with a heartfelt,
“I wish Radko were here.”</p>
      <p>So did Ean.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> chased the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> for four hours. Captain Yorath, on the
<emphasis>Iolo</emphasis>, tried the whole time to get another jump. Ean sent the requests
through the lines to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet ships, where they stopped.</p>
      <p>The ships finally got into clear space. Captain Kari Wang gave one
warning. “Attention, the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis>. Surrender, or we will fire. You have
three minutes to surrender.”</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> fired on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>, but they’d been watching the feeds
from the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis>’s bridge all this time. By now they knew how many people
were on board and had feeds of every board. They knew where the weapons
were aimed. The <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> avoided the shot, and the next one. Then fired
a shot of its own.</p>
      <p>That was all it took. One shot. A beam of some kind that Kari Wang
admitted she had no idea what it did, but one of her eights wanted her
to try it.</p>
      <p>If it hadn’t been for the captain of the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis>’s insisting everyone
wear suits, “Because we don’t know what this ship can do,” there
wouldn’t have been any prisoners, for the beam sliced the ship open.</p>
      <p>Galactic Media hadn’t filmed that final battle, but two hours later it
was showing on the vids. The image must have come from the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>
itself.</p>
      <p>Ean tried to avoid watching it.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_eighteen_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>The second crate of iced Gippian shellfish got them down to Aeolus, the
largest Redmond world. They left Leonard happily talking about the fate
of the other crate—the one he hadn’t delivered to Redmond. Tonight, the
crew on Captain Engen’s ship would dine on fresh Gippian shellfish.</p>
      <p>“With Lancian wine,” Han had said. “That’s what you normally eat them
with. “Golden Lake wine from the Radko”—he stumbled over that,
recovered—“Estates is best.” He looked at Radko, carefully this time.</p>
      <p>“I don’t know about Lancian wine,” Leonard said. “We’ll use anything
we’ve got. Now, if you want to avoid official entry, you should slip out
the side door here. Bergin, down the end, takes a flat thousand-credit
fee.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>Bergin dressed like he made a lot of money out of people entering
illegally. It was hard to believe he hadn’t attracted the attention of
the authorities. Then, he probably had. It was as good a way as any of
keeping track of illegal aliens on your world.</p>
      <p>“Use these noncitizen chits when you purchase anything.” He held out
four discs, and waited.</p>
      <p>“Thanks.” Radko handed over chits worth four thousand credits and
received the IDs in return. “We’re looking for a clinic. Can you
recommend one that won’t ask questions?”</p>
      <p>He paused. She held out a two-hundred-credit chit.</p>
      <p>“The more you pay, the better quality advice you get.”</p>
      <p>“She’s only asking a question,” Han said.</p>
      <p>Radko added another two hundred.</p>
      <p>“Fabro’s clinic. Two blocks down. They’re discreet. They take chits.”
Bergin pocketed the chits. “Welcome to the center of the universe.” He
smiled at Han. “It’s a pleasure doing business with you.”</p>
      <p>Han scowled.</p>
      <p>Radko led them out of the building. The wind nearly blew them away.
She’d forgotten the wind. She would have liked to walk faster, but they
had to move at van Heel’s pace. Van Heel was trying to hurry, but it was
obvious every step was painful, and pushing against the wind didn’t
help.</p>
      <p>“I’m sorry I—”</p>
      <p>“Save it, van Heel. There’s no need to apologize for being injured in
the line of duty. Not unless you were being stupid.” Then Radko smiled
at the other woman. “It will be nice to have you whole again, I admit.”</p>
      <p>“You think it will be nice.” Van Heel paused. “I can’t wait.”</p>
      <p>“Is this the first time you’ve been injured?”</p>
      <p>Van Heel nodded.</p>
      <p>She was holding up well.</p>
      <p>“Have you ever been injured?” Chaudry asked.</p>
      <p>“A few times. I had a dislocated shoulder and a hairline fracture in my
ankle not that long ago.” Radko smiled at the memory. “What they call
friendly fire.”</p>
      <p>Had Ean accidentally injured any others on her team? Bhaksir and the
others didn’t know when to step aside.</p>
      <p>“Someone on your own side? But that’s—”</p>
      <p>“He was saving our lives at the time.” And the Alliance. Not to mention
acquiring a fleet of spaceships for them. “You’ll like him, Chaudry.”</p>
      <p>She missed him.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Four hundred credits didn’t buy much of a medical center. It was clean,
but the prefab walls were full of holes and the equipment so old that
Radko didn’t recognize the model.</p>
      <p>“I’d almost rather stay injured,” van Heel said.</p>
      <p>The medic looked tired, and his scrubs, while clean, had a brown stain
down one side. Someone had bled on him, and he hadn’t gotten rid of the
stain.</p>
      <p>“Blaster wound,” he said, as if he saw them every day. “You’re lucky it
hasn’t turned septic.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry bit off a protest, then meekly followed the medic into the room.
Radko and Han came with them.</p>
      <p>“I don’t normally do this with an audience.” Yet he didn’t kick them
out. He swabbed van Heel’s injury, then dropped the swab into a scanner
and inspected the readings. “At least it’s clean. Someone knows
something about cleaning wounds.”</p>
      <p>Radko silently pointed to Chaudry.</p>
      <p>The medic nodded and disinfected a patch of van Heel’s uninjured skin,
then sliced a small piece off. The disinfectant must have had numbing
properties, for van Heel didn’t complain.</p>
      <p>What happened if your whole skin was too badly burned to take a starter
sample from?</p>
      <p>“Regen takes hours. There’s no point staying around to watch it.” The
medic put the sample into nutrient, then slid the sample and nutrient
into a small opening on the side of the regenerator.</p>
      <p>Radko got the hint. “We’ll leave you here, Chaudry, while we look
around. Call us if anything happens.” A proper regeneration required
three sessions. She’d bet none of this doctor’s patients ever stayed for
more than one.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Radko used the noncitizen chit Bergin had given her, and more credit
chits, to hire an aircar. The money was running out faster than she’d
like, but she didn’t want to use her own credit unless she had to.</p>
      <p>The aircar had a massive engine and enormous stabilizers. They found the
reason for them as soon as they took off, for the buffeting wind was
strong.</p>
      <p>The first thing Radko did when they were in the air was bring up the
satellite views of the street TwoPaths Engineering was on.</p>
      <p>The buildings here were buttressed up against the castle wall. Had it
been Lancia, Radko would have assumed that TwoPaths was part of the
family of the Factor of the Lesser Gods because Lancia would never allow
a commercial company—especially not one from another world—so close to
the castle. All it would take was some well-placed explosive—they had
some with them—and they could blow a hole in the wall and get into the
palace.</p>
      <p>She didn’t need to zoom in to see that the TwoPaths building was well
protected, for it had the characteristic wavy outline of a building
covered with a security netfield. Which meant she wouldn’t get inside
without blowing the net. It was a lot of security for a site TwoPaths
listed as a warehouse.</p>
      <p>Lucky for them, a net generator was big—it worked on similar principles
to a Pandora field diffuser—and the generator itself was normally
situated outside. Not only that, people who relied on such nets tended
to think they were enough security.</p>
      <p>They wouldn’t have much time once the net was down. TwoPaths would have
a private security firm on call.</p>
      <p>There was a yard on the east side, with a generator-sized structure
close to the wall. There would be a door behind that, for someone had to
service the generator.</p>
      <p>So, get in, take out the generator, and enter via the back door.</p>
      <p>Abutting the yard was another shop. They could blow the wall, but they
couldn’t hide the fact they had been there. They could misdirect,
however, and make people think it was an assault on the palace.</p>
      <p>Radko turned her attention to the shop next door. It was a sweet shop
that—according to the travel guides—was famed throughout the Worlds of
the Lesser Gods. Radko had never heard of it.</p>
      <p>She clicked off the screen, and said to Han, “Let’s be tourists.”</p>
      <p>They used the aircar to hop from one major tourist spot to another
around the Factor’s palace, checking out potential escape routes.</p>
      <p>“The wind in this place,” Han said, as the aircar rocked. “I’d hate to
live here.”</p>
      <p>Radko was glad of the powerful engine and stabilizers; otherwise, they
would have been blown from one side of Aeolus to the other.</p>
      <p>“It’s huge,” Han said. “Almost as large as the palace at Baoshan.”</p>
      <p>It was. She landed the aircar as close as she could, and they explored
further on foot.</p>
      <p>TwoPaths Engineering was a blank, featureless building. There were no
windows on the lower level and only a few on the levels above. The blue
shimmer of the security net was noticeable here on the ground. The
street was full of cameras. They’d never get in unannounced. Radko’s
initial plan, using the sweet shop, looked the most promising.</p>
      <p>The line for the sweet shop was out the door.</p>
      <p>Radko had plenty of time to check the location of the cameras. There was
one on the outside of the shop, and one camera from TwoPaths facing the
shop door.</p>
      <p>A discreet plaque outside the TwoPaths door stated, THESE PREMISES ARE
PROTECTED BY MES SECURITY.</p>
      <p>Once inside the sweet shop, she could see a rear door behind the counter
which led to a cool room or a kitchen. A conveyor belt of sweets rolled
in from out the back, continuously replenishing the supply. The servers
were human, part of the archaic charm of the shop. As she waited to be
served, Radko looked up, pretending to be bored. There were two cameras,
both of them aimed toward the counter.</p>
      <p>How much protection did TwoPaths have out the back?</p>
      <p>What was she looking for when she got in? The report itself? Or evidence
of what Redmond was doing there? Both, if she could get it, and most
importantly of all, information on why they expected to have access to a
twelve soon.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>They took a room in a hotel close to the TwoPaths building. It was a
tourist hotel, horrendously overpriced because of its proximity to the
castle. Radko checked the street views. No one went into or came out of
TwoPaths Engineering.</p>
      <p>Van Heel came back whole and new-skinned.</p>
      <p>Chaudry was pleased with the result. “But you will be careful,” he said.
“Really, you should have three sessions of regen. This is only the
first.”</p>
      <p>“I can use my arm,” van Heel said, flexing it. “And it doesn’t hurt
anymore. I’m happy.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry should never have been a soldier. He should have been a doctor.
Instead, he’d be a linesman. But a linesman could also be a doctor. If
they had linesmen who were engineers, why not linesmen who were doctors?</p>
      <p>They ate a room-service dinner. On the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> it would
be midmorning. Ean would be training linesmen or looking at alien ships.</p>
      <p>Don’t think about her old life.</p>
      <p>“Here’s what we do,” Radko said. “Tonight, we break into TwoPaths
Engineering by going through the back of the sweet shop.” She sketched a
rough plan on her comms. “I saw three cameras. They looked like basic
Schwetters to me. We need to disable them, set them onto a loop of some
kind. Can we do that?”</p>
      <p>Van Heel nodded. “It will be easier if we know which security firm
they’re with.”</p>
      <p>“MES.”</p>
      <p>“Good. I can hack them. What else?”</p>
      <p>“TwoPaths has a security net. I think the generator is in the yard out
back. We’ll have to blow a hole in the wall to get to it, but it
shouldn’t be hard.”</p>
      <p>“Blowing a hole in the wall,” Han said. “Won’t someone hear us?”</p>
      <p>Radko patted the box of explosive. “You’ve never used this stuff before.
It’s quiet.”</p>
      <p>“I’ve never done any real soldiering before this trip. Except marching.”</p>
      <p>“Me either,” Chaudry said. “I’m thinking maybe Stores wasn’t so bad,
after all.”</p>
      <p>If Chaudry chose to adopt his line heritage, he’d never work in Stores
again.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>They spent the rest of the day making plans.</p>
      <p>Radko insisted they all take time out to rest. She sent Han and Chaudry
off first, afterward van Heel and herself. When she woke, it was
midnight. The wind sounded as if it had eased a little. Van Heel was
still asleep, and Han was yawning over his screen.</p>
      <p>“Where’s Chaudry?”</p>
      <p>Han stifled another yawn. “Balcony.”</p>
      <p>Radko went out to talk to him. “How do you feel?”</p>
      <p>He leaned on the railing and looked up at the stars. “I didn’t see the
stars on Redmond. This is only the second time I have seen stars from
another world.”</p>
      <p>The first time would have been when he was with House of Isador. That
was on Centaurus, which was close to Old Earth. Radko had seen the stars
on Centaurus. They were a long way away.</p>
      <p>“Nothing compares to seeing stars in space. Down here on planet, it’s
nothing really.” Especially when obscured by city lights.</p>
      <p>“When I joined the fleet, I thought that’s what I’d be seeing. Stars in
space. Other worlds. Fighting.”</p>
      <p>“Yet you ended up in Stores.”</p>
      <p>“It’s funny, isn’t it. When I was a boy, all I wanted to be was a
doctor. Until—” He broke off, and looked away.</p>
      <p>Radko started to softly sing the fleet anthem. “The stars my
destination.”</p>
      <p>He took up the chorus with her. “I rise. I rise.”</p>
      <p>His voice was clear and light. Radko hadn’t needed confirmation, but
this was it. He was definitely a level one.</p>
      <p>The song died away. Radko let the silence extend.</p>
      <p>“Stores isn’t so bad,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>Yet he could have been a linesman.</p>
      <p>“Tell me, why did you choose to fail line certification?”</p>
      <p>Chaudry stiffened. “You don’t choose to fail. You certify or you don’t.”</p>
      <p>“You’re a one, Chaudry. You couldn’t have failed. Not unless you did it
deliberately. More to the point, once you failed, why didn’t you go back
to medical studies?”</p>
      <p>She let the silence extend again.</p>
      <p>Chaudry turned back to watch the stars. “Do you have a partner out
there, back on that ship you came from?”</p>
      <p>It was a clumsy attempt to change the subject. It wasn’t going to work,
but she answered it anyway, to keep him talking. “There’s someone I
like, but he doesn’t know it yet.” And he never would, either, for
Michelle had first rights. And she missed him more than anything right
now. “How about you?”</p>
      <p>He shook his head. “There was a girl at fleet academy, but she just
thought I could introduce her to linesmen. She didn’t know—”</p>
      <p>Radko turned her back to the stars. She could guess. “That a failed
linesman is nothing to a certified linesman.”</p>
      <p>“Yes.” It was just a whisper.</p>
      <p>“You’re not a failed linesman, Chaudry. You’re a one.”</p>
      <p>“When I made line training, my parents were <emphasis>so</emphasis> proud of me. They
cautioned me, of course, for not all linesmen made certification. But
they were so proud. But a level-one linesman is nothing. Worse than
nothing.” He ran his hands through his hair. “I knew what I was long
before the ceremony. I could only ever feel line one. I couldn’t do that
to my parents. It was better they didn’t know.”</p>
      <p>“How do you fail line certification?”</p>
      <p>“You pretend you’re trying, but you’re not doing anything really.”</p>
      <p>Level ones were rare. How many others had done the same thing? “And you
didn’t want to be a doctor anymore?”</p>
      <p>“I wanted to die.”</p>
      <p>So he’d become a soldier. What was that old joke they used to tell when
she was in training? Join the fleet; see the galaxy; shoot people. Or
have them shoot you. Which explained the comment on Chaudry’s psych
profile that he wasn’t fit for war duty.</p>
      <p>“But they put me in Stores.”</p>
      <p>Radko smiled at the plaintive tone. “At least we have decent psych
people at headquarters.” She turned back to look at the stars, in the
direction of the Haladean cluster. It wasn’t bright enough to see, but
she knew it was there. “Have you seen your family since?”</p>
      <p>“I pretended I was away on training last time they came to Baoshan.”</p>
      <p>“Because you failed them?”</p>
      <p>“You probably think it’s silly.”</p>
      <p>“I failed my parents, too.” Would she ever see them again? Did she care
if she didn’t, except as guilt if Yu did something in revenge? Thank the
lines Jai the Younger and Hua were close as siblings. Surely their
mother, Dowager Empress Jai the Elder, could be relied on to save her
youngest daughter if need be. Radko hoped someone like Vega had apprised
Jai of the possibility. “My ship is my family.”</p>
      <p>“And you lost that when you came to us.”</p>
      <p>She hadn’t thought about Sattur Dow and Yu until now. “Probably.” Vega
wouldn’t be able to fix it. She banged her fist on the railing hard
enough to hurt.</p>
      <p>“I’m sorry,” Chaudry said quietly.</p>
      <p>One man shouldn’t have that much power. “He destroyed my life.” He was
trying to destroy the New Alliance. He was trying to destroy Abram and
Michelle. If he did that, he’d destroy Ean, too, and everyone on the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>If he did that, she would destroy him.</p>
      <p>Radko took a shaky breath. “Sorry, Chaudry. I’ve been trying not to
think about it.”</p>
      <p>“Sometimes it helps to talk.”</p>
      <p>Said the man who’d joined the fleet because he wanted to kill himself.
“Do you still want to be a doctor?”</p>
      <p>Chaudry stretched. “We should go inside.”</p>
      <p>She laughed and reached out to stop him. “Don’t change the subject,
Chaudry. This is important.”</p>
      <p>“Why?”</p>
      <p>“Because a doctor who is also a linesman is a rare find indeed.”</p>
      <p>“Only a one.” It came out bitter.</p>
      <p>“Especially a one, since line one shows the health of the whole ship. A
doctor who is a level-one linesman would be perfect.” And very much in
demand. Chaudry would have his pick of ships in the Lancian fleet. But
he’d go to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> or the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. She knew that already.</p>
      <p>“Line one shows the state of other lines,” Chaudry corrected. “You don’t
need a doctor to fix lines. You need a linesman.”</p>
      <p>Radko smiled, grim and satisfied in the dark, and lonely, too, for she
missed her ship. She missed her job. She missed her linesman.</p>
      <p>“It shows the state of the whole ship, Chaudry. Human and line. Sure,
you need a linesman to fix lines, but as for the rest, that’s only
partially right. That’s what the cartel teaches you, and the cartels are
wrong.”</p>
      <p>“Wrong?”</p>
      <p>He was a linesman. He couldn’t hide the hope in his voice. Linesmen,
especially single-level linesmen, always wanted to believe there was
something more.</p>
      <p>Radko smiled again. “No line is superior to any other. We have learned
so much about the lines in the last six months. Think about what you
want for the future, Chaudry. At the end of this assignment, I’ll ask
again. If you want to work with the lines, or in medicine, or both,
we’ll do everything in our power to make it happen. We need people like
you.”</p>
      <p>She turned and led the way inside.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_nineteen_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER NINETEEN: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>Van Heel hacked into MES’s system, put the security cameras onto a loop,
and routed the alarm back to Radko.</p>
      <p>Once that was done, Radko took fifteen seconds to break into the sweet
shop.</p>
      <p>They passed through a storeroom with prepared sweets, then the kitchen,
and finally a second storeroom containing raw materials. Bags of sugar
and nuts, some form of syrup, and other items Radko couldn’t identify.
Even better, the wall out here was painted, not plastered, so the
outline of each prefab block was clear.</p>
      <p>Radko tamped the explosive down around the blocks. It went off with a
soft whumph. They kicked the blocks out.</p>
      <p>The net protecting TwoPaths Engineering wasn’t alarmed, at least not
that Radko could see. She pressed the OFF button.</p>
      <p>It whined to a halt. The loudest thing so far.</p>
      <p>Radko indicated to Han and Chaudry to stand on one side of the door, van
Heel and herself on the other.</p>
      <p>They waited.</p>
      <p>No one came.</p>
      <p>She broke the lock, and they piled inside.</p>
      <p>They found themselves in a storeroom, with shelving and cupboards around
the walls. The packaging was from a mix of worlds. There were boxes from
the Worlds of the Lesser Gods, some from Redmond, and even one from
Lancia, with HAEMOGLOBIN TESTER on the side.</p>
      <p>Chaudry stopped at a box of tubing in clear plastic bags. “Intravenous
sets.” He stopped at another box. Meters of some sort. “These are
medical supplies.”</p>
      <p>“We have to find their control center,” Radko said. They could speculate
later why an engineering company required medical supplies. Their first
job was to neutralize any security in the building before someone called
for backup.</p>
      <p>One minute.</p>
      <p>They passed through three more storerooms, one with huge, glass-door
refrigerators full of frozen, prepackaged meals.</p>
      <p>“This is starting to get creepy,” Han muttered.</p>
      <p>“Shh.” But Radko agreed. This setup was more like a hospital than an
engineering lab.</p>
      <p>Two minutes.</p>
      <p>She heard a sound outside the room they were in and stopped. She
motioned for the others to do the same.</p>
      <p>If they stayed here, they were sitting ducks. “Chaudry, find us some
cloth to cover our faces.” She beckoned to Han. “Cover me. Blaster on
stun. I’ll drop as the door opens. Spray anything higher than me but
keep out of the line of fire.”</p>
      <p>How many security people would you have on night duty at a lab? Three,
maybe four? It depended how important the lab was.</p>
      <p>Chaudry arrived back, carrying blankets. “It’s all I could find in a
hurry.”</p>
      <p>“They’ll be good.” Radko looked at van Heel and Chaudry. “Stay out of
the line of fire.”</p>
      <p>She heard muttered information being passed through a comms. Someone
knew they were there. If it was security outside—which was a logical
assumption—they’d have help on the way. There was no time to waste.</p>
      <p>She dropped to the ground, pressed the button to open the door, dragged
a fast-acting gas grenade off her belt, armed it, and rolled it out.</p>
      <p>Something swished above her head and thudded into the wall at the back
even as the door closed again.</p>
      <p>At least two people outside the door started coughing and choking.</p>
      <p>“Blankets on.” Radko wrapped one around her own face. “And don’t breathe
as you run through the gas.” She checked what had come through the door.
A tranquilizer dart.</p>
      <p>“They’re using tranqs, people, so beware.” She opened the door again and
fired through the choking smoke. A long sweep around. At least two
thuds.</p>
      <p>She kept firing as she exited. Another thud.</p>
      <p>Van Heel tripped over one of the fallen guards. Chaudry grabbed her and
kept running.</p>
      <p>One door at the front of the building was open, light streaming out.
Logically, it would be the control room. Radko entered at a run, and
fired at the sole occupant, who was still rising to pull out his weapon.</p>
      <p>“Close the door,” she ordered Chaudry.</p>
      <p>She found the alarm, turned it off. Only then did she allow herself to
take a deep breath.</p>
      <p>“What now?” Han asked.</p>
      <p>Radko turned to the wall of screens. “We find the labs.”</p>
      <p>Except there weren’t any labs. There were three operating theatres down
here on the ground floor, plus some examining rooms. Upstairs were
glass-walled rooms around a central office. Ten of them were occupied
and nearly all the occupants wore Sandhurst uniforms. Linesmen.</p>
      <p>“It’s not a lab,” Chaudry said. “It’s a hospital.”</p>
      <p>The patients showed signs of distress. One huddled in a corner, crying.
Another lay on her bed, strapped down. Her face was badly scratched, and
the tips of her fingers were bandaged. Another kicked the glass of the
walls. The glass didn’t break. It bounced, like Plexiglas.</p>
      <p>Linesmen. Line experiments.</p>
      <p>And they expected to have access to a twelve soon. Never.</p>
      <p>In two of the examining rooms, Radko saw alien artifacts. She stepped
closer to the screen to be sure. Artifacts that could only have come
from one of the alien line ships.</p>
      <p>Someone was supplying Redmond with items from the line ships.</p>
      <p>Someone from the New Alliance.</p>
      <p>Someone with access to alien artifacts would have access to Ean.</p>
      <p>Radko swung around. “Van Heel, find the patient records. Copy them.
Everything you can. Han, stay here with van Heel and watch the screens.
Chaudry, collect the artifacts from the examining rooms.” She tapped the
ones she saw, to show him what she meant. “All of them. If you see
something you don’t recognize, especially anything that talks to you,
anything that makes a noise, anything that reminds you of space, grab it
as well.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry blinked at that but nodded.</p>
      <p>He’d need something to carry them in. Radko looked around for a box,
couldn’t find one. “Use your blanket to wrap them in. There’ll be an
orderly around somewhere, so be alert.” It was a hospital. They must
have someone watching the patients.</p>
      <p>“I’ll check the office upstairs.” If the report was anywhere, it would
be there. “Open comms. All of us. Let’s go.”</p>
      <p>She left Chaudry filling his blanket and ran up the stairs.</p>
      <p>Three walls of the office were Plexiglass from waist height and looked
out onto the linesmen’s rooms. The back wall was stone; the same heavy
stone they’d seen earlier when viewing the palace walls. There was a
door in the wall. If Radko had her directions right, the lab led
directly into the palace.</p>
      <p>Radko looked around for a safe. There wasn’t one. There were two desks,
both with drawers. She tried the drawers.</p>
      <p>The first one held sweets from the shop next door, and something that
looked like dried fruit. The second was locked.</p>
      <p>Han said, low and urgent, “Whatever you did stirred up a nest of people.
They’re all running for you.”</p>
      <p>Radko pulled her weapon.</p>
      <p>The door to the palace burst open.</p>
      <p>She fired, instinctively. One. Two. Three. Before she knew what was
coming, using the desk as shelter. The answering fire hit the desk, and
heated it, but the desk remained unscathed.</p>
      <p>Four.</p>
      <p>They hadn’t been expecting opposition. They would be now.</p>
      <p>“Four coming up the stairs,” Han said. “Two in the lift.”</p>
      <p>Radko flipped some explosive out of her belt, tamped it around the
drawer entry.</p>
      <p>“Get out of there,” Han said.</p>
      <p>“Get Chaudry and go. I’ll meet you outside.” This desk was
indestructible for a reason, and Radko was sure she knew what that
reason was. It was the safe. If there was a copy of the report in this
room, it would be in that safe.</p>
      <p>“They’re carrying weapons of some type. I can’t identify them.”</p>
      <p>“Did you hear me? Outside. All of you. Chaudry?”</p>
      <p>“Going,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>Radko raced behind the other desk to shelter from the blast.</p>
      <p>“First group coming in,” Han said. Two slightly in front.</p>
      <p>Radko could see them. They could see her. But the wall had the
distinctive shimmer of Plexiglass. They couldn’t shoot through it. They
had to enter the room.</p>
      <p>The first burst in through the door. The blast from the drawer slowed
them enough for Radko to get the first two shots in. One of their
weapons skittered across the floor.</p>
      <p>A tranquilizer gun.</p>
      <p>She gestured threateningly with her blaster at the two orderlies—for
they were dressed like orderlies—who paused outside the door. She ran
for the drawer.</p>
      <p>A comms. Yes. She snatched it up.</p>
      <p>Someone, somewhere, was shouting.</p>
      <p>“Two more coming behind these.”</p>
      <p>“Han. Get the hell out of there. Where are van Heel and Chaudry?”</p>
      <p>“Gone.”</p>
      <p>“Good. No heroics. Now go.”</p>
      <p>More people burst through from the palace door. They had blasters; the
orderlies had tranquilizers. Radko took her chance with the orderlies.
She raced for the door, firing as she went. She made it outside.</p>
      <p>The Plexiglass stopped the blaster fire.</p>
      <p>Radko waved her blaster threateningly at the orderlies. “Come near, and
I’ll fry you.”</p>
      <p>They backed away.</p>
      <p>“Farther,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>“There are two more coming up the stairs,” Han said urgently.</p>
      <p>Radko fired toward the stairs, still staring at the orderlies in front
of her.</p>
      <p>Someone screamed, and there was the thud of someone falling.</p>
      <p>The orderlies backed away.</p>
      <p>Radko raced for the stairs. “Get the hell out of here, Han,” as she
grabbed the railings and swung over, holding on till the last minute to
slow her fall and minimize the distance.</p>
      <p>There was no answer from Han.</p>
      <p>Radko raced for the yard. Made it. Only to pull up as soldiers in the
uniform of the Lesser Gods flooded through the entry.</p>
      <p>How many people did it take to cover a single break-in?</p>
      <p>One of the soldiers at the front raised a tranq gun.</p>
      <p>Another team of soldiers blocked the hallway behind her.</p>
      <p>There was nowhere to run.</p>
      <p>She felt the sting of the dart in her arm. Pulled it out. Only to feel
the sting of two more, one in her back and one in her leg.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>The invitation from Emperor Yu arrived while the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> was chasing
the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>The Emperor of Lancia expects the presence of Linesman Lambert at
supper.</p>
      <p>Ean ignored it until after he came out of regen on Confluence Station.
The burn on his leg itched where the new skin had taken; he’d come away
with strict instructions on what he couldn’t do until after his third
regeneration session. But the burn wasn’t painful anymore, and he could
worry about other things, like how to refuse the invitation without
aggravating the Emperor.</p>
      <p>But first things first, and the lines always came first. He’d promised
Scout Ship Three to the Xantos. He’d somehow promised the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>
it could choose its own crew.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“And we are choosing.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Didn’t he know it.</p>
      <p>He called Abram. “I want to address the council. We need to hurry
assigning ships to worlds. Otherwise, the council won’t get to choose.”
He made the line as secure as he could. “The ships are desperate for
linesmen. They’ll take any who come along, which is how Jakob nearly got
Scout Ship Three. It’s a weakness we can’t afford.”</p>
      <p>“Line business.” Abram considered it. “It might even settle things
because people are worried about—” He grimaced and didn’t say the word
they both knew was “Lancia.” “I’ll schedule you to address the council.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you.” Ean clicked off.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Thank you,”</emphasis> came a whispered echo underneath his.</p>
      <p>He smiled and turned his attention to the other problem. Declining
Emperor Yu’s invitation politely.</p>
      <p>Rigel’s lessons had taught him how to accept invitations from royalty,
but they’d never taught him how to refuse them. Ean had declined two
invitations from Michelle already, but would the same politely worded
refusal be enough for the Emperor?</p>
      <p>“So, Ean.” He became aware Sale had said it twice. Or maybe three times.
“What happened on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> this afternoon?”</p>
      <p>He was glad it was Sale who was asking. “I’ll tell you after you tell me
if this is a polite enough refusal for Emperor Yu.” He held up his comms
and the message he had ready:</p>
      <p>It is with regret that I must decline, as I am presently attending to
line issues.</p>
      <p>“Or do I have to refuse by calling one of his assistants?”</p>
      <p>Sale snatched his comms. “Let me see.” She scanned the earlier message.
“You’ve had this for hours, Ean. We could have had you there by now.”</p>
      <p>“Michelle doesn’t want me to go to functions.”</p>
      <p>“This is not an invitation. It’s a summons. Shit. Grab your formal
clothes. Quickly.”</p>
      <p>“But—”</p>
      <p>“No buts, Ean. Hurry. You can change on the shuttle.”</p>
      <p>Ean called Michelle as he collected his formal uniform. Michelle was
unavailable, so he left a semicoherent message with Michelle’s
assistant, Lin—which he wasn’t even sure would be passed on—and made his
way back to the shuttle. Lately, he spent more time in shuttles than he
did on station.</p>
      <p>Sale called up on her comms. “Ean, supper will be over before you get
there.”</p>
      <p>Dancing attendance on Emperor Yu had never been part of Ean’s plans. Not
before he’d met Michelle, or after. But the man held his friends’ lives
in his hands. If even Michelle was worried about what Yu could do, the
best Ean could do to keep his friends safe was to do as Yu
requested—within reason. He hurried back to the shuttle.</p>
      <p>Maybe he could use the time to ask Yu to rethink Radko’s wedding.</p>
      <p>Sale might have been reading his thoughts. “Don’t mention Radko,” she
said, as they took off at speed. “Emperor Yu never, never, changes his
mind. You’ll endanger yourself, Radko, Vega, and anyone else who was
complicit in it. So don’t. Now, you still haven’t told me what happened
today.”</p>
      <p>Tell the truth, Radko would have said, simple and from the lines. Plus,
it got her off the subject of Yu, and what he could and couldn’t do
there.</p>
      <p>“You know Redmond tried to steal Scout Ship Three.”</p>
      <p>“The whole galaxy knows.”</p>
      <p>“They had some sort of magnet. They linked the two ships.”</p>
      <p>“It’s old technology,” Sale said, surprising him. “Apparently they used
it to link generation ships together. To save on fuel.”</p>
      <p>“I didn’t know that.”</p>
      <p>“Neither did most of us, but Commodore Favager of Nova Tahiti recognized
it. Got quite excited about it.”</p>
      <p>Clemence Favager was an Old Earth nut. Ean could imagine her getting
excited about the use of old technology.</p>
      <p>“They were taking a risk all the same,” Sale said. “We know ships
physically bonded together can jump through the void, but an
electromagnetic bond. I wouldn’t want to be the first to try it. I’d be
worried the bond would break in the void.”</p>
      <p>Jakob didn’t seem the sort who left things like that to chance. “They
had probably already tested it.”</p>
      <p>Sale nodded. “How did they get onto the scout ship?”</p>
      <p>“Three of the people with Jakob were linesmen. The ship was happy to let
them on.” It wasn’t the place or the time, but, “The ships need people,
Sale. They’ll start choosing their own soon.”</p>
      <p>“Tell that to the admirals, Ean. There’s no use telling me.”</p>
      <p>Sale needed to know because she was one of the people the ships were
choosing.</p>
      <p>Ean continued with what had happened. “The jump was in ten minutes, and
the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> was four hours away. I couldn’t stop the jump.”</p>
      <p>“Not even with line eight?”</p>
      <p>“I don’t know how to do it, Sale. I didn’t know what to ask. I couldn’t
get it to understand.” Maybe he should have insisted.</p>
      <p>Sale put up a hand to stop the flow of words. “It’s fine. What happened
next?”</p>
      <p>Ean blew out his breath. He didn’t like to admit the next bit. “The
trainees aren’t used to training yet. And I’m not—” Sale knew he’d been
having trouble; otherwise, she wouldn’t have said what she’d said about
Peters the other day. “I wanted to stop the jump, and I wanted to move
the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> closer to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet. Which meant a cold jump, but
Rossi—” He took a deep breath, forced his voice even and smooth. “He
doesn’t like cold jumps any more than the captains do, and he… tried to
stop me.”</p>
      <p>“By stealing Bhaksir’s blaster and firing at you?”</p>
      <p>He nodded. “Only Rossi’s a famous ten, so when Bhaksir tried to stop
him, the other linesmen came in to protect him.”</p>
      <p>“I see.”</p>
      <p>Sale had the same direct way of looking that Abram and Michelle did, as
if she could see right through you.</p>
      <p>“Gruen and I will talk to the admirals,” Sale said. “You’re lucky they
have other things to think about today.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you.”</p>
      <p>Sale turned away from the boards and looked directly at him. “When
you’re out of your depth, Ean, you have to learn to ask for help.”</p>
      <p>“I can manage.”</p>
      <p>“You can’t manage. We have a ship on lockdown because you insist on
doing everything yourself. We have a linesman who nearly got his leg
shot off.”</p>
      <p>He’d spent an hour in regen. His leg still itched, but it was fine.</p>
      <p>“Another one with a broken wrist, one with concussion, and five with
various laser burns. Four people were arrested.”</p>
      <p>What could he say to that?</p>
      <p>“Worse, we have to explain to the admirals of the other military forces
what happened.”</p>
      <p>“I’m sorry.”</p>
      <p>This time it was Sale who sighed. “Don’t be, Ean. It’s as much my fault
as it is yours. I knew you were having problems. I should have done
something about it.”</p>
      <p>“You’re not responsible for me.”</p>
      <p>“Somebody has to look after you while Radko’s not here to do it.”</p>
      <p>Radko’s job was to protect Ean from would-be murderers and kidnappers,
not from his own inability to control the trainees.</p>
      <p>He was glad his comms chimed then, with a message from Abram. He was to
address the council meeting the following day. Even gladder Abram had
made it soon.</p>
      <p>“If you were a soldier and couldn’t fire a blaster, Ean, you wouldn’t be
expected to teach yourself. Your team leader would help out, ensuring
you had remedial help.”</p>
      <p>He couldn’t fire a blaster, and it was one thing Radko had never shown
him. He’d asked her once if she was going to. She’d said, “Ean, your
weapons are the lines.”</p>
      <p>“Maybe you should teach me how to use a blaster.”</p>
      <p>“Are you changing the subject, Ean?”</p>
      <p>“No.” Maybe. He wasn’t sure. “What do I do about the line trainees?”</p>
      <p>“Let’s see who gets involved before we decide.” The shuttle sounded for
landing. Sale strapped herself in. “Meantime, we have to survive this
supper first.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The ship welcomed them. Ean sang his own song of welcome as he followed
Sale down the corridor. He checked the ship while he did so. Captain
Helmo was on the bridge. He felt—or heard—Ean’s regard, and nodded.
Commodore Vega was at shuttle bay five, waiting for a shuttle to dock.</p>
      <p>Commodore Bach, the Emperor’s head of security and Vega’s equivalent,
was in the foyer of Yu’s apartment, talking into his comms.</p>
      <p>“Everything is in hand, Lord Renaud. I assure you. I have set my staff
to attend to it personally.” He glanced at Ean and Sale. “You will
excuse me, Lord Renaud, but I must attend His Imperial Majesty.” He
swiped off, then swiped the comms open again. The woman at the other end
wore a Lancian uniform, with the same braid Ean had on his own
shoulders. “Find out who assigned Yves Han to a covert operation. I want
their head on my desk, tomorrow morning.”</p>
      <p>“Do we rescue Han the Younger?”</p>
      <p>“What we do is damage control. And hope certain people never hear about
it.” Bach swiped off, then looked at Sale and Ean.</p>
      <p>“Emperor Yu requested the presence of Linesman Lambert at supper, sir,”
Sale said.</p>
      <p>Bach looked at her epaulettes. “And he’s delivered by a group leader.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, sir. It’s a good opportunity to debrief in private.”</p>
      <p>Bach nodded. “I heard about today. What started it?”</p>
      <p>“Started it, sir?” Sale looked as mystified as Ean felt. “Captain Jakob
attempting to steal the ship.”</p>
      <p>“The lockdown of linesmen.”</p>
      <p>He shouldn’t have known about that. It was Abram’s area, not Bach’s. Not
even Vega’s, although she knew.</p>
      <p>“That.” Sale waved a dismissive hand. “You know linesmen. They come in
thinking they’re the galaxy’s gift. We’re teaching them new methods. It
takes time to adapt. They don’t like change.”</p>
      <p>Sale was as talented at dissembling as Abram and Michelle. Ean hid his
smile.</p>
      <p>“So they always do this?”</p>
      <p>“This time was a little extreme. But there were reasons.” Sale saluted.
“It’s in my report if you wish to read it. But, sir, I must deliver the
linesman to supper. If you will excuse me.”</p>
      <p>“Of course.” Bach stepped aside to let them enter. He followed them in.</p>
      <p>The walls on the Emperor’s entertaining room were covered with
TransScreen, a product that had come onto the market just before
Michelle had purchased Ean’s contract. TransScreen had a smooth surface
that showed whatever was sent through to its controllers. This
particular sheet depicted a 360-degree panorama of somewhere on Lancia,
for the sky had a distinctive purple tinge. Ean could hear the feed from
line five as a constant stream, and as he watched, a shuttle zoomed high
across the sky. A delayed real-time send, he guessed.</p>
      <p>How magnificent would it be to switch the view to the cameras on the
outside of the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>? You’d really feel you were in
space then.</p>
      <p>Or maybe that wasn’t such a good idea. Ean didn’t like to remember there
was only a wall between him and the stars.</p>
      <p>He wasn’t the only guest. Sattur Dow was there, as was the Factor of the
Lesser Gods. Plus assorted support staff. Some of Yu’s, some of the
Factor’s, some of Sattur Dow’s. Ean recognized Ethan Saylor, the youth
who continually called Vega wanting to talk to Radko.</p>
      <p>Two members of Helmo’s crew were clearing away the remains of food on
the long supper table. Ean’s stomach rumbled as he saw that. He hadn’t
eaten yet.</p>
      <p>Yu looked him over as if he were inspecting something he was about to
purchase. He glanced at the Factor. The Factor quirked an eyebrow. Ean
got the impression that neither of them was impressed.</p>
      <p>“So, Linesman,” Yu said, and Ean got the impression more than ever that
he was being studied as a pending acquisition. “Why is Galenos hiding
information about the alien line ships from Lancia?”</p>
      <p>He was glad he’d seen Vega’s tape of Michelle’s meeting with her father.
Otherwise, he might have replied that the Department of Alien Affairs
was keeping information about the line ships from every world until it
was safe to do so.</p>
      <p>“Hiding information.” Ean managed a creditable Rossi-like laugh. “From
Lancia, who gets knowledge before everyone else does. Who sends their
own staff out to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> every day. Other worlds should be so
lucky.”</p>
      <p>“That isn’t what I have heard.”</p>
      <p>It was a pity Yu hadn’t been on ship long, for the lines weren’t picking
up his emotions enough for Ean to interpret them. “I don’t know what you
have heard,” Ean said. “But if it’s not that, I would question your
sources.”</p>
      <p>Yu’s eyes narrowed.</p>
      <p>The Factor intercepted smoothly. “Tell me, Linesman. What is your
opinion of the events today?”</p>
      <p>Which events did he mean? The lockdown of the linesmen? Or the attempt
to steal Scout Ship Three?</p>
      <p>“I’m a linesman, not a politician. If you are looking for opinions, why
don’t you ask—” Abram, he’d been going to say, but Yu obviously had it
in for him. “Mi— Her Royal Highness, the Crown Princess, I mean.”</p>
      <p>“Assuredly, we will,” Yu said. “But does it not seem unusual that a man
heretofore known as loyal and devoted to his ruler suddenly tries to
steal a ship? One might almost believe that Captain Jakob was framed.”</p>
      <p>He couldn’t be serious. But it seemed he was.</p>
      <p>“By whom?” Ean asked, when he finally found enough voice to speak.</p>
      <p>“Someone who wishes to keep the Worlds of the Lesser Gods out of the New
Alliance.”</p>
      <p>Like Abram, he meant.</p>
      <p>“No,” Ean said. “The Factor was not set up. Jakob is working with
Redmond. He’s sent them messages in the past.”</p>
      <p>“Messages,” Bach asked sharply. “To Redmond. How do you know that?”</p>
      <p>Bach’s high-tech center he’d set up on board the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>
would have picked up the transmissions as well. If Ean and Helmo hadn’t
destroyed his listening devices.</p>
      <p>“We’ve heard some of them.”</p>
      <p>“Heard some of them?”</p>
      <p>“Jakob sent a message before he left to go home.” Except he hadn’t gone
home. “He was speaking Redmond.”</p>
      <p>Yu, Bach, and the Factor exchanged glances.</p>
      <p>“Why wasn’t I informed of this?” Yu demanded.</p>
      <p>Now Vega would get in trouble because Ean had opened his mouth. “We were
following it up. Jakob had replaced the camera in his cabin with old
footage of him sleeping. We didn’t have any recordings of what he did or
said.” Their emotions were stronger now; he was finally picking
something up through the lines. Consternation, agitation. “Once we knew
more, we would have notified Commodore Bach, of course, but Jakob and
the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> tried to steal the ship before our investigation was
complete.”</p>
      <p>Bach asked, “Do you have proof of this?” while the Factor demanded, “Are
you spying on us?”</p>
      <p>The lines sang a sudden song of welcome. It took Ean a moment to realize
it wasn’t because of what the Factor had said, but it was Michelle’s
shuttle, arriving in bay three. One of two shuttles arriving at the same
time.</p>
      <p>It was a pity Michelle wasn’t here, right now. She’d know what to say.
Still, he’d talked himself into this. It was up to him to talk himself
out of it.</p>
      <p>“We are not spying,” for that seemed to be their main concern. Although
he didn’t know why, given that rulers spent their lives surrounded by
people who knew everything they did. “We look for triggers.” It was even
true. “Redmond language, in this case, which was what alerted us to
Jakob.”</p>
      <p>The three men looked at each other again.</p>
      <p>“You have an alert for anyone speaking Redmond,” the Factor said.</p>
      <p>“Yes. We do.” Ean did, anyway.</p>
      <p>“On this ship.” Yu looked at Bach, rather than at Ean. “Why would they
expect that?”</p>
      <p>“Concerned they have spies on board,” Bach suggested. To Ean, “You
should have informed me, as I am responsible for the Emperor’s
protection.”</p>
      <p>Ean nodded but didn’t answer.</p>
      <p>Yu started to pace. “My own daughter is spying on me now.” He stopped
close to Ean. “Why is that?”</p>
      <p>He was way too close, and according to Rigel, one never invaded the
ruler’s personal space. Ean knew he was supposed to step back, to give
him room.</p>
      <p>Ean had learned more about intimidation techniques in the last six
months than he had in his whole life. He knew how to respond. He didn’t
move—back or forward. He curled his mouth in what he hoped looked like
disdain, and channeled his best Rossi. “You assume she’s spying on
<emphasis>you</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>His hands were clammy. He was sweating. This was as bad as the trainees
and had escalated as quickly.</p>
      <p>Down in shuttle bay three, Michelle waited for the air to recycle before
she could disembark.</p>
      <p>A woman exited shuttle bay five. One of Vega’s staff frisked her for
weapons.</p>
      <p>“I see no need for this farce,” the woman being frisked said.</p>
      <p>“I would be negligent if I allowed you in the Emperor’s presence without
it,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>“Clear, ma’am,” the soldier frisking the visitor told Vega.</p>
      <p>“Thank you. This way.” Vega led the woman along the corridor. “I trust
you had a pleasant trip, Madam Chen.”</p>
      <p>“Fine, thank you,” Chen said, stiffly.</p>
      <p>Ean dragged his attention back to the room he was in. It wouldn’t do to
miss something right now because he was listening to the ship. Yu was
frowning, almost as if he’d forgotten Ean was there.</p>
      <p>The Factor said, “If Jakob is working with Redmond, we must decide what
to do about him.”</p>
      <p>For a moment, it looked as if Yu wouldn’t answer.</p>
      <p>“Galenos will question him. I would like to be involved in that.”</p>
      <p>There was emotion here, pungent, and sharp. Ean couldn’t pick who it was
from, maybe both of them. He tested the taste with his tongue. There was
a touch of fear there, too, as if Yu really was worried about what Abram
would do. About a man he’d promoted to admiral six months ago.</p>
      <p>If he weren’t so paranoid, he wouldn’t need to be scared at all.</p>
      <p>Yu turned his back on Ean. “You are correct, Factor. Admiral Galenos
will twist the facts to suit himself.”</p>
      <p>Ean wanted to leave, couldn’t do so until he was dismissed.</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow stepped up beside Ean. “I believe you know my fiancée,
Linesman.”</p>
      <p>“Of course I do. Everyone on this ship does.”</p>
      <p>“But you know her especially well, I have heard.”</p>
      <p>What had he heard?</p>
      <p>Dow smiled at him. “As such, I would like to extend an invitation to our
wedding.”</p>
      <p>There was no way Sattur Dow was going to marry Radko.</p>
      <p>“Others on this ship know her better,” Ean said, trying to be fair.
“They’re as much her family as her real family is, and have been around
longer than I. You should invite her whole team.”</p>
      <p>He was saved from the awkward silence that statement caused by the
arrival of Vega and Madam Chen. Vega withdrew after delivering the new
guest. She glanced sharply at Ean on her way out but didn’t say
anything.</p>
      <p>Chen made straight for Sattur Dow. “I need to talk to you.”</p>
      <p>“Later.”</p>
      <p>“I need to talk to you now.”</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow looked irritated. “Please excuse me a moment, Linesman.”</p>
      <p>Ean was pleased to see him go. “Of course.”</p>
      <p>Dow tried to halt at the door, but Chen took him out into the foyer.
“Privately.”</p>
      <p>Ean eavesdropped unashamedly through the lines.</p>
      <p>“You set me up.” Ean could hear Chen’s rage, icy on his skin.</p>
      <p>“I have no idea what you are talking about,” Dow said. “But drag me away
like that in the middle of a conversation again, and I will most
certainly set you up.”</p>
      <p>Ethan Saylor moved in to fill the void. “Linesman.” He smiled cordially.
“We should get to know each other better since we’ll be working
together.”</p>
      <p>“Working together?” Most of Ean’s attention was on what was happening
outside the door.</p>
      <p>“Once your bodyguard marries Sattur Dow,” Saylor said.</p>
      <p>Ean looked at him. He was serious.</p>
      <p>“You sent me to Redmond to kill me,” Chen said.</p>
      <p>Redmond, again. Why so much about Redmond all of a sudden?</p>
      <p>“Maybe we could get together for a drink sometime,” Saylor said.</p>
      <p>“If this is your way of getting something more out of our agreement,
it’s not going to work,” Dow said. “Where are my plans?”</p>
      <p>“What about tomorrow night? After you finish work,” Saylor said.</p>
      <p>“I don’t have your precious plans,” Chen said. “You know that already.”</p>
      <p>“Linesman?”</p>
      <p>“You set me up, Sattur.” Chen took something out of her pocket. A chit.
Ean was familiar with them from his youth. Chits were guarantees of
money. You purchased them from moneylenders at above-market rates. They
allowed you to move money without the purchase being traced.</p>
      <p>She threw it at Dow. “Here’s your money. Be warned, Sattur. You think
you’re too powerful to be reached, but everyone has secrets, you more
than most.” Chen turned and walked away.</p>
      <p>Dow watched her go. He picked up the chit, then came back inside.</p>
      <p>“Is there anyone inside there, Linesman?”</p>
      <p>Ean blinked. “Sorry,” he said to Saylor. “I was momentarily distracted.”</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow rejoined them. “Apologies, Linesman.” He inclined his head
toward Saylor. “Ethan, would you please find out what Merchant Chen’s
problem is?”</p>
      <p>Saylor smiled although the smile didn’t reach his eyes. “Of course,
Sattur.” He nodded politely to them both, leaving Ean alone with Sattur
Dow again.</p>
      <p>The noise in the room dropped. Yu, Bach, and the Factor looked at Ean.</p>
      <p>He should have been listening to them, not to Dow.</p>
      <p>“Linesman Lambert,” Bach said. “When did you first realize—” His comms
beeped. He glanced at the screen, thumb about to swipe the message to
silence it. He paused, then looked up. “Please excuse me. I must take
this call.”</p>
      <p>Michelle had exited from the shuttle and was making her way quickly
along the corridors. Coming this way. She walked so briskly, her
bodyguards had to half trot to keep up with her.</p>
      <p>“What was in Jakob’s message?” Yu demanded, as they waited for Bach to
return.</p>
      <p>“I don’t know.” He considered telling them to ask Vega, but Vega would
be forced to say he was the one who heard it. He repeated the few words
he could remember.</p>
      <p>Yu’s face, and the Factor’s, grew grimmer as they listened. “That’s only
an approximation.”</p>
      <p>“Translated?” Yu asked.</p>
      <p>“I don’t know,” Ean said, but Yu was looking at the Factor.</p>
      <p>Coming from neighboring worlds, he would know enough Redmond to get by.</p>
      <p>The Factor shook his head.</p>
      <p>An uncomfortable silence fell.</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t break it. Instead, he listened to Bach take his call outside
the door.</p>
      <p>The woman on the comms was the same woman Bach had been talking to
earlier. “This had better be important,” Bach said.</p>
      <p>“I found who assigned Han’s son to Redmond.”</p>
      <p>Redmond again. Why was everyone at Redmond all of a sudden? Including
Radko.</p>
      <p>“And?” Bach asked.</p>
      <p>“Commodore Jiang Vega.”</p>
      <p>“Vega,” Bach said, as Michelle slowed to enter the foyer where he was
talking.</p>
      <p>Michelle looked at him.</p>
      <p>Bach bowed. “Your Royal Highness.”</p>
      <p>“Commodore Bach.”</p>
      <p>Bach bowed and waited for her to enter before he turned back to his
comms. “Send a code five,” he told the woman. He flicked off and frowned
down at the screen, then followed Michelle in.</p>
      <p>Michelle inclined her head. “Father. Factor. Merchant Dow. Good
evening.” She nodded at Ean.</p>
      <p>“Daughter. So glad you could make my supper. I heard you were staying on
Haladea III tonight.”</p>
      <p>“My meeting finished early,” Michelle said. “And I had some security
issues I needed to discuss with Commodore Vega.”</p>
      <p>“We have been hearing about security issues.” Yu ignored what was an
obvious warning glance from Bach. “You spy on your guests.”</p>
      <p>“Surely not.” Michelle didn’t look at Ean, but he knew she knew who had
precipitated the accusation.</p>
      <p>Yu’s comms vibrated discreetly then. And Bach’s. And those of an
assistant.</p>
      <p>Yu ignored his comms. “Yes, apparently you are—”</p>
      <p>The assistant raised a discreet hand.</p>
      <p>Yu took out his own comms. He glanced at the message, raised a brow in
Bach’s direction. Bach nodded.</p>
      <p>Was that Bach’s code five? What was Vega involved in? And if it was
Redmond, was Radko involved?</p>
      <p>Yu swiped his comms off with force. He looked at Michelle. “We are not
finished with this conversation, Daughter, but I have other issues to
attend for the moment.”</p>
      <p>“Of course. My ship is at your disposal, Father.”</p>
      <p>“The Factor of the Lesser Gods wishes to be present at the interrogation
of Captain Jakob. Arrange this, Daughter.” He turned to Bach. “We should
start now for Haladea III,” and glanced at Michelle again. “In case
Galenos steps up the timing of his interrogations.”</p>
      <p>He swept out, the Factor close behind him. Bach followed them both,
calling Helmo for clearance for the Emperor’s shuttle.</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow, left behind, bowed to Michelle.</p>
      <p>“Excuse my rudeness, Sattur,” Michelle said. “But I must organize the
Factor’s request to sit in on the interrogation. Ean,” and she indicated
he was to leave in front of her.</p>
      <p>Ean half bowed to Sattur Dow on the way out. “Good night, Merchant.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_one_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Ean tried to pull the screens on the shuttle through to the screen in
Vega’s office. He couldn’t.</p>
      <p>“It won’t be wired for comms,” Vega said. “The only time you’ll ever get
a signal out of there is if someone opens a channel on their comms. You
could kill someone in one of those secure shuttles and no one would
know. Not unless they recorded it.”</p>
      <p>He tried for Bach’s comms but didn’t know it well enough to identify
which, out of the thousands around, it was.</p>
      <p>Vega made them tea. It was only the four of them. Michelle, Ean, Sale,
and Vega. “You’re here to save Lambert from his supper?” she asked
Michelle.</p>
      <p>Michelle nodded.</p>
      <p>“At least something makes sense. And you, Lambert. Why the sudden spying
on Bach?”</p>
      <p>“Because he wants your head,” Ean said. “On his desk. By morning.”</p>
      <p>Vega paused making the tea. “Literally? Or figuratively?”</p>
      <p>“He doesn’t actually want your head, I think, but he was unhappy with
something you did. He called a code five.”</p>
      <p>“A what?”</p>
      <p>“A code five, and not long after that, Yu got a message.” Ean was sure
that Yu’s message had been precipitated by Bach.</p>
      <p>“We don’t do codes by numbers,” Vega said. “Ours are names, like
Situation Josiah.”</p>
      <p>From the way Michelle nodded, Josiah was a real code. Maybe the numbers
were a personal code between Bach and his boss.</p>
      <p>“Vega, who is Yves Han, and is he or she with Radko?”</p>
      <p>Vega spilled the tea she was bringing across to Michelle. She didn’t say
anything until she’d mopped up and made another glass.</p>
      <p>“I want a linesman of my own,” she told Michelle. “If we all had
personal linesmen, we wouldn’t have any need for war, for nothing would
be secret.”</p>
      <p>Michelle’s smile showed her dimples. The best smile. “Level twelve.
They’re hard to come by.”</p>
      <p>“I still want one. One that <emphasis>I</emphasis> control, rather than one that controls
me. So, Lambert, where did you hear about Han?”</p>
      <p>“Bach was talking about him earlier, to someone called Lord Renaud. He
was on the comms to him when we went in to supper.”</p>
      <p>Not that they’d had any supper.</p>
      <p>“He told Renaud he’d deal with it, then he called up this other woman,
told her to find out who had assigned Yves Han to a covert operation,
and said he wanted their head on his desk by the morning. She called
back later—before Michelle arrived—and said she’d found who assigned Han
to Redmond. You had. After that, Bach called his code five. I think they
went down to the planet so they could talk about you.”</p>
      <p>“Is that Renaud Han’s son?” Michelle asked.</p>
      <p>Vega nodded. “Yves Han. He worked for me for two years when I was at
Baoshan Barracks. He’s very good. He’s wasted where he is.”</p>
      <p>Of course Vega would send good people with Radko.</p>
      <p>“I sent three people with Radko. All failed linesmen. She is, after all,
uniquely positioned to understand the abilities and difficulties of
working with such people.”</p>
      <p>If it was meant to be an insult, Ean ignored it.</p>
      <p>“Two of them had failed certification. Yves Han didn’t. He certified
with House of Sandhurst. Level seven, and the lines know, we need
sevens. He came home not long afterward to attend a function.” She
looked at Michelle. “He is Lord Renaud’s son, after all.”</p>
      <p>Michelle nodded.</p>
      <p>“He stopped off at a hotel before the event. The day some crazy woman
blew herself up there. Killed fifty people. Yves Han spent six months in
hospital having his body rebuilt. When he came out he couldn’t
communicate with the lines anymore. The doctors say there was no brain
damage, and that his loss of lines is psychosomatic, rather than
physical, in origin. They posit that he was doing something line-related
at the time of the explosion, and that it is so intertwined with the
memory of the explosion that he shuts down whenever he tries to use the
lines.”</p>
      <p>“And you thought Ean might be able to fix it.”</p>
      <p>“Lambert’s method of interacting with the lines is different,” Vega
said. “I thought it might be strange enough to bypass any mental
blocks.”</p>
      <p>She might be right.</p>
      <p>“Han’s father said he was in trouble,” Ean said. “He wanted Bach to
rescue him.”</p>
      <p>Damage control, Bach had said. What were they doing on Redmond anyway?</p>
      <p>“Let’s find out what the trouble is,” Vega said. “And let’s hope Bach
isn’t talking to Lord Renaud at the same time.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>The time lag between Lancia and the Haladean sector was nineteen
minutes.</p>
      <p>While they waited, Sale went down to the mess and came back with plates
of supper. “If it’s okay with you, ma’am,” she said apologetically, and
Ean wasn’t sure who she was saying it to. “But neither of us have eaten
yet.”</p>
      <p>“I haven’t eaten in ages either,” Michelle said. “I wouldn’t mind
something myself.”</p>
      <p>“Remember the sandwiches when we met,” Ean said, and he and Michelle
shared a smile.</p>
      <p>“I’ll never forget.”</p>
      <p>Michelle’s comms buzzed. Her father. Ean thought about tracing the
comms.</p>
      <p>“Daughter,” Yu said. “Call a council meeting immediately. Your betrothed
wishes to request a favor of them.”</p>
      <p>Michelle looked taken aback. “It is midnight. By the time I got them
together, it would be time for tomorrow’s regular council meeting.”</p>
      <p>“Are you—”</p>
      <p>“Of course not, Father. But I refuse to make a fool of myself organizing
a meeting when one will already happen within hours. Nor should you. It
was you yourself who taught me to save the fights for the important
things. What is this matter which is of such great import?”</p>
      <p>“And if Admiral Galenos asked you to organize a council meeting, what
would you say? Wait?”</p>
      <p>Michelle took a deep breath.</p>
      <p>Yu had no right to do this to anyone.</p>
      <p>Vega put a hand on Ean’s arm. Out of sight of Michelle’s comms. He
hadn’t realized he’d opened his mouth to speak.</p>
      <p>“I would tell him the same thing.” Michelle took a deep breath. “I will
ask that the Factor be allowed to address the council after the regular
session. What does he wish to speak to them about?”</p>
      <p>“Why, the capture of the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> and the betrayal of Captain Jakob, of
course.”</p>
      <p>“Very well,” Michelle said.</p>
      <p>After Michelle clicked off, she stared at her comms. “I don’t know how
many more favors the council will grant us. We are fast running out of
friends.”</p>
      <p>“Maybe the Factor should have requested it himself,” Vega said. “I hear
he’s fast making them.”</p>
      <p>Ean thought of Admiral Trask, and his carefully worded warnings. Of how
many of the admirals who’d spoken to Ean wanted the Worlds of the Lesser
Gods on the New Alliance’s side. They could all see advantages having
allies close to Redmond. They just didn’t like the way it was being
done.</p>
      <p>Renaud Han called then.</p>
      <p>Lord Renaud had been on the vids often when Ean was a boy. This harried,
anguished man looked nothing like the elegant lord Ean remembered from
his childhood.</p>
      <p>“Lord Renaud,” Vega said. “I am from the Palace Guard. About your call
earlier. Your son. What exactly is the problem?”</p>
      <p>They waited for the call to travel to Lancia and back.</p>
      <p>Vega didn’t give her name, but nineteen minutes later, when the call
came back, Lord Renaud looked into the screen as if trying to see her
properly. “Captain Vega.” His face cleared with relief. “We’ve met
before. You were my son’s commanding officer on Baoshan.”</p>
      <p>“I was,” Vega agreed.</p>
      <p>“Only it’s Commodore now, of course. Congratulations on your promotion.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>Neither of her answers would get back to Lancia for another nineteen
minutes.</p>
      <p>“Lord Renaud,” Vega said. “I need to know what trouble your son is in
and what we can do to fix it.”</p>
      <p>Ean dozed while he waited for the reply.</p>
      <p>“It’s difficult to explain over the comms,” Renaud said. Ean heard the
hot spike of Vega’s impatience. “You see, Yves thinks he was on a job,
and I’m concerned my comms are not secure enough.”</p>
      <p>“Is it bugged?” Vega asked Ean.</p>
      <p>“I can only tell about this end.”</p>
      <p>“Damn. I need answers, bugged or not. Can you make it secure, Ean?”</p>
      <p>Ean had no control on ships outside the sector. “No”</p>
      <p>“We’ll have to send him into the barracks to get it coded.” Vega looked
back at the screen. “Lord Renaud. I need to know exactly what happened.
I want you to go into the barracks. I’ll have someone ready for you. I
want you to tell the whole story. They’ll record it, encode it, and send
it to me. Tell everything, even things you don’t think necessary. Do you
understand?”</p>
      <p>“We could jump the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> back to Lancian space and pick
him up,” Ean suggested, while they waited for the reply. “Then he could
tell us face-to-face.”</p>
      <p>“A cold jump. I don’t want to be the one to send Helmo to an early
grave.”</p>
      <p>The comms was open; they weren’t hiding any of the conversation from
Renaud Han.</p>
      <p>Nineteen minutes later, the reply came back from Renaud. “I’d be happy
to explain it in person. Relieved, actually, and I could talk to
Commodore Bach while I’m there.”</p>
      <p>Vega’s annoyance flooded line one. “Lord Renaud, it will take two weeks
to get a jump. If you’re lucky.”</p>
      <p>But Renaud was still talking from nineteen minutes ago. “I can be there
tomorrow.”</p>
      <p>This time Vega did turn the comms off. “I don’t know what world he lives
in, but it’s not reality.” She switched back on. “Lord Renaud. If you
are unable to get a ship, please go back to our original plan. I will
have someone from the barracks contact you.”</p>
      <p>She clicked off. “Some people don’t seem to realize there’s a war on.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_two_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Michelle called in multiple favors to get the Factor an audience after
the day’s council meeting. Ean listened to the talk through Orsaya’s
comms on his way to his own meeting.</p>
      <p>“At this rate, she won’t have any favors left to call in.” Orsaya’s
voice was as sour as Vega’s as she and Ean walked down to the council
room with the Yaolin captain, Auburn. “She’s definitely using up the
goodwill of Aratoga and Balian on this.”</p>
      <p>Captain Auburn nodded.</p>
      <p>Ean wished Yu would hurry up and go home.</p>
      <p>Line training had been canceled that day, pending the investigation by
the admirals. That wouldn’t happen until after the council meeting. One
thing less to worry about, at least. For the moment, anyway.</p>
      <p>Abram had organized a precouncil meeting for him. A private session
where no visitors were allowed, and the recorded discussion was not made
available to the general public. Line business was for council ears
only.</p>
      <p>Ean stepped up to the podium and wiped his suddenly damp hands down the
side of his uniform. He had spoken to each council member multiple
times, individually and in groups, but today, he was nervous.</p>
      <p>“Members of the council, thank you for agreeing to hear me.” He looked
around at the 140 council members. Michelle and Abram both smiled
encouragingly. Ean took a deep breath. “Yesterday, Redmond tried to
steal a fleet line ship.”</p>
      <p>He had their attention. He heard the sound of a glass being placed down
after one of the councilors took a drink of water. If he’d been on a
ship, he would have heard the gulp that went with it and tasted the
water.</p>
      <p>He wanted to be on ship. He wanted to know what they were thinking.</p>
      <p>He had no idea.</p>
      <p>“They very nearly succeeded.”</p>
      <p>That caused a reaction: a murmur of noise that swelled, then died away.</p>
      <p>“They didn’t steal the ships.” One could always rely on Admiral Carrell,
of Eridanus, to speak first.</p>
      <p>“No, they didn’t,” Ean agreed. “But it was close.” He spoke before
Carrell could speak again. “Do you want to know why it was so close,
Admiral Carrell?”</p>
      <p>“Well, of course I do. We all do.”</p>
      <p>This time the murmur was an assent.</p>
      <p>“Because Redmond brought linesmen,” Ean said. He raised his arm and
pointed. He didn’t have to calculate a direction. He knew where the
ships were. “Those ships out there are so desperate for linesmen,
they’ll take anything they can get. Even enemy linesmen.”</p>
      <p>“We have supplied you with linesmen,” Carrell said. “Once they are
trained, they will be put on those ships.”</p>
      <p>“I understand that. But the ships are sentient. They don’t understand
the concept of time. They don’t understand why they have to wait. They
want their linesmen now. And if we don’t start allocating them to
various ships, the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> and its fleet will start to choose its
own crew. From anywhere. Even the enemy. Give me a list of which world
gets which ship, and I’ll introduce them to their linesmen.”</p>
      <p>“They’re line ships,” Carrell said. “We choose their crew. When we’re
ready.”</p>
      <p>If Ean could convince Carrell, he could convince the rest of the
council. “Alien ships are different from any ships we have known before,
Admiral. We might have chosen crew for the human line ships, but the
alien ships have minds of their own.”</p>
      <p>The aliens would have been smart enough to have crew ready as soon as a
ship was available.</p>
      <p>“So you’re telling us we have no control over who goes on which ship? Is
this a plot by Lancia to grab the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> itself?”</p>
      <p>He was not going to tell anyone about Sale. Not right now. “I am telling
you to sort out which ship each world will get. Sort it out now, and I
will endeavor to introduce the ships to their linesmen. Otherwise, I
cannot guarantee you will get the ship you negotiate for.”</p>
      <p>“This is a plot. A plan by Lancia to—”</p>
      <p>The noise from the chamber swelled.</p>
      <p>“Admiral Carrell.” Ean was grateful for his voice training, which
allowed him to raise his voice enough to be heard here on world, even
without the lines. “Admiral Carrell. Do you know how we stopped Redmond
stealing Scout Ship Three?”</p>
      <p>He waited until the noise had subsided.</p>
      <p>“I promised it a crew of its own. I introduced the ship to its crew.”
Ean searched the hall for Councilor Shimson. He bowed to him. “Councilor
Shimson, Admiral Trask,” who was seated next to him. “I promised Scout
Ship Three to Xanto.”</p>
      <p>The council members started talking over each other.</p>
      <p>“Why does Xanto get a ship first?”</p>
      <p>“How can a ship choose its own crew?”</p>
      <p>“You have to stop this happening. Surely you control the ships.”</p>
      <p>“Intelligent ships. It’s a farce, to force us into deciding before we’re
ready.”</p>
      <p>“Which ships are choosing? We need more time.”</p>
      <p>“Mightn’t be a bad idea to move faster. We get our own ship, with
entrenched linesmen. Lancia couldn’t drag it back after that.”</p>
      <p>The noise of over one hundred people speaking at once battered at him.
Ean held his hands up to stop their talking. For a wonder, they quieted.</p>
      <p>“These are alien ships. They are sentient.” If the members of the
council didn’t know that by now, they were living in denial. “They don’t
think as we do. For us to have control, tell me who gets which ship, and
I will introduce the linesmen of that world to their ships. As long as
they see progress, I think the ships will wait longer.”</p>
      <p>“And the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>,” Admiral Carrell demanded.</p>
      <p>“Give me two linesmen from every world for it. Pledge those linesmen as
part of your gaining your own ship.”</p>
      <p>Someone whose voice Ean didn’t recognize said, “But the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>
hasn’t got a captain yet.”</p>
      <p>He really wasn’t going to mention Sale. “I’m sure all of you already
have a captain in mind. Put their name forward. Let the council decide.
Just give the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> a crew while you’re deciding.”</p>
      <p>He held up his hand for silence again. And got it. “I don’t need to
remind you of the fragility of the fleet.” This was a closed session,
after all. Everyone here knew facts that weren’t general knowledge. Like
how the fleets jumped together unless they had a linesman in control. He
wasn’t sure if they all knew it had to be a line seven, but they knew
the limitations. “If Scout Ship Three had jumped, the whole fleet would
have jumped into enemy territory.”</p>
      <p>He paused, then added, “I urge you to act now to be sure the ships are
under your control.” Abram and Michelle would have been proud of his
double meaning there. “Before it’s too late.”</p>
      <p>He left the council chambers as more animated chatter broke out. This
wasn’t his decision to make. The council needed time to argue.</p>
      <p>Emperor Yu and the Factor of the Lesser Gods were in the outer chamber,
along with the media and support staff who were locked out when a closed
council was in session.</p>
      <p>Yu paced. The man was always pacing. The Factor was speaking with two
well-dressed officials. His body language was eloquent. The horror, the
shame, the sense of betrayal. It wasn’t hard to surmise they were
talking about the attempted theft of Scout Ship Three.</p>
      <p>If Michelle did marry the Factor, they’d be able to converse in body
gestures alone. Michelle and Abram could hold silent conversations, too.
Only they hadn’t needed grandiloquent gestures. They’d held whole
conversations with a raised eyebrow or a twist of lips.</p>
      <p>Yu stopped pacing when he saw Ean. Ean was glad of Bhaksir and her team,
who fell in around him and marched him out, looking straight ahead. They
exited the gallery before the media descended.</p>
      <p>“We should stay and see what the Factor says,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“No.” Bhaksir took him straight to the roof. “We’ve orders to get you
back on ship as quickly as we can.”</p>
      <p>To be honest, he was glad. Here on world, he was blind and deaf. He
didn’t know what was going on. How easily one got used to having access
to the lines.</p>
      <p>“Can we watch the council meeting?”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir nodded, and Ean listened to the regular business until it was
time to call the Factor.</p>
      <p>The Factor stood before the councilors, tall and imposing. “Council of
the New Alliance. I come to you with this plea. The Worlds of the Lesser
Gods are vulnerable. Our former ally, Redmond, has deserted us. We stood
alone. Then, out of the goodness of your hearts, the New Alliance is
considering us as potential allies. You have adopted us and made us feel
welcome. And how do we repay you?”</p>
      <p>He paused, long enough to let the message sink in but not long enough
for Admiral Carrell to interject.</p>
      <p>“With treachery. A traitor from my own party. A man I trusted. A man
working with my enemy, our enemy, to steal what is yours.”</p>
      <p>He was a mesmerizing speaker. By the time he got to the end, Ean wanted
to applaud.</p>
      <p>Some members of the council did.</p>
      <p>“What will happen to those traitors? To this man I trusted with my own
life? Will they receive the punishment that is due? No. They will
languish in a prison for the rest of their life. I ask you, councilors.
Isn’t that too kind?”</p>
      <p>Another pause.</p>
      <p>“Will they even give us the information we require? On the Worlds of the
Lesser Gods, we deal with betrayers as they deserve. We take them, we
break them. We get our answers. And then we destroy them.</p>
      <p>“I, the Factor of the Lesser Gods, ask this of you. Let <emphasis>us</emphasis> take these
people and find out what they know. Let <emphasis>us</emphasis> treat them with the
contempt they deserve. Allow me to salve a small amount of the harm that
was done to my worlds, to the reputation of my betrothed’s world. Grant
me this means of making amends.</p>
      <p>“I will escort them personally. I will ensure the correct questions are
asked. I will share this knowledge with you. With <emphasis>all</emphasis> of you.”</p>
      <p>It was a measured dig at the Department of Alien Affairs.</p>
      <p>He got applause, and Ean heard Carrell’s “Well said.”</p>
      <p>Afterward, when the noise had died down, Abram asked the first question.
“So you are proposing to take these thieves back to your world and
torture them?”</p>
      <p>That question raised a chorus of complaints. “Come, Galenos,” Admiral
Carrell said. “You can’t tell me Lancia never tortured anyone.”</p>
      <p>“I’m not even trying,” Abram said. “But I question whether it is
necessary. We have efficient questioning techniques of our own.
Humanitarian ones. Can we trust that the Worlds of the Lesser Gods will
pass the information they receive back to us? If we allow them to take
these people and question them, how do we know what results we will get
back? How do we know they will be questioned?”</p>
      <p>It was the closest anyone had come yet to accusing the Worlds of the
Lesser Gods outright of being involved.</p>
      <p>Ean couldn’t see what Michelle thought of that.</p>
      <p>“If you are so concerned about their not doing the right thing,” Carrell
said, “why don’t you send someone with them to oversee that it is done
properly.”</p>
      <p>“Hear, hear,” another councilor said. And a second, then a third.</p>
      <p>“I propose we vote on the Factor’s request that he be allowed to take
the criminals back to the Worlds of the Lesser Gods,” Admiral Carrell
said. “With the proviso that we are allowed to send two observers. One
from Lancia, another chosen by the council by vote.”</p>
      <p>The vote went seventy-one to sixty-nine, the Factor’s way. Michelle
voted for the Factor’s proposal; Abram voted against. It was the first
time Ean could recall that Michelle and Abram hadn’t voted the same way.</p>
      <p>Emperor Yu, from the visitor’s gallery, volunteered Commodore Bach as
the Lancastrian to accompany the prisoners.</p>
      <p>“After all,” he told Michelle when they were back on the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis>, “we need someone we can trust to oversee the operation.”</p>
      <p>Ean eavesdropped unashamedly.</p>
      <p>“You honor us all.” Michelle looked cool and composed, but through the
lines Ean could hear how utterly weary she was, could taste the
bitterness and the exhaustion. She looked over to Commodore Bach. “I
would appreciate it if you would go. I have the utmost trust in you.”</p>
      <p>Bach bowed low. “Thank you. Be sure that everything I do, I do only for
Lancia.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Ean was on Confluence Station when the shuttleload of prisoners boarded
the ship Lancia had provided for the trip back to the Worlds of the
Lesser Gods. He waited with Sale and Orsaya while it jumped.</p>
      <p>How had the Factor gotten a jump so quickly?</p>
      <p>“One hopes Commodore Bach’s team is enough to cope with whatever the
Worlds of the Lesser Gods puts forward,” Orsaya said.</p>
      <p>Ean wasn’t sure he trusted Bach yet.</p>
      <p>Renaud Han hadn’t called from Baoshan Barracks, either, so he didn’t
know what was happening with Radko.</p>
      <p>He had other things to worry about right now, for Abram, Katida, and
MacClennan arrived at Confluence Station. All four admirals from the
Department of Alien Affairs. Here to talk about the “incident” at line
training yesterday.</p>
      <p>Ean, Rossi, and Sale joined them.</p>
      <p>Orsaya’s staff got them sandwiches and tea. Sometimes, Ean thought the
only thing working soldiers ate was sandwiches.</p>
      <p>No one talked about what had happened that morning at the council
meeting. Instead they talked about the Factor’s initial visit to the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. And about the visitors’ line knowledge in general.</p>
      <p>“The Factor was fishing,” Orsaya said. “He’s heard stories about
Lambert.”</p>
      <p>“Maybe we shouldn’t keep it a secret anymore,” Abram said. “Enough
people know or suspect by now. We also have Sattur Dow asking questions
about things he shouldn’t know. Someone is feeding him information.”</p>
      <p>“I thought you ran a tight ship, Galenos,” Orsaya said. “I can’t imagine
your staff giving out information like that.”</p>
      <p>Abram blew out his breath but didn’t say anything.</p>
      <p>“Everyone on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> is reliable,” Sale said, her
voice cold.</p>
      <p>Orsaya smiled. “Well-spoken, Group Leader. We all know that. But Galenos
is as aware as we are that someone is passing information to people like
Dow. There is a high probability that someone is Lancastrian.”</p>
      <p>It wasn’t anyone on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>“So we come now to yesterday’s problem,” Katida said. Ean didn’t know if
it was a deliberate attempt to change the subject.</p>
      <p>“I take full responsibility,” Sale said. “I was aware of the tension. I
should have acted earlier.”</p>
      <p>No way would Ean let Sale take the blame for something he’d done. “It
wasn’t Sale. She offered to help, but I wanted to sort it out myself.”</p>
      <p>“What actually happened?” Katida asked. Her lines were muted, as if she
was deliberately trying to hide them. Ean didn’t pry. He opened his
mouth to answer, but Sale spoke first.</p>
      <p>“Lambert had—has—a reputation among other linesman. Many of the
multilevel linesmen in this group were aware of that reputation.”</p>
      <p>“I didn’t control—”</p>
      <p>“Let Group Leader Sale complete her explanation,” Orsaya said.</p>
      <p>Ean closed his mouth.</p>
      <p>“The problem was compounded by the fact that Linesman Rossi, a known
level-ten linesman, attended the training but did not run it.”</p>
      <p>More nods.</p>
      <p>“One linesman in particular, Arnold Peters, has been spreading
resentment. In the classes themselves, and outside of them. He is, by
all accounts, convincing, and was at House of Rigel while Ean was there.
He’s telling them horror stories.</p>
      <p>“We knew there was a problem. It was manageable until yesterday, when
Captain Jakob and Redmond tried to steal the scout.” Sale glanced over
at Ean and Rossi. “Lambert took corrective action by moving the ship
closer to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet.”</p>
      <p>He was Lambert now. No one in Sale’s team ever called him Lambert.</p>
      <p>“The bastard jumped the ship cold,” Rossi said. “He has no consideration
for the welfare of anyone else on the ships.”</p>
      <p>He wasn’t going to let Redmond—or the Worlds of the Lesser Gods—steal a
ship.</p>
      <p>“Linesman Rossi reacted by trying to prevent Lambert from moving the
ship,” Sale said. “He grabbed a weapon and attempted to shoot him.
Lambert’s bodyguards protected him and disarmed Rossi. Except the
trainees saw a top-level linesman attacked for no obvious reason. They
came in to defend him.”</p>
      <p>Sale looked at each admiral in turn. “The problem was quickly resolved
with the assistance of all crew on board the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>. However, Captain
Gruen demanded a lockdown, as people were still angry. And her ship was
damaged.”</p>
      <p>Katida’s lines leaked amusement. “And we couldn’t have that, of course.”</p>
      <p>“No, ma’am,” Sale said, then back to all four admirals. “That’s all,
sirs.”</p>
      <p>They turned their attention to Ean. Four intense gazes were unnerving.</p>
      <p>“Do you have anything to add to the facts?” Katida asked.</p>
      <p>He heard the slight emphasis on “facts,” both through her voice and
through the lines.</p>
      <p>“No, ma’am.” It felt strange calling Katida ma’am. “Except the fault is
all mine. I was in charge.” Sale shouldn’t blame herself. He’d been
running the training. “But I disagree with the implication that I have
no concern for other people and their welfare. The jump was perfectly
safe. If I only cared for the ships, I would have allowed the ship to be
taken. It wanted crew. All the alien ships do.” He pressed his lips
together before he said anything further.</p>
      <p>Katida turned back to Sale. “Do we have a plan for dealing with future
problems?”</p>
      <p>“We were hoping that as the linesmen learned more about the lines, they
would come around.”</p>
      <p>“If we get rid of Peters?”</p>
      <p>“I’m not sure that will solve the problem,” Sale said. “Although we have
discussed that.”</p>
      <p>They’d mentioned it. Was that the full amount of their discussion, or
had they talked about it elsewhere?</p>
      <p>“Peters makes a lot of noise,” Sale said. “But they’re linesmen. The
singles should be realizing the benefits by now and shutting him down,
even if the multilevels aren’t. But the singles are almost worse than
the multilevels. He shouldn’t have that much influence. Not on his own.”</p>
      <p>“So there may be a second troublemaker,” Katida said. “Any idea who?”
Her lines didn’t sound surprised. None of the others looked surprised
either. It was almost as if they expected it.</p>
      <p>“No, ma’am. We haven’t ascertained that yet.”</p>
      <p>“The question,” Admiral MacClennan said, “is whether the trouble is
deliberate, or whether they’re just linesmen aggrieved about the
training?”</p>
      <p>Ean hoped they weren’t trying to find excuses to absolve him. “How could
it be deliberate?”</p>
      <p>“Ean,” Katida said, “you truly do need to spend some time in my
military. Build up some paranoia.”</p>
      <p>“Put Burns in,” Orsaya suggested. “He’s a single. Many people still
believe he’s Rossi’s assistant. There might be some sympathy there.”</p>
      <p>“What if they think he’s a spy?” Fergus worked with Ean. If the trainees
turned on him, he’d have no chance.</p>
      <p>“I’ll put him in a protective suit,” Abram said. Ean had a suit of his
own back on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. He’d never worn it, other than
to try it on. “Although we won’t be close enough if anything goes wrong.
Ean?”</p>
      <p>“The lines will look after him.” They considered Fergus part of the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet, and the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> was an <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> ship.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“You’d better make sure he’s safe, bastard.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“I will, but why don’t you do something about it as well?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Rossi crossed his arms over his chest and didn’t answer.</p>
      <p>Orsaya said, “We’ll all be watching to see what we can find. Burns will
be the most protected man in the whole of the New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>Did the trainees realize they’d now be watched by four fleets?</p>
      <p>Abram called Fergus up immediately. “Burns, we’re placing you on the
<emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>. Group Leader Sale and Linesman Lambert will explain what you
need to do.” Then he called Gruen. “We’re sending Linesman Burns to the
<emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> temporarily. Please look after him.”</p>
      <p>She nodded. “I’ve sent through a list of damages.”</p>
      <p>“We’ll have it attended to,” Abram promised, and clicked off.</p>
      <p>What did Gruen do after a battle, when her ship was badly damaged? Hound
the admiralty until it was fixed?</p>
      <p>After that, they walked down to the shuttle bay together.</p>
      <p>“Abram.” Ean dropped back.</p>
      <p>Abram matched his pace to Ean’s. This close there were more lines around
his eyes than there had been, and he looked tired.</p>
      <p>“Did the council say anything? About getting crew for the fleet ships.”</p>
      <p>Abram smiled. “You certainly stirred them up. Made them a lot happier,
actually. They’re scared of Lancia and worried they’ll lose their ships
to us. Your message this morning gave them a way to be sure they don’t,
without actually admitting Lancia is a problem. You’ll have your ships
allocated soon.”</p>
      <p>“Good. Because the ships are already choosing their own linesmen. The
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> is vetting each linesman who comes on board.” And not only
the linesmen. Should he tell Abram about Sale?</p>
      <p>“Although”—and the corners of Abram’s mouth quirked—“your announcement
that you’ve already given one ship away was unexpected.” He breathed
out, a soft sigh Ean heard through the lines rather than actually heard.
“I wish that yours were the only type of problems we had to deal with.”</p>
      <p>Did that mean he minded what Ean had done? Or that he didn’t? Whether he
did or didn’t, the ships would choose. “Put sentient ships around
sentience for too long, and you won’t have any choice who goes where.”</p>
      <p>“So, is it humans who are giving the lines sentience, then? Or is it
that the lines, so long being used to a different sentience, are
adapting to humans?”</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t know, but wondering about it had brought back some of Abram’s
energy and spirit. Maybe it was time to raise the other matter.</p>
      <p>“Did you know the captain of a ship doesn’t have to be the captain?”</p>
      <p>Abram raised an eyebrow.</p>
      <p>“Patten isn’t the one Confluence Station thinks is in charge. That’s a
guy called Ryley.”</p>
      <p>“Malcolm Ryley? Patten’s second-in-command?”</p>
      <p>“Yes.”</p>
      <p>“He’s probably a better choice,” Abram said. “So you say if a ship has a
bad captain, it chooses its own.”</p>
      <p>How bad had Patten been? Ean shrugged. “It chooses its own if it doesn’t
have a captain.” Maybe Ryley had been around longer. Maybe the station
liked Ryley better. “It finds someone who looks after it and is there
all the time.”</p>
      <p>Abram didn’t get the hint.</p>
      <p>“The <emphasis>ships</emphasis> are starting to do that.”</p>
      <p>Abram said, “That may be no bad thing.”</p>
      <p>There was nothing Ean could say to that.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Fergus greeted them with, “Have you ever worn one of these things?”
Externally, he didn’t look any different. Not even bulkier. “They’re
dreadful.”</p>
      <p>“They keep you alive,” Sale said.</p>
      <p>“But still, against a bunch of linesmen?”</p>
      <p>“Linesmen who are in the military. Who’ve been trained to shoot
accurately and shoot fast.”</p>
      <p>“Are they likely to be a problem?”</p>
      <p>“Why don’t you ask Rossi, over there, who’ll be wearing that splint on
his wrist for the next three days? Or Ean, whose leg is fresh from
rehab.”</p>
      <p>Technically, the damage to Ean had been done by Rossi, and the damage to
Rossi by Bhaksir and her team.</p>
      <p>“Why are we expecting problems?” Fergus asked. “Surely, the business of
yesterday cleared the air.”</p>
      <p>“One can only hope,” Sale said. “Unfortunately, it seems to have had the
opposite effect, and everyone is resentful because that lockdown will be
on their record. We want you to find out if someone is deliberately
stirring up trouble.”</p>
      <p>“Peters?”</p>
      <p>“Probably not Peters. He’s more likely to be a vocal result of whoever
is stirring them up.”</p>
      <p>Fergus nodded. “Anything else?”</p>
      <p>“Be prepared. Don’t be complacent.”</p>
      <p>Fergus nodded again.</p>
      <p>They walked down to the shuttle bay with him—their second walk for the
night—while Sale gave Fergus last-minute instructions. A frowning Rossi
accompanied them, the first show of line solidarity in what felt like a
long time.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“We’ll look after him.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Thank you.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>“The lines will protect you,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“That’s good to know. Thank you.”</p>
      <p>What harm could befall Fergus on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> anyway? It was a fleet
ship; it should be safe.</p>
      <p>“See you tomorrow at training.” Ean hoped his foreboding was more to do
with his concern about facing the trainees again than it was about what
might happen to Fergus in the meantime.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Sale, Craik, and her team accompanied Ean to line training the following
day. They had a full complement of senior linesmen, with Rossi,
Hernandez, and Fergus all present.</p>
      <p>“I want to talk to them,” Ean told Sale. “Rather than you tell them off,
I mean.”</p>
      <p>Later, facing the trainees in the cargo hold, he wasn’t as confident.
Gruen had provided her own guards, and they stood ready—with weapons—for
any assault.</p>
      <p>Fergus smiled encouragement. He, at least, was still whole and safe.</p>
      <p>“What happened yesterday was a disgrace to us all, as people, and to the
lines you are learning to work with. Some of you have issues with me
being your trainer.” He paused and looked them over. Peters opened his
mouth to say something. “Don’t say it, Peters, or I’ll be forced to use
you as an example.”</p>
      <p>Peters closed his mouth with a snap. Ean breathed out; that was one
battle he hadn’t wanted to fight.</p>
      <p>“I’m sure you’ve all had trainers before that you didn’t like. Ones you
didn’t think capable of training you. They weren’t necessarily the
highest rank in their field, either. Did you pick a fight with your
trainers and continuously undermine them? I doubt it. You gritted your
teeth and hoped to get through the course.”</p>
      <p>They were all silent. How much of that was because they were listening
to him, and how much of it was because of Gruen’s armed guards around
the room? Sale’s team, too, although they didn’t look as menacing as
Gruen’s people even if they were more dangerous.</p>
      <p>“Yesterday was your last chance. You work with the program or you are
out.”</p>
      <p>He took a deep breath. “As some of you mentioned, you’re not getting
access to the alien ships, even though you think you deserve it.” He
could tell them now that they didn’t deserve it, but they wouldn’t
believe him. “You have to earn that access. Once you earn it, we’ll take
you on a tour.”</p>
      <p>Sale straightened but didn’t say anything.</p>
      <p>“And who decides when we’ve earned it?” Peters couldn’t stay quiet for
long. “You? We know who you’ll pick.”</p>
      <p>“Not me.” He looked out over the crowd to the linesmen at the back.
Hernandez, scowling at the group. Rossi, arms crossed, frowning. Fergus,
stiff in his armored suit. “Since you all know how good he is, Linesman
Rossi will deem whether you’ve earned a trip to the alien ships.”</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Don’t include me in your crazy schemes.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“We’re linesmen, Rossi. We work together.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>He watched the speculative looks the trainees shared. Some of them were
definitely out to prove themselves. Even Peters looked interested.</p>
      <p>“So what earns us a pass?” Kentish demanded.</p>
      <p>“You talk to the lines; you hear them when they talk back to you. Rossi
will tell you if you’re doing it right or not.”</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Thank you very much.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Ean smiled. “Let’s start training, shall we.”</p>
      <p>Jordan Rossi wasn’t a patient man, or a tolerant one. He listened to
each linesman sing, pointed left or right, then moved on to the next.
The four Xantos went right, and Ean already knew they could hear the
lines, so that meant those on the left needed more training.</p>
      <p>Peters was sent left.</p>
      <p>Ean went over to him. “Can you feel the lines? Like you do normally, I
mean.”</p>
      <p>“Is this a trick question?”</p>
      <p>Ean hid his sigh. <emphasis>“No,”</emphasis> direct to Peters, and then to the lines,
<emphasis>“Please tell him no.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>A strong chorus of noes filled the room, mixed in with some of Ean’s
exasperation. Even the elevens joined in.</p>
      <p>Peters looked taken aback.</p>
      <p>“Do you mind?” Rossi said.</p>
      <p>“Did you understand what I said?” Ean asked Peters.</p>
      <p>“No.”</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t push it. He moved on to the next linesman.</p>
      <p>Halfway through training, Vega left a message. Renaud Han was in
Haladean space. She’d sent him to Confluence Station. She would meet Ean
there.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>They met in the small meeting room off the main control room.</p>
      <p>“You got here quickly,” Vega said</p>
      <p>“I will do whatever needs to be done for my son.” It was both a promise
and a challenge. “He’s not involved. He’s an honest boy and works hard.
He doesn’t know about any of this.”</p>
      <p>“And what did it take to get a ship here so fast?”</p>
      <p>It wasn’t the first question Ean would have asked, but Renaud laughed.
“I’ve been smuggling goods for fourteen years now. Getting a ship was
the least of my problems.”</p>
      <p>Vega didn’t even blink although Ean did. “You don’t strike me as a man
likely to become involved in smuggling, Lord Renaud. What could you
possibly gain?”</p>
      <p>“Isn’t that what this is about?” Renaud asked.</p>
      <p>Was Radko was chasing smugglers on Redmond? No. Vega wouldn’t have sent
her there for that. Not unless someone was smuggling war secrets.</p>
      <p>“I’m not ashamed of what I did.”</p>
      <p>“Tell the damn story, Renaud, or I’ll feed you a truth drug. We’ve got
more important things than having you procrastinating.”</p>
      <p>Lord Renaud nodded and blew into his cupped palms. Maybe to give himself
courage.</p>
      <p>“You need to understand why I did it.”</p>
      <p>“Tell us, then.”</p>
      <p>“My son was a monster.” Bald and flat, and absolutely honest, according
to the lines.</p>
      <p>“This son you are trying so desperately to rescue?”</p>
      <p>“Of course not. Let me tell it from the beginning.”</p>
      <p>Vega nodded.</p>
      <p>“Yves was… you don’t need to know… but we started sending him away for
treatment when we discovered what he was like.”</p>
      <p>He relaxed as he spoke. Ean thought he might be relieved to tell it.</p>
      <p>“We got a look-alike for some of the public functions because, of
course, we had to keep up appearances. It wouldn’t do to show the
Emperor we had a weakness.”</p>
      <p>Emperor Yu again, controlling everyone’s lives. One man shouldn’t have
that much power.</p>
      <p>“Jaxon was a lovely boy. And although Amina never said it to my face, I
know we both wished he was our son, and not Yves.”</p>
      <p>Renaud blew into his hands again. He was trembling now. “Yves got worse,
especially once he started line training. There were incidents. Here,
and on Roscracia.”</p>
      <p>House of Sandhurst was on Roscracia, and Vega had said Han trained at
Sandhurst.</p>
      <p>“One girl.” Renaud’s voice didn’t change, but the wave of horror—bitter
and nose-clearingly sharp—overwhelmed the lines.</p>
      <p>“The girl?” Vega prompted Renaud.</p>
      <p>“Her mother decided to kill Yves. He came back to Lancia for a function.
She blew up the hotel. Killed him, killed herself, and fifty other
people.”</p>
      <p>That would be the explosion where Yves Han had lost his line ability.</p>
      <p>“They told us that Yves was dead. Then they said they’d made a mistake,
and he was in the hospital.” Renaud breathed into his palms again. “We
think the initial prognosis—that Yves was dead—came from the DNA they
got from the bomb scene. Then someone at the hospital recognized Yves as
our son. We didn’t know Yves had asked Jaxon to stand in for him. Not
for weeks. Not until they started the skin grafts and found we were
incompatible.”</p>
      <p>Vega nodded.</p>
      <p>“So we went to his parents. They wanted money. For what we’d done to
their son.” Renaud looked earnestly at them both. “Understand, no one
expected Yves—Jaxon—to recover fully. We all thought he’d… so we paid
them off, provided they came in every week for skin grafts.”</p>
      <p>Renaud breathed in deeply again. The opposite of Abram, who always blew
out. “They’re still getting their money.</p>
      <p>“Things went well for a while. Yves—Jaxon—recovered, although he didn’t
remember much at first. Everyone thought he was Yves, treated him like
Yves. His parents stayed away, provided they got their money.”</p>
      <p>A lot of families Ean knew would give up their sons for a regular
allowance.</p>
      <p>“Did he ever remember?” Vega asked.</p>
      <p>“In the end, but, of course, we wouldn’t listen. We always changed the
subject.” Another deep breath. “Tiana Chen found out. I don’t know if
you know her. She sticks around the fringes of court, finding everyone’s
secrets and blackmailing them.”</p>
      <p>“She blackmailed you?”</p>
      <p>“Yes. Yves guessed we were being blackmailed. So he joined the fleet.” A
laugh that was half sob. “I think he felt guilty. He thought it would
solve things. Only the entry tests—”</p>
      <p>“Would have picked up that he was an imposter,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>“Yes.” Renaud rubbed his hands together again. “I found someone. On
Redmond. They agreed to switch the DNA records in exchange for my
sending them things from Lancia. Medical supplies, mostly, because the
taxes between the two worlds quadruple the cost. There were some things
you couldn’t send to Redmond, even back then.”</p>
      <p>Ean shivered. The adopted son would have thought he was fixing things.
But he hadn’t. He’d made it much, much worse.</p>
      <p>“How did you get the items to Redmond?”</p>
      <p>“I have a friend.” Renaud stopped.</p>
      <p>“He won’t get into trouble. We’re interested in your son, right now.”</p>
      <p>“He’s a good friend. He hasn’t done anything wrong.”</p>
      <p>“I’ve already said no repercussions for him.”</p>
      <p>“He exports live shellfish. He gave me access to the ships he uses. He’s
their best customer. They’ll do anything for him.”</p>
      <p>“So let me get this straight,” Vega said. “The boy’s parents are
blackmailing you. Tiana Chen is blackmailing you. And Redmond is
blackmailing you and asking you to smuggle medical supplies and other
goods.”</p>
      <p>“Yves is worth every credit. And I’ll still happily pay it.”</p>
      <p>The truth of that was a high crystal note through the lines.</p>
      <p>“So what changed,” Vega asked. “You wouldn’t be this stressed about
something that’s been going on for years.”</p>
      <p>Renaud rubbed his eyes. “A month after the formation of the New Alliance
I got a visit from someone. I didn’t know him, but he was Lancastrian.
Military, I think, but I couldn’t be sure. He said, ‘We know you are
sending items to Redmond. We want you to send things for us, as well.’”</p>
      <p>“And if you didn’t?”</p>
      <p>“They would take Yves and torture him. Suddenly, instead of passing
medical supplies, I’m passing fleet plans and… alien gadgets and I don’t
know what else.”</p>
      <p>“Alien gadgets?” Ean asked.</p>
      <p>“I recognized one of them. From the media. A little thing about so big.”
Renaud cupped his hands.</p>
      <p>Ean wanted to ask him to describe it further. He didn’t.</p>
      <p>“I knew it was wrong. Of course I did. We’re at war. I couldn’t keep it
up, not even for Yves. So I went to Commodore Bach.”</p>
      <p>“What did he do?” Vega’s tone was mild.</p>
      <p>“He told me to keep sending the items but to tell him about each
shipment. That if I stopped, Redmond would likely make good on their
promise to harm Yves. Or at the very least kidnap him and use that to
force us to continue sending goods.”</p>
      <p>Renaud blinked hard and breathed in three times fast in succession,
nearly choking himself. He blinked again. “No one saw me go to Bach, but
not long after that Yves leaves the barracks without calling me first.
He knows we worry if he goes away. He always calls to let us know.”</p>
      <p>“How often does he go away?”</p>
      <p>“Hardly ever. He’s a military policeman. He’s stationed at Baoshan
Barracks.”</p>
      <p>Who had assigned Yves Jaxon Han to Baoshan? Ean suspected Renaud
wouldn’t be above dropping a word in the ear of someone in power to get
his “son” a job somewhere safe, where the worst thing he was likely to
come across were soldiers drunk after a night out. Where the Han family
could keep an eye on him.</p>
      <p>“When Yves finally calls, he’s on Redmond, and he wants Gunter to send
shellfish so he can escape. How does he even know we always put the
smuggled goods in with the shellfish? Not unless someone is forcing him
to call.”</p>
      <p>And people said the families in the slums were strange.</p>
      <p>“Well, it’s a mess,” Vega said in the silence that followed. “It’s also
a damned remarkable coincidence. Gunter Wong is one of the few
Lancastrians who can still get ships off Lancia on a regular basis. His
product has a short shelf life, and he has buyers in Gate Union and
Redmond who keep the lines open for him. We follow the shellfish
orders.”</p>
      <p>Abram probably used it, too. The Lancastrian ambassador on Haladea III
ordered Gippian shellfish for functions.</p>
      <p>“I sent Han on this mission, Lord Renaud,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>Renaud sagged. Physically and emotionally. Through the lines it was a
long, slow, gray relief. Someone should test Renaud Han for line
ability.</p>
      <p>“So it is a job? He’s safe?”</p>
      <p>Vega didn’t answer that. She turned to Ean. “The team went down with a
cargo of shellfish. One of them might have recognized it as a potential
escape route.”</p>
      <p>Radko would even if no one else had.</p>
      <p>“Did they get off Redmond?” Ean asked. The most important question.</p>
      <p>“I’m not sure yet. But the ship manifest doesn’t show any problems.”</p>
      <p>“Don’t you know?” Based on what Renaud had told them, he would have
asked, and if Gunter Wong was such a friend, he’d have told him.</p>
      <p>“Yves hasn’t contacted me,” Renaud said. “If he’s on a job, I can’t
compromise him by calling him up.”</p>
      <p>Surely it was too late to think of that now. “Where did the ship go
after it left Redmond?”</p>
      <p>Renaud paused, and the lines reluctantly deflated. They really should
test his line ability.</p>
      <p>“Aeolus.”</p>
      <p>Ean had never heard of Aeolus two weeks ago. Still, the Worlds of the
Lesser Gods was friendly to Lancia. Wasn’t it? So why wasn’t Radko back
by now?</p>
      <p>He glanced at Vega. She was scowling at him. She might have given Radko
and her team more than one task. Who said they weren’t off doing their
job?</p>
      <p>“I’ll see how far Bach got investigating what happened.” Vega called
Sale. “Group Leader. Arrange secure accommodation for Lord Renaud on
Confluence Station.” Then she said to Renaud, “I’ll keep you informed.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you.”</p>
      <p>Ean said, after Renaud had left, “You know Bach wasn’t doing anything.
Except damage control.”</p>
      <p>“Damage control. It’s an odd phrase, don’t you think.” Vega frowned. “I
wonder if Bach had an operation of his own on Redmond, and our people
got in the way.”</p>
      <p>“Don’t you talk to each other?”</p>
      <p>“Of course we do, but there are always secret ops.” She glared at him,
as if he were to blame, but Ean was used to the Vega glare by now. That
was her normal expression. “I’ll find out.”</p>
      <p>She started for the door, paused. “I almost forgot. We still don’t know
about this top secret project Linesman Glenn was working on, but we did
find out that House of Sandhurst recently signed a big contract with
TwoPaths Engineering to supply more linesmen for them.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_three_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>Radko came around to the sound of two people arguing. They were speaking
Standard, but one had the distinct uptrill of a native Redmond speaker,
and the other had flatter tones she didn’t recognize.</p>
      <p>“I’ve told you before, Commander Martel. No more than two tranquilizers
per person. It’s dangerous,” the Redmond speaker said.</p>
      <p>“I’m not putting my crew in danger because your crazy linesmen won’t
board a shuttle, Dr. Quinn. Argo’s got scratch marks down his face that
will need regen.”</p>
      <p>“Two tranquilizers would have been enough.”</p>
      <p>Radko couldn’t move her arms or her legs. She’d taken at least three
tranquilizers herself. Would it wear off? She tried to open her eyes.
Couldn’t do that either.</p>
      <p>“We had to get them out fast,” Martel said.</p>
      <p>“We didn’t need to go at all. You caught everyone.”</p>
      <p>Was her team all right? Were they immobilized like her?</p>
      <p>“The lab was compromised. You know the rules. Especially this close to
culmination. And remember, this is two weeks after someone stole your
report.”</p>
      <p>“It wasn’t my report they stole.” But Quinn’s tone became more
reasonable. “Even so, taking them onto a space station. You know they
hate that.”</p>
      <p>The slight vibration and the murmur of the air supply had been so
familiar Radko hadn’t realized they were in space. By the sounds, she
was on a shuttle.</p>
      <p>“They hate everything and everyone.” Martel brushed past Radko. She
tried to open her eyes again. Still couldn’t.</p>
      <p>“Any luck?” The voice was directed close to her.</p>
      <p>“Nothing.” A third voice, as flat as Martel’s. Something dropped onto a
surface nearby. “Two comms. Neither of which I can read; they look new.
A knife in her boot. An arsenal around her waist, sourced from all over
the galaxy. A lot of credit in chits.”</p>
      <p>The sleeve brushed her again. “This comms looks remarkably familiar.”</p>
      <p>Radko wanted to be Ean, who didn’t need his eyes or ears to see through
the lines.</p>
      <p>“Redmond military property. It strikes me, Dr. Quinn, that your people
are very loose with classified information.”</p>
      <p>Yet Martel didn’t have a Redmond accent. Was he part of TwoPaths
Engineering? Or part of a third group they didn’t know about?</p>
      <p>“You’re supposed to be protecting us.”</p>
      <p>“We’re supposed to, Quinn? Wasn’t your government doing that? And
they’re doing a good job, too, as we can all see.” From the sudden extra
loudness in his voice, Radko knew he’d turned back to look her. “Do you
think this one’s the leader?”</p>
      <p>“I’d guess,” said the man who, presumably, had emptied her pockets.
“She’s got one of Bergin’s fake entry chits, but I can’t ID her until we
crack her comms.”</p>
      <p>“She’ll be Lancastrian.” Martel sounded confident. Radko wished she
could see him. “Look at her face.”</p>
      <p>There were benefits to looking like a relation to the Crown Princess of
Lancia but disadvantages as well. The disadvantages outweighed the
advantages.</p>
      <p>“Why would they be so stupid. We’ve agreed—”</p>
      <p>“You heard Bach’s call the other day. That guy’s father. Only they said
he was on Redmond.”</p>
      <p>Bach wasn’t a common name on Lancia. The only Bach that Radko knew was
Sergey Bach, Emperor Yu’s head of security.</p>
      <p>Renaud Han had called someone to get Han out of Redmond. What if he’d
called Bach? Why would Bach call these people?</p>
      <p>“What else did we find?” the officer asked.</p>
      <p>“Comms on the other two.”</p>
      <p>So two of them had been caught. Which two?</p>
      <p>She couldn’t do anything for the moment, so she lay and listened. This
drug immobilized the muscles but didn’t immobilize the mind.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_four_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Radko could take care of herself. Ean knew that, and he knew that
hitching a ride on a ship guaranteed to deliver a cargo was a smart
thing to do. A very Radko thing to do. She was fine.</p>
      <p>He wished she’d call, though, and let them that know she was. Except
according to Vega, if she called, it meant something was wrong.</p>
      <p>The clock in his room showed 03:17 when he finally admitted he wasn’t
going to get to sleep and made for the fresher. Maybe he’d sleep after a
shower.</p>
      <p>He listened to the lines and let the water flow wash over him. Ships on
both fleets were calm. Except the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, which was
edgy.</p>
      <p>Captain Helmo was awake, sitting back in the captain’s chair on the
bridge, fingers pressed together, doing his captain’s equivalent of
listening to the lines.</p>
      <p>Helmo and Ean had discussed it. Helmo didn’t hear anything.</p>
      <p>“It’s all gut feel, Ean.”</p>
      <p>“But you must hear something,” Ean had protested.</p>
      <p>“Instinct, Ean. You know when something is not right, or something needs
to be done. It may not even be to do with the lines. Maybe it’s
experience. Someone doesn’t react the way I expect them to, or a ship
noise is slightly off.”</p>
      <p>Ean thought it was more like the cartel-trained linesmen, who learned to
push at the lines, rather than tune them. “I think you’re getting
messages, but you can’t interpret them. You think of them as your gut
feel, but they’re not. You’re hearing them.”</p>
      <p>“Define hearing, Ean,” Helmo had said. “No one denies the lines use
sound. I can see that when I go onto one of the alien ships. It’s not
sound waves that allow you to ‘hear’ me on the bridge from your room.”</p>
      <p>“I listen through the lines.”</p>
      <p>“It’s not acoustics that make you sound like a full choir when you sing.
A single human larynx cannot physically make the sounds you make.
There’s something else. You—we—interpret it as sound, but it’s more.”</p>
      <p>However they interpreted it, Ean knew that right now Helmo was sitting
in the captain’s chair because that was where the “instinct” was
strongest. He looked for the origin of the trouble that Helmo was
worried about. Yu’s quarters. No surprise there.</p>
      <p>Yu and Michelle were drinking tea. At least Michelle was. Yu paced
energetically around the room. He looked fresh, as if he could keep up
the pace forever. Michelle was her usual inscrutable self, but Ean knew
how many hours she’d spent awake over the last few nights, and he could
feel exhaustion underneath the nagging worry.</p>
      <p>“Your arrival has stirred up old worries about Lancia,” Michelle said.
“Did you think you could come here—with the Factor of the Lesser Gods in
tow—and expect nothing to change? Especially not when you brought Sattur
Dow with you. The way he’s sniffing around the alien ships leads
everyone to believe that the first thing you will do when Lancia has
enough power is to gift him a ship.”</p>
      <p>“Of course things have changed. They needed to change. Lancia was being
ignored, pushed aside by the other worlds.”</p>
      <p>“Two weeks ago, Lancia required seven extra worlds voting with them to
gain a majority in parliament. Today, they need seventeen. Some change
is not good, Father, and this one is bad.”</p>
      <p>“Everything is working to plan, Daughter.”</p>
      <p>Something like ice whispered through the lines and raised the hair on
Ean’s arms. Even the fresher seemed cold, suddenly. The cold had a
faint, fizzy, citrus tang to it. It was coming from Michelle.</p>
      <p>Her voice showed none of it as she said, “If you have plans, Father,
isn’t it time you told them to me? Perhaps I can help.”</p>
      <p>Yu paused. He looked at her, head cocked to one side. “Perhaps it is
time. But then what, Daughter? Will you take those plans to Galenos?”</p>
      <p>“Should it matter if I did? Galenos is loyal to Lancia.”</p>
      <p>“Is he? He blocks my every turn. He refuses to let my friends come to
the capital of the New Alliance.” Yu stopped in front of Michelle. “He
advises against my future son-in-law seeing his betrothed’s ships.”</p>
      <p>“We restrict access to those ships inside the New Alliance,” Michelle
said. “Why should we allow people who are not part of the New Alliance
to see them before our own allies do?”</p>
      <p>“Our allies? Is not the Worlds of the Lesser Gods a potential ally,
too?”</p>
      <p>“They have to earn the New Alliance’s trust. Having a high-profile
member of their party attempt to steal ships for Redmond doesn’t help.”</p>
      <p>Yu waved that away as if it were nothing. “Everyone has traitors in
their midst, Daughter. Even I. And you can never tell who is trustworthy
and who is not. Six months ago, I had not anticipated that Galenos—a man
I trusted to look after my own daughter—would betray me with his own
ambition.”</p>
      <p>A wave of emotion so strong it manifested itself as a stab in the gut.
Ean doubled over.</p>
      <p>“I don’t see why you believe Admiral Galenos is betraying you. He has
devoted his life to Lancia.”</p>
      <p>The emotion was so strong, Ean couldn’t tell what it was. He staggered
out of the fresher, and went back to sit on the side of the bed.</p>
      <p>“Can you be sure he’s working for <emphasis>my</emphasis> Lancia?” Yu asked.</p>
      <p>The waves grew stronger, a sudden tsunami of noise and bitterness—and
purple worry. “I cannot believe you would say that about an honorable
man like Galenos. Let us stop this farce, Father, and call this entire
stupid conversation out for what it is.”</p>
      <p>“Which is?”</p>
      <p>Michelle glanced at him. Ean couldn’t read her expression, and he’d bet
Yu couldn’t, either. “You are trying to discredit Galenos. I can only
assume it is because you want to put your own puppet in the council
here, and, unfortunately for you, there are only two ways to get onto
the council. Wait six years for this term to run out and replace us
then, or kill one of us now.”</p>
      <p>Lancia had been the only world to protest at the six-year term, and the
inability to exit—short of dying—once you were elected.</p>
      <p>Michelle couldn’t be serious. But her lines said she was. No wonder she
wouldn’t let Abram anywhere near the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> while Yu was
there.</p>
      <p>“This time, Father, I refuse to stand by and watch you kill an innocent
man. A good man, who only has the interests of Lancia at heart.”</p>
      <p>Yu came to sit opposite Michelle. His overriding emotion was
satisfaction. Was he pleased his daughter had seen through his plan?
Proud of her for realizing the truth?</p>
      <p>“You will have to kill me before you get to Abram.”</p>
      <p>“Abram now, is it?”</p>
      <p>Michelle tilted her chin. “Yes, it is.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang a song of encouragement through the lines. <emphasis>“We’re here. We
support you.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Captain Helmo heard him. Would Michelle? Probably not. He pushed the
full strength of his support through the lines, to the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis>, who echoed it and amplified it.</p>
      <p>Michelle sat up straighter. Did he imagine her smile? He didn’t imagine
the glance that she flicked toward the camera facing her.</p>
      <p>“I am sorry to hear that.” And Yu did look regretful. “You will get over
it. And you will have a new life. A political alliance by marriage to
cement, allies to manage.”</p>
      <p>“I have allies to manage here if I can. Your coming here has
irretrievably damaged Lancia’s standing. If you have any political sense
at all, you’ll go home and leave us to do damage control.” Then she
added, bitterly, “If it isn’t too late.”</p>
      <p>“Damage control.” Yu rolled the words around his mouth. “I see.” Another
long pause. “Well, Daughter. I am not going home. Today, I go to
Confluence Station as a guest of the Admiral Carrell of Eridanus.”</p>
      <p>“Carrell?”</p>
      <p>“A surprise inspection.” Yu smiled. “Being arranged at this very moment.
Some members of the council are concerned that the Department of Alien
Affairs is not looking out for <emphasis>all</emphasis> members of the New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>A small frown creased Michelle’s forehead, but she didn’t say anything.</p>
      <p>Yu’s smile widened. “Before that, I go onto the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>.” He reached
across and patted her hand. “I might meet your linesman there. He’s so
very hard to catch. If I hadn’t seen him at supper the other night, I
might wonder if he even exists.”</p>
      <p>Michelle looked away. “I doubt you will see him there. Lambert is taking
the trainee linesmen out to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> today.” Her gaze shifted,
and the glance that flicked toward the camera was longer this time.</p>
      <p>Message received and understood. <emphasis>“We will,”</emphasis> Ean sang although he was
fairly sure Michelle didn’t hear him. He opened the comms to Helmo, who
was sitting forward in his seat now. “If you get a chance, please tell
Michelle I got her message. Make it discreet.”</p>
      <p>Helmo nodded. “Anything else?”</p>
      <p>“No.”</p>
      <p>Ean pulled on his uniform and went out to the main control room. Hana
and one of Rossi’s people were on duty.</p>
      <p>“We’re taking the trainees to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> today,” he told Hana.</p>
      <p>The trainees hadn’t yet all passed the Rossi test. Peters, for one, was
still denying he heard the lines though it was obvious he did. The three
trainees from Lancia all said they did, but they hadn’t passed the Rossi
test, either.</p>
      <p>If Michelle had told Yu they would be on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, then that’s
where they’d be.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> would be happy. More prospective crew. Ean would have
to remind it that they weren’t all for the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>Hana woke Bhaksir, who woke Sale. Orsaya’s guard woke Orsaya’s aide,
Captain Auburn.</p>
      <p>Ean looked at the time. It was 04:02. “There wasn’t any need to wake
people. We could have sorted this ourselves.”</p>
      <p>But you couldn’t simply tell everyone to meet at a different ship. There
were security clearances to organize, shuttles to schedule, and a whole
lot of other bureaucracy to cover. How had Yu managed to arrange a visit
without anyone’s knowing?</p>
      <p>If they didn’t start now, they wouldn’t be ready in time, not unless it
was deemed an emergency. Not to mention, if they started organizing it
after Yu set out for Confluence Station, it would be obvious what they
were doing.</p>
      <p>“If you keep this up, Ean,” Sale said, “I’m doing the night shifts from
now on. What’s your problem this time?”</p>
      <p>“It’s not a problem. We’re taking the trainees to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>
today.”</p>
      <p>“Since when?”</p>
      <p>“Since about ten minutes ago, when Michelle said we were. Yu’s coming
out to Confluence Station, and the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>. She said we wouldn’t be
there because we’re training on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> today.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll call Admiral Orsaya,” Auburn said.</p>
      <p>“And the ones Rossi hasn’t passed?” Sale asked.</p>
      <p>Rossi wouldn’t pass up a chance to visit an eleven ship. Not when there
was a choice. He’d talk his way into coming along. Somehow. Ean smiled.
“Keep them on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>. Rossi can train them.”</p>
      <p>“I thought all the linesmen—”</p>
      <p>“Yu didn’t mention Rossi.” Let Rossi work to find a reason to come
along.</p>
      <p>Orsaya came out then, as grumpy as Ean felt without much sleep. “Emperor
Yu is coming here, you say. We haven’t given him permission. I wish the
man would take himself and his unwelcome guests and go home. Although I
fear—” Orsaya looked away from the Lancastrians and closed her lips on
anything else she might have said.</p>
      <p>What did she fear that she wouldn’t say? The same thing Michelle feared?
That Yu was here to kill Abram to get his own seat on the council?</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Sale spent the next hour reassigning paramedics and guards from the
<emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> and getting security passes allocated for
them.</p>
      <p>“At least we’ve Lancastrian paramedics today. I can’t imagine how
awkward explaining this would be if they were from some other world.”</p>
      <p>Bach would have known and told Emperor Yu that the change had been a
late one, but he was off supervising Jakob’s interrogation.</p>
      <p>Jordan Rossi, allowed to sleep through till breakfast, came out looking
refreshed and impeccable.</p>
      <p>“I haven’t seen this much activity since the last time Lambert did
something crazy. What’s he done this time?”</p>
      <p>Ean got himself tea and nut paste with winter fruits. The one meal Ru Li
and Hana couldn’t spoil because the nut paste was ordered in from
Haladea, and the winter fruits came from the freezer. “I’m taking the
trainees who have passed your test onto the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> for training
today.”</p>
      <p>“Rather sudden, isn’t it? Not to mention a total about-face from what
you said—was it only yesterday—about not taking anyone onto the alien
ships.”</p>
      <p>“Circumstances change.”</p>
      <p>“We’re taking Ean onto the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> to avoid Emperor Yu,” Sale said.
“You’re on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>, Rossi. With the ones you haven’t passed yet.”</p>
      <p>“Surely you’d be smarter getting all the linesmen off ship.”</p>
      <p>“We won’t undermine Ean like that.”</p>
      <p>“I see.” And Rossi probably did see.</p>
      <p>“We’d prefer everyone went,” Orsaya said.</p>
      <p>Rossi sat back. <emphasis>“I know what you’re doing, bastard.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Then do something about it.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Rossi sipped scalding hot tea while he pondered. Ean forced himself to
sit and wait. Eventually, Rossi smiled. “Take them over. I want to
address them when they arrive on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“I don’t think I’m going to like this,” Sale said.</p>
      <p>“You don’t have to, sweetheart. Lambert’s got a problem. I can fix it.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>They had an hour before they left for Confluence Station.</p>
      <p>Michelle couldn’t keep Abram away from Yu forever. One day they’d meet.
And Yu would kill Abram.</p>
      <p>But if Abram was on ship, line eight could protect him. If Ean could
work out how to make line eight come in when he needed it.</p>
      <p>Ean found an empty room. <emphasis>“Let’s try the protection again,”</emphasis> he sang to
the line.</p>
      <p>He stopped when he saw Rossi standing in the doorway.</p>
      <p>“What are you doing?”</p>
      <p>“Working with line eight.”</p>
      <p>“You’re pushing at the line,” Rossi said. “Like those linesmen you
despise so much. The ones who were taught by the cartels.”</p>
      <p>“I don’t despise them.”</p>
      <p>“Whatever you say. The fact remains; you’re forcing the line. On my
home.” Rossi crossed his arms and waited.</p>
      <p>“I wasn’t forcing the line.”</p>
      <p>“You are pushing it to do something you want it to do. Isn’t that your
definition of force?”</p>
      <p>Rossi had a point. Trying to make the line do something in a way it
didn’t understand could be seen as force. Ean sang a quick apology to
line eight.</p>
      <p>“Thank you. Now what were you trying to do?”</p>
      <p>Ean would have to apologize to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> lines tomorrow as well.
Right now, he was marveling at the fact that Rossi had come to him to
tell him he was doing something wrong. Rossi would never admit to
helping someone even if he was. “I was trying to get line eight’s
protective field to work.”</p>
      <p>“And all that garbage you tell us about listening to the lines, and
<emphasis>asking</emphasis> them to do things, rather than forcing them, is just that?
Garbage?”</p>
      <p>“Of course not.” But he had been, hadn’t he.</p>
      <p>How did you say thank you to a man who wouldn’t appreciate your noticing
what he was doing? You just said it. “Thank you, Rossi.”</p>
      <p>“I’m not doing it for you. I’m doing it because you’re mucking up lines
that I fix. I don’t need a megalomaniac running around all power and no
consideration for what he’s doing. You’re a level twelve. That doesn’t
always make you right.” Rossi turned and walked away.</p>
      <p>Ean watched where he went. Through the corridors, all the way down to
the viewport. Ean didn’t go to the viewport often. He’d forgotten it was
there. He remembered the linesmen, people he’d heard about but never
before seen, being dragged out of that same area by Orsaya’s soldiers,
back when she’d first tried to get the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> out of the void.</p>
      <p>He watched Rossi pick up a half-finished glass of wine. He must have
come from the viewport when he’d heard Ean forcing line eight.</p>
      <p>Rossi took a mouthful of wine, closed his eyes, and leaned against the
Plexiglass as he savored it. Ean tasted the wine along with him. Mellow,
like a good Lancian wine should be.</p>
      <p>For breakfast?</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Stay out of my mind, bastard.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Ean left him there, losing himself in the music of the lines.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_five_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>Radko was still paralyzed when the shuttle finally landed. She hoped it
was the tranquilizer. It was a scarily long time to be helpless. The
sounds and the smells reminded her of Confluence Station. They were on a
space station. Or a very large ship.</p>
      <p>“Take the prisoners down to the cells,” Martel ordered. “Get them out of
my sight until they’re fit to be questioned.”</p>
      <p>Radko lost track of the time. Here, in the lockup, it was quiet. Ean
would have been handy right now. He could have used the lines to see
where the others were, see what was going on.</p>
      <p>She didn’t know how much later it was that her toes and the tips of her
fingers started to tingle with pins and needles. Not long after that she
found she could flutter her eyelids although it was another hour before
she could open her eyes.</p>
      <p>She had plenty of time after that to stare at the ceiling. It was made
of the same tiles as those at Confluence Station. If she had her knife,
she’d be able to prise the tiles off and make her way through the
ceiling to escape. Once she could move, that was. Her eyes tracked to
the camera set in the ceiling. Of course, they’d know as soon as she
tried.</p>
      <p>Still, she had inspected Confluence Station thoroughly prior to Ean’s
taking up residence. A station was a station. If she could get herself
and her people into the access corridors, she knew places they could
hide.</p>
      <p>About the time she could move her arms, Martel arrived back. He wore the
navy and pale blue uniform of a Worlds of the Lesser Gods officer, and
the pips of commander.</p>
      <p>“Ready to talk yet?”</p>
      <p>She wasn’t sure she could even if she wanted to.</p>
      <p>“Amazing stuff, that tranquilizer. I didn’t realize how good until now.
All three of you are still immobilized.”</p>
      <p>Still only three. Thank the lines one of them was still free.</p>
      <p>“It’s a pity because there’s nothing I can do to make you answer while
you’re in this state although I could have fun trying.”</p>
      <p>Radko damped down the surge of unease.</p>
      <p>“Unfortunately, the first captain will be back soon, and he’ll want
answers, so we don’t have the time.” He beckoned to someone outside the
door. “Get Dr. Quinn here. He must have something to counter the effects
of the tranquilizer. After all, they use it often enough.”</p>
      <p>Five minutes later, Dr. Quinn arrived with two assistants.</p>
      <p>“I need her talking in twenty minutes. Pump in a fast-acting truth serum
as well.”</p>
      <p>“I’m not your personal interrogation chemist.”</p>
      <p>“If you want to keep testing drugs on your linesmen, you’ll do the
occasional side job.”</p>
      <p>Martel left.</p>
      <p>“Occasional.” Dr. Quinn hooked Radko up to an intravenous feed. “This is
the second one today.”</p>
      <p>“The other man did break onto the station,” one of the assistants said.
“We were lucky they caught him.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry or Han, it if was a “he.” Did that mean they were all captured?</p>
      <p>“We were unlucky he had enzymes in his stomach to counteract the truth
serum,” Quinn said. “First Captain Jakob will bite our heads off for
that. And Martel won’t take two failures in one day well.”</p>
      <p>He snapped a solution into the end of the IV. “Monitor that,” he ordered
one of the assistants. “Don’t let it get above 0.3. You,” to the other
one. “Be ready to give her 700 mls of Dromalan as soon as it stabilizes.
And whatever you do, don’t give her the truth serum before she
stabilizes. If you do, <emphasis>you’re</emphasis> answering to the commander.”</p>
      <p>Both assistants shuddered.</p>
      <p>Dromalan truth serum took two to three hours to take effect. Once they
administered it, Radko had a maximum of two hours before she’d start to
talk. She had to escape by then or avoid taking the drug in the first
place.</p>
      <p>Worse, if a linesman had Dromalan truth serum in their system when they
traveled through the void, it destroyed their line ability. Early
experiments with the serum had been to improve line ability. It was only
later they’d found it useful as a truth drug. If van Heel or Chaudry had
been given the serum, the whole team would be stuck in this sector for a
week.</p>
      <p>Quinn hurried out.</p>
      <p>One of the assistants checked the feed. “Get this wrong, and we’ll both
be dead. Commander Martel is in a mood. So is First Captain Jakob, I
hear.”</p>
      <p>“Because he’s coming back empty-handed?”</p>
      <p>They both sniggered.</p>
      <p>“I heard he got arrested.”</p>
      <p>The other assistant glanced at the camera, then nudged the one who’d
spoken.</p>
      <p>Neither of them stood as straight as regular soldiers. Pure medical
staff, then. Radko’s reflexes would be slow. Could she overcome two
untrained people? And if she did, how long would she have to get away?
They were on a station, with cameras in every corridor.</p>
      <p>Radko waited.</p>
      <p>“Stabilized,” the first assistant said, finally. “Are you ready?” He
looked over to the other assistant. The second assistant checked the
syringe of green liquid and nodded. Radko couldn’t wait any longer. She
rolled off the bed and knocked the first assistant off his feet.</p>
      <p>“Hey. You shouldn’t be moving yet.” The second assistant came running
around the bed. Radko rolled under it, came out the other side, and
pushed the bed into him. It was a weak push, not enough to push him off
his feet even. The assistant was back before Radko could stand. She
scissored her legs—just enough to pull him off his stride.</p>
      <p>“This is personal now.” He fell onto Radko to hold her into place and
jabbed his syringe downward. Radko pushed his arm aside. It wasn’t much,
but the syringe missed her and scraped the assistant’s arm, just enough
to draw blood.</p>
      <p>He cursed, flung the syringe away, and raced over to the basin,
scrubbing at the scratch.</p>
      <p>If Radko had been closer, she’d have snatched the syringe up. Instead,
she rolled away, into the first assistant’s legs. He’d regained his feet
and was reaching toward the intercom. This time, Radko controlled the
roll and brought the assistant crashing down.</p>
      <p>She got up and ran. Not that it was much of a run, more of a drunken
roll. She focused on keeping on her feet.</p>
      <p>She made for the nearest emergency alarm station, clearly marked on the
wall, broke the glass, and pressed the hull-breach button. The station’s
airtight partitions slammed into place over the whoop of the alarm.</p>
      <p>Now it was just her and the people in her section.</p>
      <p>She ran back to the room she’d exited. Both assistants were gone, as was
the syringe. She looked around.</p>
      <p>The door had a pop-lock mechanism. Sometimes the luck ran your way.</p>
      <p>She reached inside and pulled wires. That one. And that one. In
exercises, she could do this in fifteen seconds. She had that now, no
more. She pushed the wires together, and counted as the feedback from
the electronics built. Ten seconds. Twelve. Fourteen. There was a tiny
fizz, and the overload on the wires blacked out the wiring for the doors
in this section of the station. Doors around her slid open. Except the
breach partitions, of course. They didn’t open when you lost power. They
had to be opened manually. Once the crew determined where the breach was
or wasn’t.</p>
      <p>She grabbed oxygen and a mask from one of the emergency stations. They’d
gas the area soon because they had to be watching what had happened.</p>
      <p>Where was everyone?</p>
      <p>She ducked into a nearby room. An oxygen cylinder hurtled toward her.
She threw herself sideways.</p>
      <p>“What the hell?” Van Heel had a second cylinder primed to use. She
dropped it with a clatter. “What’s happening?”</p>
      <p>“Escaping,” Radko said. “What’s happened with you?”</p>
      <p>“Same. I only just got out of that prison they put me in, when the doors
all flew open. I should have waited.”</p>
      <p>“Have they given you any drugs?”</p>
      <p>“Not yet.”</p>
      <p>That was something.</p>
      <p>“They were about to interrogate me when they caught someone else. I
thought it was you. There was a lot of excitement about that.”</p>
      <p>The man Quinn’s two assistants had spoken about? The one who’d broken
onto the station? Chaudry or Han.</p>
      <p>“Grab oxygen and a mask,” Radko said. “They’ll gas this section
eventually.” The oxygen tanks also made a primitive weapon, which was
better than nothing.</p>
      <p>Radko glanced out the door. “Han and Chaudry will be around here
somewhere. We need to find them. And we need to arm ourselves with
something better than oxygen cylinders.” There wouldn’t be any weapons
in the jail cells. If they hadn’t been in space, there wouldn’t have
been any oxygen, either.</p>
      <p>Chaudry was two doors down. Still groggy from the tranquilizer but
moving, if slowly.</p>
      <p>“Han?”</p>
      <p>“Haven’t found him yet,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>They found the two assistants Radko had bested earlier hiding in a cell
close to the breach partition. One had his comms out. Radko kicked it
out of his hands, and stomped on it. Anything they said would be feeding
out to the rest of the station. Chaudry loomed over them, his face
scrunched into a mean-looking scowl, threatening to brain them with his
oxygen cylinder.</p>
      <p>Van Heel finished checking the other rooms. “Han’s not here.”</p>
      <p>Radko looked at the two assistants. It would have been smart to knock
them out, but she didn’t. “Give me your comms,” she said to the other
assistant.</p>
      <p>He handed it over, keeping one eye on Chaudry.</p>
      <p>She made sure it was off, then put it in her pocket. “Stay here. If you
come after us, we’ll kill you.”</p>
      <p>She led the way back to her own room. She’d had time to look at the
ceiling on this one. “Chaudry, I’m going to stand on your shoulders.”</p>
      <p>He stood rock solid and silent.</p>
      <p>Behind them, she could hear the crew hauling the breach doors open. She
pushed the ceiling tile up and swung herself into the roof space. She
found the nearest support. “Over here. Van Heel first.” Because Chaudry
would be too heavy for just one of them to lift.</p>
      <p>Chaudry boosted her up.</p>
      <p>“Now you, Chaudry. Push the bed over, stand on it, and we’ll haul you
the rest of the way.”</p>
      <p>“You can’t lift—”</p>
      <p>“Lift your hands, Chaudry, or we’ll be caught.”</p>
      <p>It might have been the shouts of the crew as they pushed the breach
doors open that spurred him. It was certainly the shouts that gave Radko
an adrenaline boost as she and van Heel hauled him up.</p>
      <p>She thought her arms would drop off.</p>
      <p>“Go, go,” Radko said to van Heel, as Chaudry scrabbled for a foothold
along the beam. “That way. There’ll be a walkway at the end. Wait for us
there. Chaudry?”</p>
      <p>Chaudry was nimble, for all that he was bulky. He slipped, but
recovered, and crawled along the beam as fast as he could go.</p>
      <p>The burn of a blaster singed Radko’s boot as she followed him.</p>
      <p>Ahead, she heard the unmistakable sound of someone’s opening an access
hatch. Van Heel, in front, hesitated. Radko pushed past her. “Watch our
backs,” she ordered, and ran for the hatch.</p>
      <p>She was in time to kick the head of the first person entering. He fell
backward, and she slammed the hatch shut. It was a pity she couldn’t
have grabbed his blaster. A weapon would be handy right now.</p>
      <p>She motioned van Heel and Chaudry forward. The hatch started to move
under her feet. She stepped off quietly and waited. The hatch lifted
enough to let the nozzle of a blaster through. A beam on stun, sprayed
indiscriminately. Chaudry opened his mouth and Radko motioned him to
silence. The user gained more courage and ventured farther into the
access space. Radko jumped on the hatch cover, catching the blaster
between the edges as she did so. There was a yelp, and the blaster
dropped. Radko snatched it up.</p>
      <p>Armed, and it felt good.</p>
      <p>There was silence from outside.</p>
      <p>They wouldn’t get far without getting caught. For the moment, though,
they were better off in the access passages than in the main corridors
of the station. This way, anyone coming after them had to travel single
file. She could pick them off one by one.</p>
      <p>Unfortunately, the enemy could pick her team off the same way.</p>
      <p>First, they had to get themselves somewhere safe.</p>
      <p>The soldiers started shooting at the ceiling. This time the blasters
were on burn. Chaudry grunted and jumped back. Van Heel grabbed him
before he could fall through the weakened ceiling. They moved back.</p>
      <p>Behind them, the first soldier came into sight. Radko stunned them.</p>
      <p>“Stop.” His voice was familiar. Commander Martel. “You’re on a station.
Do you <emphasis>want</emphasis> to breach the hull?”</p>
      <p>The body Radko had downed blocked the way back. Radko leaned close to
Chaudry and van Heel, so she could speak softly. “Use the pipes”—and she
pointed above—“to help you get across the damaged part. Van Heel first,
then Chaudry. Make for the nearest junction. Don’t wait for me. I’ll
catch up.”</p>
      <p>She fired again over the top of the fallen pursuer. Someone swore and
ducked. She hadn’t hit him.</p>
      <p>The ceiling under Chaudry’s feet creaked. Chaudry stopped.</p>
      <p>“Get across there,” Radko hissed. “Use the pipes.”</p>
      <p>He started moving again. The overhead pipes creaked.</p>
      <p>Radko sweated with him.</p>
      <p>He stopped at the other side, with van Heel.</p>
      <p>A small piece of paneling dropped away. Someone fired.</p>
      <p>“Fire again, and you won’t live to regret it.” Martel again. “We’ll get
them at the next entry.”</p>
      <p>Radko waved the others on. It would have been handy to have Ean right
now. He could watch through the lines, know where everyone was and what
they were doing.</p>
      <p>They moved on reluctantly.</p>
      <p>Below her, more people entered the room.</p>
      <p>Radko waited until she was sure no one below would fire before she
grabbed for the pipes and swung along carefully, keeping her legs raised
from the treacherous floor.</p>
      <p>She hesitated as she recognized a voice below.</p>
      <p>Sergey Bach. Head of Palace Security on Lancia. Commodore Vega’s
equivalent for Emperor Yu.</p>
      <p>“I don’t know what the hell you’re doing.” Bach was practically
spitting. “And it’s obvious you don’t know, either. I feel as if I’ve
walked into a farce. You can’t run a station, let alone plan to win a
war. Who are these people?”</p>
      <p>“Lancastrians,” Commander Martel said. “Maybe you could tell us how they
got here.”</p>
      <p>“Lan—”</p>
      <p>Another voice cut in. “Why don’t <emphasis>you</emphasis> tell <emphasis>us</emphasis> how that happened,
Commodore Bach.”</p>
      <p>“Lancastrians. Prove it to me.”</p>
      <p>“We will as soon as we recapture them.”</p>
      <p>Bach laughed. “How convenient. You balls-up a simple effort to steal a
ship—even though we went out of our way to make it easy for you—and you
try to draw attention away by blaming us for problems you’re having.”</p>
      <p>“If you made it so easy for us”—this was the man whose voice Radko
didn’t recognize—“how did the farce of my arrest come about?”</p>
      <p>“I got you access to the alien ships. <emphasis>You</emphasis> got caught.”</p>
      <p>Radko smiled grimly. They didn’t realize yet, but with Ean around,
they’d never steal an alien ship.</p>
      <p>The pipe above her gave way without warning. She crashed through the
damaged ceiling, onto the floor in front of the speakers.</p>
      <p>Three blasters swung toward her.</p>
      <p>She recognized the speaker. First Captain Jakob. The Lesser Gods’
equivalent of a commodore. The head of the Factor’s personal security
and Bach’s equivalent. She’d looked him up after learning about
Michelle’s proposed marriage, still doing her job, finding out about
potential threats to Michelle and Ean. Old habits.</p>
      <p>“Blaster down, nice and quiet.”</p>
      <p>She put her blaster down and used the hand she was lying on to ease out
the comms she’d taken from the assistant. She’d never get out of this
alive, not if Bach had this to hide. The most important thing was to let
Lancia know he was a traitor.</p>
      <p>She managed to push it behind her, and one-handedly thumbed the comms
on, praying that it didn’t beep. She pressed in the emergency code she
knew by heart.</p>
      <p>“What’s that?”</p>
      <p>She realized she’d been whispering to line five, much like Ean might
sing. <emphasis>“Please, don’t make a noise.”</emphasis> But the lines didn’t hear her, of
course.</p>
      <p>Bach kicked her blaster away. “My Lady Dominique.” His voice was as sour
as Vega’s could be.</p>
      <p>“Lancastrian?” Jakob asked.</p>
      <p>“Unfortunately, yes.”</p>
      <p>Jakob raised his weapon.</p>
      <p>Bach knocked his hand away. “Don’t kill her. She is cousin to His
Imperial Majesty, Emperor Yu. And important to our plans.”</p>
      <p>He should have let Jakob kill her. Why keep her alive when she might
escape and report what he had done?</p>
      <p>It was too late, anyway. The comms behind her was capturing all this.
Vega would piece it together, and she and Admiral Galenos would chase
this traitor down and destroy him.</p>
      <p>“Cousin?” Jakob asked.</p>
      <p>“You are a traitor to Lancia, Commodore Bach.” Radko made her voice
clear enough to carry to the comms behind her.</p>
      <p>“Doesn’t the cousin work for Galenos?”</p>
      <p>“She is part of the personal security complement for Her Royal Highness,
the Crown Princess Michelle.”</p>
      <p>Radko kept her voice clear. “You have conspired with Redmond and the
Worlds of the Lesser Gods,” for they had to be working together. “To
attempt to steal an alien line ship. You have betrayed Lancia, and the
New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>“Oh, for—” Jakob spun the control on his blaster. “If someone won’t do
it, I will.”</p>
      <p>“You, and Commander Jakob, and—”</p>
      <p>Jakob fired.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_six_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Ean heard the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>’s <emphasis>“Welcome home”</emphasis> as Sale and her team
docked.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“This is not their home. That is the</emphasis> Lancastrian Princess<emphasis>.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Abram hadn’t understood his message. Helmo would kill him for stealing
his crew. So would Vega. Maybe even Sale herself although Sale did give
the ship a pat as she came on board. He’d seen Kari Wang do the same
thing on occasion, and Captain Gruen, as well. But Sale was a group
leader, four promotions away from captain yet.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“We choose.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“You’ll get your people soon.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>There was no way the New Alliance would give the ship to Sale. Everyone
was worried Lancia would take the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. That was another reason
the ship would never be Sale’s.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Do you know about politics?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Blue misunderstanding.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Power factions.”</emphasis> Ean didn’t have the words to describe it.
<emphasis>“Worlds.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Worlds?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>How did you describe a world to a line ship? They must know they were
there because they avoided them, but Ean had never seen them depicted on
the displays of the ships. <emphasis>“You know about suns.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Suns?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Of course they knew about suns, and, if his surmise was correct, flicked
enemy ships into them. <emphasis>“Those big balls of energy in space.”</emphasis> He used
the tune for Bose engines for energy. <emphasis>“They have worlds surrounding
them.”</emphasis> Line four and line two. <emphasis>“People live on these worlds.”</emphasis> Line
one. <emphasis>“Our home ships, if you like. Where we come from.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>More blue confusion. He might as well have been speaking gibberish.
Which he probably was to the lines. It was like line seven all over
again. They could be saying exactly the same thing to each other, but
they didn’t have the knowledge to link it to something both of them
understood.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Anyway, these factions will send you more people.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“More people is good.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>They needed to get Sale away from the ship while those “more people”
bonded. And keep her away afterward. Did a ship ever have two “Ships”?
Ean didn’t think so. But they did bond with new captains if they didn’t
have one—as was shown with the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>’s accepting Kari Wang. Best to
get Sale off the ship and see what happened.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Ship is ours.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>And he’d have to stop worrying about it while he was on a <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>
fleet ship. Let Abram deal with it.</p>
      <p>He was glad the shuttle of paramedics arrived then. Forty of them, all
wearing Lancian gray. A new batch again, for Ean didn’t recognize any of
these people. Didn’t whoever was in charge of assigning paramedics
understand they were taking the linesmen onto the strongest ship in the
two fleets? They should have sent experienced people.</p>
      <p>None of these paramedics had been on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> before. They were
a long way past the original group supplied by the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis>, Balian’s Captain Seafra, and Yaolin’s Admiral Orsaya.</p>
      <p>There were four shuttle decks on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, each of them immense,
each of them easily able to hold the full group of trainees, as well as
forty paramedics, Craik’s team, and Bhaksir’s team.</p>
      <p>The deck they used for training was set up for human linesmen, with
oxygen tanks spread throughout the vast space. The other three—all of
them a long trek through the ship—were closed off. They didn’t have
breathable air yet. You always had to wear a suit on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>,
for you never knew when you might step into alien atmosphere.</p>
      <p>Before Michelle had bought his contract, Ean had never worn a space
suit. Now, he sometimes felt as if he lived in one.</p>
      <p>The first trainee shuttle arrived, disgorging forty trainees onto the
shuttle deck. Then the next. And the next.</p>
      <p>Peters was in the first batch, along with the four Xantos.</p>
      <p>Nadia Kentish looked around. “It’s as big as a barracks parade ground.”</p>
      <p>“You’d get used to it,” Lina Vang said, but she sounded doubtful.</p>
      <p>Scout Ship Three sounded smug. <emphasis>“Not like me. I’m sneaky and fast, and
not too big.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>None of the Xantos answered, but they all looked around, as if wondering
who had spoken.</p>
      <p>Ean turned to what he had some semblance of control over. “Do you want
to talk to them?” he asked Sale.</p>
      <p>“Of course.”</p>
      <p>As Radko would say, “Was the sky on Lancia purple?” Sale always
addressed the trainees.</p>
      <p>“Who goes first? You or Rossi?”</p>
      <p>“Rossi. So I can do damage control if I have to.”</p>
      <p>Damage control. Ean shivered. Michelle had used those words earlier
today, talking to Yu.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Rossi had an orator’s voice, and he knew how to use it. “Linesmen.”</p>
      <p>He got instant silence.</p>
      <p>“The best way to learn the lines is to experience them firsthand. You
need to be where the lines are. There are some”—and he glanced at
Ean—“who believe you should practice it as some nebulous art in a
far-off spaceship, but nothing matches firsthand experience. I, Jordan
Rossi, level-ten linesman, know that. That is why you are here. After
today, all of you should understand what is different about these lines
and how you have to respond to them.”</p>
      <p>The linesmen broke into spontaneous applause.</p>
      <p>Fergus came up beside Ean. “I’m not sure it was wise to let him up there
to put you down like that. Jordan may have dropped his plans to become
Grand Master, but he’s still ambitious. And political.”</p>
      <p>No matter how much he denied it, Rossi would never willingly go far from
the eleven lines, and as Grand Master, he’d have to travel the galaxy.
In a way, Rossi had earned the occasional bagging right. He was stuck
here, subordinate to Ean, and he knew he could never leave.</p>
      <p>“If it makes Rossi feel he is in control, I don’t care what he says, as
long as he does what needs to be done.” At least Fergus was still alive
and whole. “How have you been?”</p>
      <p>“This suit.” Fergus grimaced. “As for the rest.”</p>
      <p>“On this ship,” Rossi’s voice thundered, “you will experience the true
strength of the lines.”</p>
      <p>“I’ve been doing some listening, Ean. I’m sorry to say, but I think
there’s a problem with the linesmen Lancia sent in. If I didn’t know
better, I’d say they were deliberately stirring up trouble.”</p>
      <p>Lancia. Ean wasn’t surprised. “It’s probably part of Yu’s plan to
destabilize Abram.” If they had to kick the Lancastrian linesmen out to
save Abram, he’d do it.</p>
      <p>Almost as if it were a signal, Ean became aware that Emperor Yu and
Admiral Carrell had stepped onto Confluence Station. Sattur Dow
followed.</p>
      <p>“Abram? But why?”</p>
      <p>“It’s a long story.” Ean had forgotten Fergus didn’t know the details.
But he was a good source of information, and he knew how to keep his
mouth shut. “Fergus, what does Lancia do to traitors?”</p>
      <p>He shouldn’t have asked it, not when he’d just said what he’d said that
about Abram.</p>
      <p>“Traitors? What have you done to upset Lancia?”</p>
      <p>At least he didn’t realize the question was about Abram. “Nothing.” Yet,
but if Yu challenged Abram as a traitor, he’d do something about it.
“The Factor implied the New Alliance wouldn’t punish the traitors, not
as he believed they should be punished, so we let him take Jakob and the
crew of the <emphasis>Iolo</emphasis> home.”</p>
      <p>Fergus looked at him. “You can’t be serious.”</p>
      <p>Unfortunately, he was. “I was wondering how Lancia punishes someone for
treason.” He hoped his voice stayed neutral.</p>
      <p>Fergus considered it. Jordan Rossi had once said he had a storage-box
mind. Full of facts and figures, all filed neatly away. It wasn’t a
function of line seven, so it was something that Fergus, himself, was
good at, outside of line ability.</p>
      <p>“I think Emperor Yu has them shot. They have a trial, but if the Emperor
truly believes someone is a traitor, the trial is a sham.”</p>
      <p>That’s what Ean was afraid of.</p>
      <p>“Lancia has a bad reputation for its treatment of people who betray
them. Don’t forget Rebekah Grimes.”</p>
      <p>Abram had executed Rebekah. But she had killed his people.</p>
      <p>“Lancia’s way is quick, but I wouldn’t want to get on the wrong side of
Emperor Yu. You tend not to see those people again.”</p>
      <p>That’s what Michelle was worried about. And Ean was now, too.</p>
      <p>On Confluence Station, Admiral Orsaya greeted Yu and Carrell
respectfully but without warmth. “Admiral, Your Imperial Majesty. You
got here fast. It’s less than an hour since your clearance came
through.”</p>
      <p>“Times like these,” Carrell said, and looked as if he thought Orsaya
would agree with him, “the less advance notice the better.”</p>
      <p>“Where is the Lancastrian linesman?” Yu demanded. “I want to talk to
him.”</p>
      <p>“Linesman Lambert is conducting line training today,” Orsaya said.</p>
      <p>“We have come from the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>,” Yu said. “There were no trainees.”</p>
      <p>Maybe it was a good thing they’d woken Sale and Orsaya earlier.
Otherwise, the trainees would have still been leaving when Yu arrived.</p>
      <p>Ean dragged himself back to what was happening on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.
“Thanks, Fergus. I’ll let Sale know about the Lancastrian linesmen.”</p>
      <p>Rossi had finished his oration. Ean had no idea of the rest of what he’d
said, but the trainees were happily agreeable.</p>
      <p>Sale stepped up to address the trainees. “One day I might kill you
personally,” she said to Rossi, as they passed.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“She doesn’t mean it,”</emphasis> Ean sang hastily as the ship lines stirred,
especially line eight. <emphasis>“It’s a human way of saying they’re annoyed with
other people.”</emphasis> He waited till the lines subsided. “Don’t say things
like that, Sale.”</p>
      <p>Rossi laughed aloud. “Lines a little out of control, Linesman?”</p>
      <p>Sale looked daggers at Rossi. When she turned to Ean, her gaze wasn’t
much less ferocious. “Can I speak now?”</p>
      <p>He nodded.</p>
      <p>She raised her voice. “As you can see, it’s a big ship.” Unbidden—or at
least unbidden by Ean—the ship amplified her words, so everyone heard
clearly. “You get a guided tour as part of your training, but it is line
training. That is what you’re here for. That’s what you’re expected to
do.” She looked directly at Peters. “Any complaints, and you go straight
back to the shuttle.”</p>
      <p>She looked away, over the crowd, before he could argue. “Access is
restricted. Don’t wander. We know where you are at any time. If you
wander, you get sent back to the shuttle. Understood?”</p>
      <p>She held their gaze until most of them nodded.</p>
      <p>“Good. We are on a line ship. An Eleven-class. You all know line eleven
can be strong. You know the symptoms. You know what to do. We have
paramedics here.” She indicated the paramedics around the room. “Help
your teammates. If you see someone in trouble, do what you can and call
the nearest paramedic.”</p>
      <p>Line eleven had been quiet so far. Or as quiet as it could be. Some of
the trainees still had difficulty breathing. The paramedics were already
among them.</p>
      <p>“Ean.”</p>
      <p>Ean stepped up. “You know the routine. We will now greet the lines on
this ship.”</p>
      <p>He started with line one. The standard introductory training song. The
crew of the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> called it the Hello Song, and it was as good a name
as any.</p>
      <p>Here, on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, the lines were strong. Even Peters’s eyes
widened as line one answered.</p>
      <p>Maybe it was as simple as that. They should have brought them onto the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> first, and all that antagonism would have gone.</p>
      <p>Line two.</p>
      <p>Sale came over to Ean while he waited for them to sing. “Thanks for the
amplification, Ean. It was a good idea.”</p>
      <p>“That wasn’t my idea. It was the ship’s.” Yes, and ship was feeling
pretty satisfied with the praise. “Have you ever sat in the captain’s
chair, Sale?”</p>
      <p>“I wouldn’t dream of doing so.”</p>
      <p>“But you’ve spent a lot of time on the bridge.”</p>
      <p>“What’s that supposed to mean?”</p>
      <p>“Nothing.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang line three and waited for the trainees to sing it, too, and for
the reply.</p>
      <p>“Ean, you don’t ask questions without a purpose.”</p>
      <p>Ean ignored that.</p>
      <p>Line four. The trainees were more animated, and so was the ship. Not
only that, the ships of the whole fleet were listening in. The council
had better come up with that list of ships and worlds, for if the ships
started choosing people, Ean didn’t know what he was going to do.</p>
      <p>“I think.” What did he think? “I think that you don’t always have to be
a linesman for the lines to hear you.”</p>
      <p>“That stands to reason,” Sale said. “The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> knows we’re here.
It opens doors for us.”</p>
      <p>“It does?”</p>
      <p>“How do you think we get around the ship?”</p>
      <p>He hadn’t thought about it at all. Initially, he’d asked the ship to
open the doors. He’d assumed Sale’s team had added human triggers.
They’d brought technicians in to add human screens. Engineer Tai had
supervised that.</p>
      <p>“I’m sure it thinks we’re deaf, dumb, and blind, but it recognizes us,
weird creatures that we are.”</p>
      <p>Deaf, dumb, and blind, maybe, but it had recognized that Sale wanted to
be heard and amplified her voice. It would do other things for her, if
she asked. The way it had shown her the medical center. He’d bet they’d
talked about it here on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> after they’d discovered the
medical center on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>She could ask… what? He looked around for inspiration, and his gaze fell
on the electric cart that both Sale and the ship hated so much.</p>
      <p>“You should ask the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> to show you how to get to the bridge
fast, Sale. Tell it that you need to get places quickly. Ask for another
way.”</p>
      <p>“And how is it going to understand me, let alone tell me what I want to
know?”</p>
      <p>“The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> can sense what you want. Like before, when it
amplified your voice.”</p>
      <p>“The lines can certainly sense humans better than most humans can sense
the lines,” Sale said. “That’s obvious. But we need linesmen to really
talk.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“She wants transport,”</emphasis> Ean whispered to the lines. <emphasis>“She doesn’t want
to use—”</emphasis> How did one describe a cart? He tried to remember back to what
he had felt through the lines.</p>
      <p>He should suggest to Abram that Sale be included with the captains when
they talked about the lines. But that would give the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> ideas.
Did he care? He liked Sale. She would be good for the ship.</p>
      <p>But right now, he had training, and the lines were waiting. He turned
his attention back to his job.</p>
      <p>Line five.</p>
      <p>On board Confluence Station, Orsaya was saying, “I don’t know what time
the linesmen will be back.”</p>
      <p>Line six.</p>
      <p>All the way up to line ten. And finally, line eleven.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Gently,”</emphasis> Ean cautioned. <emphasis>“Human lines. Weak.”</emphasis> And line eleven was
gentle but it was strong and close, and still took all the multilevel
linesmen down.</p>
      <p>Nadia Kentish dropped to her knees beside Lina Vang, who’d gone down
hard. She signaled to a paramedic. “Over here.”</p>
      <p>On board Confluence Station, Yu was already preparing to depart. What
was the point of going all that way out to a ship and leaving almost
immediately? Orsaya stopped to answer her comms. Carrell slowed to wait
for her. Dow and Yu kept walking toward the shuttle.</p>
      <p>With the strength of the lines on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, Ean could hear and
see them as clearly as if he’d been standing beside them, could taste
how glad Orsaya was to see them gone.</p>
      <p>Dow said quietly to Yu, “She bought it.”</p>
      <p>Orsaya couldn’t hear it, but Ean could, through the lines.</p>
      <p>“Of course she did. I knew exactly how my daughter would react, Sattur.
She has protected this linesman all along, may even have some personal
feelings for him. Of course she would send him to what she perceives as
safety.”</p>
      <p>Yu had deliberately pushed Michelle into sending Ean to the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. He’d wanted the linesmen there. Why?</p>
      <p>What had they done?</p>
      <p>“Sale,” Ean said. “We have a problem. I think it’s a trap.”</p>
      <p>“Over here,” Kentish called. Ean heard the force of it through the
lines. She was a nine, and strong with it.</p>
      <p>“Trap?”</p>
      <p>The paramedic making his way across to Kentish veered toward Ean. He
wrapped an arm around Ean’s neck and jerked him back. Ean felt the hard
muzzle of a blaster against the side of his neck.</p>
      <p>That sort of trap.</p>
      <p>Another paramedic pointed a weapon at Sale.</p>
      <p>They weren’t supposed to be armed. After the riot on the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>, none
of the trainees were allowed to carry weapons.</p>
      <p>Other paramedics had weapons out. Half of them made for Ean and Sale.
The others circled the fallen and not-fallen linesmen.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir pressed her own blaster against the back of the man holding Ean.
“Move away from him.”</p>
      <p>Ean hadn’t seen her take her weapon out. Or move. He’d bet the paramedic
hadn’t either.</p>
      <p>“Drop it,” the paramedic said to Bhaksir. “Or I kill him.” He looked
around at the rest of Bhaksir’s team, who had their weapons out, too.
“All of you.”</p>
      <p>“Oxygen,” Kentish demanded.</p>
      <p>“Keep still, and none of you will get hurt.”</p>
      <p>Kentish stood up.</p>
      <p>A paramedic raised his weapon.</p>
      <p>Fergus jumped in front of Kentish, deflecting half the blast.</p>
      <p>They both went down. Scout Ship Three wailed.</p>
      <p>The lines came on, urgent, insistent. All ships.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Radko,”</emphasis> and they opened, without request, to show Commodore Vega at
her desk, listening to a message. It was sound only. There was no
visual.</p>
      <p>“Put your weapons down,” Sale said to Bhaksir. “We’ll let the <emphasis>lines</emphasis>
sort this out.”</p>
      <p>Ean, she meant, but Ean was listening with Vega to Radko, trying to see
at the same time if Fergus and Kentish were all right.</p>
      <p>“You are a traitor to Lancia, Commodore Bach,” Radko’s words came
through the comms. “You have conspired with Redmond and the Worlds of
the Lesser Gods to steal an alien line ship. You have betrayed Lancia,
and the New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>Ean heard Jakob’s unmistakable voice. “If someone won’t do it, I will.”</p>
      <p>“You, and Captain Jakob, and—”</p>
      <p>Then Radko stopped speaking.</p>
      <p>“No.” Ean’s heart thudded in panic. He pushed the paramedic away,
ignoring the blaster held to his neck. “Radko.”</p>
      <p>Ten blasters rose simultaneously.</p>
      <p>“Hold,” the paramedic yelled to his own team. “Don’t kill the linesman.”
Sweat dripped off his face. “You crazy moron. If I say don’t move, you
don’t move.”</p>
      <p>Ean hardly heard him. Dead man’s message, Vega had called it. The
message you sent when you knew you weren’t coming home. Was Radko
already dead?</p>
      <p>He tried to concentrate on what was happening on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> but
couldn’t stop listening with Vega.</p>
      <p>If they killed Radko, he would blast them all out of space.</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> lines surged. <emphasis>“Battle,”</emphasis> and the linesmen who’d
started to recover went down again.</p>
      <p>The lines on the other ships took up the refrain. <emphasis>“Battle. Battle.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Peters, who had recovered enough to understand what was happening,
clambered to his knees. “We’ll die rather than surrender this ship.”</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“No surrender. We fight.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>“We fight.” That was Peters, too, who claimed he didn’t hear the lines.</p>
      <p>“That woman is Emperor Yu’s cousin.” This voice had clipped Lancian
vowels. Commodore Bach. “He won’t take kindly to your killing her.”</p>
      <p>“If Yu wants to negate our agreement by sending his own team, he would
do well to consider the message I send him.” Jakob’s voice changed, as
if he was looking elsewhere. “Find out if she’s had the truth serum yet,
and if she hasn’t, for God’s sake give it to her. I want to question her
before I kill her.”</p>
      <p>She wasn’t dead yet. Ean breathed again. His legs wouldn’t hold him any
longer, and he sank to the floor.</p>
      <p>“He wants us to move the ship, Ean.” Sale looked at the paramedic
holding the blaster on Ean. “I can’t move it,” she told him. “The
linesman is the only one who can.”</p>
      <p>On the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, Vega said, “Find out where that message
originated.”</p>
      <p>“Ean.” Sale’s voice was amplified by the lines. He forced himself to
look at her. How long would they keep Radko alive?</p>
      <p>“He wants you to jump.” Her message was clear. He’d jumped ships before,
switched places with other ships in the fleet. She expected him to do
that now. She also expected that the other ships already knew what was
happening. After all, that was what he usually did.</p>
      <p>Ean sang the lines open to the bridges of the fleet ships. Both fleets,
for there was no time to choose specific ships, and Craik and four of
her team were on the bridge here on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. They needed to
know what had happened.</p>
      <p>“What the hell?” the paramedic said. “What’s with the singing? Now?”</p>
      <p>If Sale had been Radko, she would have said, “He does that sometimes,
it’s his way of coping with nerves.”</p>
      <p>But Sale wasn’t Radko, and if he didn’t save her, she wouldn’t be around
much longer to say things like that.</p>
      <p>Sale shrugged, as if she wasn’t sure. “Ean, the jump.”</p>
      <p>Another single-level linesman, this one in Balian uniform, said, “We
refuse to allow this ship to be taken. If you do this for them,
Linesman, you are a traitor. A traitor to the New Alliance. A traitor to
Lancia.”</p>
      <p>“They’re traitors anyway,” another trainee said. For the Lancastrian
linesmen—those who were standing—had produced weapons as well.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Shit,”</emphasis> from the ship, and Ean had to look to be sure Sale’s mouth
hadn’t moved. But the linesmen heard it, every single one of them who
was capable of it.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Did you?”</emphasis> Never mind. It wasn’t the time or the place.</p>
      <p>The Lancian captors—they were all Lancastrians, Ean realized—rounded up
the linesmen. Was Lancia trying to steal the ships?</p>
      <p>Fergus struggled to his knees. “I think I’m going to be sick.” He
crawled over to Kentish. “She’s alive.”</p>
      <p>“Who are you?” Sale demanded of the Lancastrians. “Who sent you?”</p>
      <p>“I need that jump, Linesman,” the paramedic said, holding the weapon on
Ean. “Otherwise, I start shooting people. Starting with that one.” He
indicated Sale.</p>
      <p>“No one will cooperate if you shoot Sale.” Least of all the ship.</p>
      <p>Line eight was getting louder. So much so that the human eights—all of
them singles—were showing distinct signs of distress.</p>
      <p>On the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> and the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>, response teams ran for
the shuttle bays.</p>
      <p>“Give me the coordinates,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>Helmo clicked through to Vega. “Are you receiving this?”</p>
      <p>“Spacer Radko? Loud and clear. I’m sure everyone is.”</p>
      <p>“Radko? No, I mean the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“Tell me.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“The coordinates. Please.”</emphasis> Everyone on all 135 ships heard that.</p>
      <p>Peters strained forward. “He’s as much a traitor as the other
Lancastrians. See how none of them are fighting it.”</p>
      <p>“That’s because we’re outgunned,” Hernandez said. “Group Leader Sale
isn’t stupid.” Hernandez was like Sale, expecting him to swap with
another ship. If he did that, he left Radko to die.</p>
      <p>The paramedic gave Ean the coordinates for the jump.</p>
      <p>Ean read them aloud. “They were 2341.123416.23.21. Where’s that?”</p>
      <p>“None of your business,” but Ean hadn’t been asking the paramedic.</p>
      <p>Answers came, almost simultaneously, from Helmo and Vega on the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, Wendell on the <emphasis>Wendell</emphasis>, and Kari Wang on the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>. “Redmond sector.”</p>
      <p>Which was still half a sector away from the Worlds of the Lesser Gods,
where Bach and Radko were. At least where he presumed Radko was. Half a
sector. Far enough away that Redmond couldn’t reach them before they’d
had time to rescue Radko and return home.</p>
      <p>As for the people on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. They wouldn’t be any worse off
near the Worlds of the Lesser Gods than they would be here.</p>
      <p>“Lambert,” Vega said. “Don’t do anything stupid.”</p>
      <p>Vega wouldn’t give him Radko’s coordinates.</p>
      <p>“Ean,” Sale said. “We need to act.”</p>
      <p>Ean nodded, and directed his song to line ten. <emphasis>“Can you take us to
where Radko’s signal was?”</emphasis> The lines wouldn’t remember the signal if
they left it too late.</p>
      <p>He realized the lines were already acting, and hurriedly sang line seven
in. It wouldn’t do to take the whole fleet with him. That would be an
act of war.</p>
      <p>And this wasn’t?</p>
      <p>He didn’t care. Radko didn’t deserve to die. Especially not by Jakob’s
hand. Or by traitorous Lancastrians’.</p>
      <p>But they couldn’t rescue Radko without people to do it, and they
couldn’t do that while the Lancastrians—enemy Lancastrians—were holding
weapons on them. And line eight was more than ready.</p>
      <p>Maybe Rossi was right. Let the ship do it. Don’t try to force it.</p>
      <p>“Well,” the paramedic said.</p>
      <p>“We’ve already jumped,” Sale said.</p>
      <p>Line eight was waiting. Ready to protect its people and its ship.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Linesmen, drop,”</emphasis> Ean sang, and put all the force he could behind his
words. <emphasis>“Drop. Drop now, to the floor. If someone near you doesn’t drop,
pull them down, or they’ll be hurt.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>He didn’t know how he knew it, but he knew the lines would come in waist
high. Maybe they always did. After all, they hadn’t exactly measured
them, had they.</p>
      <p>The lines came in strong to support him, line eleven, too, and if the
trainees standing hadn’t been single-level linesmen, the strength of it
would have knocked them all down. It sent Ean to his knees, and it was a
struggle to stay that much upright. <emphasis>“Drop, all of you.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>The lines took up the chant. <emphasis>“Drop, drop. All of you.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>“What’s going on?” the lead paramedic demanded of Sale.</p>
      <p>“Lines. When they’re strong, they overpower the linesmen.” Although she
knew as well as Ean did that the single levels shouldn’t have gone down
at all. “I need to give Lambert oxygen, or he’ll be no use to you.”</p>
      <p>Ean glanced around. His trainees were all down. And the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>
wouldn’t hurt Sale or her people. <emphasis>“Protect us. Protect Ship from the
marauders,”</emphasis> he sang to line eight.</p>
      <p>A tsunami of sound rushed past him. A force-wave that crashed into those
standing. They were tossed like flotsam in it. Against the wall. Against
the ceiling.</p>
      <p>Sale was in the wave’s path.</p>
      <p>“Sale!”</p>
      <p>But the wave flowed around her, and around the paramedic holding his
weapon on her.</p>
      <p>Sale snatched his weapon while he watched the carnage, openmouthed.</p>
      <p>She shot him.</p>
      <p>Ean sang a counterwave around himself to protect Bhaksir and her team.
The two waves canceled each other out, but he didn’t need it, for line
eight flowed around them as well.</p>
      <p>Above his singing, he heard Sale, amplified again by the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.
“Trainee linesmen. Those of you who are able, collect the intruders’
weapons. Subdue any who resist.”</p>
      <p>Sale took out her comms and called Craik, who’d been on the bridge all
this time. “Where did he take us?”</p>
      <p>“Redmond sector,” Craik said. “We’re still determining exactly where.”</p>
      <p>“Redmond.” Sale’s voice was accusing. “You took us where he wanted to
go.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Battle,”</emphasis> said the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>Ean staggered to his feet. “Sale, we have to rescue Radko.”</p>
      <p>Sale’s comms sounded. Vega. Ean looked at it uneasily. “Maybe you should
answer that when we get back.”</p>
      <p>Sale glared at him, clicked it on.</p>
      <p>“Group Leader Sale,” came Vega’s crisp tones. “You are near a research
station orbiting Aeolus, one of the Worlds of the Lesser Gods. Anything
you do is likely to be considered an act of war.” She paused, then
added, “You are on your own. I repeat. You have no support. Return
immediately.”</p>
      <p>They were still linked to the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet ships. Ean considered
turning the link off, but that was childish. Although there was a lot of
activity on the media ships. They were listening in. He hastily sang
those lines closed.</p>
      <p>“Radko’s here,” Ean said to Sale. “On that station. She sent a message.
She’s going to die.”</p>
      <p>Sale looked at Ean, looked at her comms, then looked at the
trainees—busy rounding up prisoners. She looked at her comms again.
“There’s only one way home, ma’am. We need to fix his problem before
he’ll fix ours.”</p>
      <p>She clicked off and watched the Xantos attending Kentish. “How is she?”</p>
      <p>Alex Joy shook his head. “She’s alive, but that’s all we can say for
her.” He looked from Kentish to Vang, and back again.</p>
      <p>Sale looked at Losan, who was nearby. “Take Joy down to the medical
store.” She scowled at the paramedics. “If I thought any of them were
real paramedics, I’d get you to rouse one.”</p>
      <p>If that was possible. Many of them were horribly still.</p>
      <p>“But I don’t think any of them are. We haven’t got much in the way of
medical supplies,” she told Joy. “See what you can do.” She scowled
again. “We’ve a whole hospital here, and we don’t know how to use it.”
Then she turned to Fergus. “What in the lines did you think you were
doing?”</p>
      <p>“I had a suit on.”</p>
      <p>“A suit protects vital body organs. It doesn’t protect your head. Or
your legs. Not to mention, there’s a hell of a concussion as the suit
dissipates the blaster heat.”</p>
      <p>Fergus nodded and winced as he did. “Hell-of-a is an accurate way to
describe it, I think.”</p>
      <p>“Don’t do it again.” Sale turned to Ean. “What’s going on?”</p>
      <p>“I’ll send you home,” Ean said. “Give me a shuttle. I need to find
Radko. They are going to kill her.”</p>
      <p>“Don’t be stupid, Ean. We’re better armed with you on a ship than we are
with you in a shuttle. Although you’d better not lose this ship.” She
flicked her comms on again, to Craik, on the bridge of the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.
“What do we have?”</p>
      <p>“The station is threatening to shoot us.”</p>
      <p>“Tell them we’ll use the green pulse if they do, so they’d better not
try.”</p>
      <p>“Right,” and Craik clicked off.</p>
      <p>Sale looked at Ean. “Does the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> have a green field?”</p>
      <p>“Yes.” And line eight was ready to use it, too.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Not yet. Not until we have rescued Radko.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Technically, the Worlds of the Lesser Gods were allied with Lancia—and
thus the New Alliance. They should appreciate Radko’s uncovering Bach as
a traitor, as well as Jakob.</p>
      <p>The trainees were rounding up the paramedics who could move, removing
their weapons, forcing them into a central circle. Ean tried not to jig
impatiently. This had to be done, but every second they wasted here was
a second wasted not rescuing Radko.</p>
      <p>Sale looked at Bhaksir. “Use what trainees you can to get this lot
locked up. Put them in one of the empty shuttle bays, and get Ean to
sing the door locked. That way if they cause trouble, we’ll vent them
into space.” She scowled at the paramedics. “I can’t believe they’re
Lancastrian.”</p>
      <p>She picked out three of the trainees, all single-level linesmen and thus
standing, all with rankings on their shoulders. “You, help Bhaksir with
the organization. Joy, too, when he gets back. Oh, and none of you try
any stupid ‘They’re Lancian’ shit. We’re on the same side as you, and
we’re your only way home. You’re right in the middle of enemy territory.</p>
      <p>“Ean, block any messages from this ship that’s not ours. Some of those
paramedics will have comms.”</p>
      <p>That was easy. <emphasis>“Only send comms from Ship’s people,”</emphasis> he told line
five. <emphasis>“From our fleet people. You know the ones Ship will let you
send.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>It was equivalent to Captain Helmo saying, “No unauthorized comms.”</p>
      <p>Sale turned toward the bridge. “Come on, Ean. We’ve work to do.”</p>
      <p>Ean ran to keep up with her.</p>
      <p>At last. It would take them forever to get to the bridge. He was glad he
didn’t have to be on the bridge to know what was going on. Even the ship
seemed infected with urgency.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Hurry, hurry. Faster.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>“I can take a shuttle.” It would be faster than having to go all the way
to the bridge.</p>
      <p>“That’s not going to happen, Ean. You’ll leave us stranded in enemy
space with the most valuable ship in the whole of the New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>“Technically, the Worlds of the Lesser Gods are not enemies.”</p>
      <p>Sale snorted. “Does anyone seriously believe that?”</p>
      <p>No.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Slow. Faster.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>He was going as fast as he could. Surely the ship understood that.</p>
      <p>“Keep an eye on the trainees” Sale said. “I don’t want them turning on
us. We’re in a really bad position right now. The only thing between us
and the trainees’ taking over the ship is you. Keep it that way.”</p>
      <p>He should have waited till they’d sorted out the attack here on the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. But Radko might be dead by then.</p>
      <p>“I don’t know how long the station will hold off firing on us. We don’t
know what weapons this ship has.”</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> was the size of a small city.</p>
      <p>“We have a green field.”</p>
      <p>“Which is useless because we’ll destroy Radko, along with who knows how
many innocent people. Tell me about Radko.”</p>
      <p>But first, Ean checked with line eight. <emphasis>“Where are your weapons? What
do you have?”</emphasis></p>
      <p>The overlay of sound almost knocked him over. There were lots of
weapons, all around the ship, although he couldn’t have told Sale where
a single one was right now. One of them was the quiet blue hot blood.</p>
      <p>“We have weapons. Lots of them.” Breathlessly, for Sale had started to
run. It was a long way from the shuttle bays to the bridge. “Radko sent
a message.”</p>
      <p>He still couldn’t run and talk, let alone sing, but he tried anyway.</p>
      <p>“She said. Commodore Bach,” because Sale needed to know that. “Traitor.
With Redmond and the Worlds of the Lesser Gods. And then he shot her.”</p>
      <p>“Bach shot Radko?”</p>
      <p>“Jakob did.”</p>
      <p>“What’s Jakob doing there? Never mind, Ean. Tell the rest when we’re on
the bridge.”</p>
      <p>He was grateful for that because Sale could run as fast as Radko. “You
really should ask the ship how to get to the bridge fast.” Or he could
ask it himself, but he didn’t have the breath for anything but running
right now.</p>
      <p>“We haven’t time to experiment right now.”</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Faster. Hurry.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>He had a stitch in his side, and the lines seemed determined to push him
off course. He nearly ran into the wall once, had to force himself away.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Faster,”</emphasis> the lines insisted, battering him with sound. <emphasis>“Faster.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Finally, he couldn’t fight the sound anymore. He stopped, his lungs
burning. All he could do was stand with his hands on his knees and drag
in deep breaths.</p>
      <p>Sale was a full corridor ahead of him.</p>
      <p>The lines didn’t normally push him to do things he wasn’t capable of.
They were more likely to try to fix it for him. What was he missing?</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Faster,”</emphasis> and the lines sounded relieved that he’d finally stopped.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Faster,”</emphasis> Ean agreed, and let the noise push him toward the wall.</p>
      <p>Nothing. He was going to walk into the wall. Ean closed his eyes and let
the music guide him.</p>
      <p>Something jerked, and grabbed him, like the force that grabbed the
shuttles. Lines four and three were loud, the other lines finally
silent. He opened his eyes. It was dark, but he knew he was
moving—horizontally, he thought. Scarily fast. He shot upward, then
down, then along again. It was worse than a jump; it was a rushing
pneumatic tube, and he was in it.</p>
      <p>He shot out the other end, onto the bridge in a rolling heap that he
couldn’t stop, in time to hear Sale say to Craik, “I’ve lost Ean. I need
to go back for him. Can you manage?”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Too fast.”</emphasis> Lines one, three, and four seemed to be conferring.
<emphasis>“Human. Slower?”</emphasis> As if they weren’t sure they could get it any slower.</p>
      <p>Ean hit the wall, bounced off, and finally came to a stop. He got to his
feet, choking, trying to catch his breath. His suit had sealed
automatically. Wherever he’d been, there was no oxygen.</p>
      <p>“He’s just arrived on the bridge,” Craik said. “Get here as fast as you
can.”</p>
      <p>“But he was way behind me.”</p>
      <p>“He’s here now, Sale. Trying not to throw up.”</p>
      <p>“Shit.”</p>
      <p>When he could finally speak, Ean said, “Sale. You should—”</p>
      <p>But she was here now, stopping with a skid at the entry to the bridge.
“Status?”</p>
      <p>Craik shook her head. “No change on station.” She glanced over at Ean.
“Not sure about him.”</p>
      <p>“I’m fine.” It was a wheeze, but he was fine. He checked the readings on
his suit. Radko insisted he always check before he took the helmet off.
The air was clean. <emphasis>“Thank you,”</emphasis> he whispered to the ship.</p>
      <p>All he ever had to do was listen. <emphasis>“If I don’t listen next time, tell me
‘faster,’ and I’ll remember.”</emphasis> At least, he’d try to remember.</p>
      <p>Sale asked, “Is Radko alive or dead, Ean?”</p>
      <p>“I don’t know. Jakob said he wanted to talk to her. That was after he
shot her, so I think so.”</p>
      <p>Please let her be alive.</p>
      <p>Sale said, “I need to see the control center on that station. Anything
line eight is involved in. And I need to see Bach, Jakob, and Radko.”</p>
      <p>What was the control center on a station? The administrator’s office?</p>
      <p>“Bach?” Craik said. “Radko?”</p>
      <p>“I’ll explain in a minute. Ean?”</p>
      <p>He sang up the lines. Station “Ship,” anywhere with line-eight activity,
then had to flick through each of the cameras to get Radko—and Bach and
Jakob—because none of them were linesmen, and the station lines weren’t
as strong as ship lines. Maybe there was something in Wendell’s theory
that the more you went through the void, the stronger the lines became.</p>
      <p>But speaking of lines.</p>
      <p>Ean stopped. “There are a lot of linesmen on that station,” he told
Sale. “They’re all strong, and… a little strange.” Crazy was the word
that came to mind, but you wouldn’t have a station full of crazy
linesmen. Maybe they’d been trained by a secret line guild on the Worlds
of the Lesser Gods and were different. “They’re very strong.”</p>
      <p>Many of them were reacting badly to the presence of line eleven.</p>
      <p>“Show me.”</p>
      <p>Ean put them up on the screen on the wall, a matrix of five images by
four, room by room. He brought a new one up every five seconds,
replacing the one that had been there the longest.</p>
      <p>Radko would be in the prisons. He could see two people locked in cells.
One was a middle-aged woman who was inspecting the walls of her cell
with care, looking for a way to escape. The other was a bulky younger
man who sat in the center of the featureless room, staring ahead.</p>
      <p>The rest of the station seemed to be a minibarracks. A warren of living
areas, offices and meeting rooms, some training rooms. They had a huge
medical center. The first rooms were empty, but the rest had patients.
All of them were linesmen. Some of the linesmen were being attended to.
They had the strongest lines. And felt the craziest.</p>
      <p>Ean tried not to shudder. It was an insane type of crazy, unhinged
almost.</p>
      <p>Most of them wore the uniform of House of Sandhurst.</p>
      <p>There, finally, in a room on the sixth level. A woman strapped to a
chair, with two men standing nearby. One of the men wore the uniform Ean
recognized from the Factor’s entourage. Jakob. The other wore the gray
of Lancia. Commodore Bach.</p>
      <p>The woman in the chair moved slightly, and Ean could have cried.</p>
      <p>Radko.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_seven_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>Radko woke to cramps, and pins and needles.</p>
      <p>Jakob hadn’t killed her. He’d stunned her.</p>
      <p>She was bound to a chair, arms by her sides, strapped at the shoulders,
the waist, the wrists, and around her ankles. The bindings were tight
all the way down. She couldn’t slip out of them. The ties were behind
her, and the seat was fastened to the floor.</p>
      <p>She might not be dead yet, but it was difficult to see how she would get
out of this.</p>
      <p>“Those useless Redmond lackeys,” Jakob said. “Their security is full of
holes. Look at this.” Something spun. She caught the movement out of the
corner of her eye, and moved her eyes without moving her head so she
could see it better. It looked like a comms. “We didn’t even know this
was gone until Martel found it among your girl’s belongings.”</p>
      <p>Radko kept her head down. The longer Jakob thought she was unconscious,
the better. She could see one pair of polished boots. Worlds of the
Lesser Gods boots were a deep navy. These were black. Lancian boots.
Commodore Bach was here.</p>
      <p>Please let Vega have received her message.</p>
      <p>“What is it?” Bach sounded almost disinterested although Radko would bet
he wanted to know.</p>
      <p>“The report on experiments Quinn is doing on the linesmen. It was stolen
two weeks ago. Redmond and TwoPaths Engineering didn’t plan on telling
us.”</p>
      <p>Surely they knew it wasn’t the original report that had been stolen. Or
maybe only Dr. Quinn did, and if no one had said the original report was
missing, would they admit to a second one going missing? Probably not.</p>
      <p>Radko knew secrets she couldn’t afford to give away. Even if Jakob
didn’t kill her, she couldn’t stay alive to blab those secrets out. The
question was, how to do the most damage to Jakob and Bach on the way.
And somehow steal the comms and get it to Vega.</p>
      <p>Jakob must have turned to face her, for his voice got clearer. “We’re in
a hospital full of doctors, and they can’t even administer a drug
properly. This time I’ll give her the truth serum myself.”</p>
      <p>“I never thought much of Dromalan truth serum, myself.” That was Bach,
and the bile rose in Radko’s throat just thinking about him.</p>
      <p>“It’s not my favorite, either,” Jakob admitted. “I prefer something
faster acting. But there are gallons of this stuff lying around on
station. They use it for experimenting on the linesmen.”</p>
      <p>Bach shuddered, and Radko wanted to do the same. The serum made a
linesman more receptive to the lines, but the stronger the linesman, the
more damage it did. And you never sent a linesman who’d been doped with
it through the void. You destroyed his lines.</p>
      <p>“Some of the experiments strike me as barbaric.”</p>
      <p>“Barbaric or not, they’re working. Redmond has done more with linesmen
than your world or my world would do in a lifetime, and they’ve done it
in fifteen years.”</p>
      <p>“We’ve done some exceptional work of our own, recently,” Bach said.</p>
      <p>“Not like this. Wait till we get those ships. You’ll see what—” Jakob
broke off as his comms sounded. Radko saw the shadow of his hand move as
he flicked it on. “I told you not to disturb me.”</p>
      <p>She listened hard, but didn’t catch the reply.</p>
      <p>“Talk sense, man.” Jakob pushed the call onto the wall screen. Radko
looked up properly, and saw that was to free his hands so he could fill
the syringe with green liquid from the jar on his desk.</p>
      <p>The caller was Martel. “The alien ship is here.”</p>
      <p>“Here?”</p>
      <p>“Right in our space.” The volume rose as Martel spoke, until he was
almost shouting. “Which stupid idiot thought that would be a clever
trick? Because it wasn’t. It was downright dangerous.”</p>
      <p>Bach pointed his blaster at Jakob. “This is supposed to be a three-world
initiative. The ship was to go to Redmond. Does the Worlds of the Lesser
Gods plan on going it alone?”</p>
      <p>Jakob waved him away. “It was supposed to go to Redmond. But who cares.
We’ve got the alien fleet. All of them?” he asked Martel.</p>
      <p>His comms was going crazy with people trying to call him. He ignored
them.</p>
      <p>“Isn’t one enough?”</p>
      <p>Jakob looked at Bach. He ignored the blaster. “They only brought the one
ship? You said we take one ship, and it brings the whole fleet. It
didn’t matter which ship.” He lifted the comms to talk into it again.
“Which ship is it?”</p>
      <p>“Which bloody ship do you think it is? It’s massive. And it’s close. Oh,
and it’s threatening to use a destructive green field.”</p>
      <p>Radko started to hope.</p>
      <p>“Contact your man,” Jakob said to Bach.</p>
      <p>Bach opened his own comms. “Status report, Rigg.”</p>
      <p>There was no answer.</p>
      <p>Bach would only be calling the ship if it was his people who had stolen
it. How many Lancastrians were involved in this betrayal?</p>
      <p>“Come on,” Jakob said. “How hard can it be to steal a ship and send a
message?”</p>
      <p>An alarm sounded. First in the corridors outside, then over the speaker.
Jakob clicked back to Martel. “What’s happening?”</p>
      <p>Martel glanced sideways. “It’s an internal alarm. I’ll call you back.”</p>
      <p>“I hope it’s not someone panicking about the ship. We <emphasis>have</emphasis> captured
it.” Jakob clicked off, then added under his breath as he waited for
Bach’s call to be answered, “We’d better have, anyway. Come on, it can’t
take this long.”</p>
      <p>It could if Rigg wasn’t in charge of the ship. The lines would be
blocking the calls.</p>
      <p>Martel called back. He had Dr. Quinn on split screen. Quinn started
talking almost before the call was open. “They’ve attacked our
linesman.”</p>
      <p>“We’re not under attack.”</p>
      <p>“They’re all out cold, or screaming, or… Do something. Get rid of it.
Now.”</p>
      <p>Radko grinned. The ship out there was one of the eleven ships. Probably
the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> itself. And she knew which linesman would be on it.</p>
      <p>Time for a rethink on her action plan.</p>
      <p>She spoke softly, under the noise. “Ean. Can you hear me? Flash the
lights once if you can.”</p>
      <p>The lights blinked.</p>
      <p>Good. “I need someone to free me.”</p>
      <p>Bach turned his head to watch her, but he didn’t raise his weapon or
stop her. Hopefully, he wouldn’t realize what she was doing until it was
too late.</p>
      <p>“I have at least two people on the station with me,” Radko said.
“Hopefully, three. They’ll be in cells. Or two of them will.”</p>
      <p>“Calm down, Quinn,” Jakob said. “You know how the lines on the alien
ship affect the linesmen.”</p>
      <p>Quinn was working himself into his own heart attack. “That’s why the
ship wasn’t supposed to come here. Look at them.” He brought up visuals
of rooms and corridors. Dozens of linesmen, most of them on the floor,
all of them trying to breathe. One of them didn’t look to be breathing
at all.</p>
      <p>If only one ship was here, Ean had used line seven, and they would still
be in contact with the other ships in Haladean space. “Vega will
identify my team for you,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>“It felled half the linesmen,” Quinn cried.</p>
      <p>“See if you can rescue them,” Radko continued. “If you can, get them to
come here. But tell them I’ve two armed men here who are as good as any
of our own people, and not to underestimate them. If you can’t get them
here, get them to the shuttles.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_eight_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Ean started to sing open Vega’s comms, then realized that the lines were
already open to the fleet ships.</p>
      <p>“You heard that?” he said to Vega.</p>
      <p>“The whole fleet heard it,” Vega said. “And you might mention to Sale
that instead of ignoring us, she’d do well to leverage off our
experience. She has four experienced battle captains here, plus the crew
of the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> and Fleet Admiral Orsaya. You have two
teams, and a whole station opposing you. Not to mention that based on
the rankings on those uniforms, the station is likely to be armed. As
soon as they realize they don’t have control of the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>,
they’ll start firing.”</p>
      <p>“Heard and understood, ma’am,” Sale said.</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t have time for this. “Vega, do you have—”</p>
      <p>“Coming through,” Vega said, and it was, finally.</p>
      <p>Three images. Ean pushed them up to the screen on the wall.</p>
      <p>“The man on the left is Yves Han,” Vega said. “The young man in the
middle is Arun Chaudry, and the woman is Theodora van Heel.”</p>
      <p>Ean remembered Chaudry and van Heel. “The prisoners.” He sang up the
camera views in their cells for Sale and everyone else on the bridge of
the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, then sang the doors to their cells unlocked.</p>
      <p>“Let me talk to them,” Sale said.</p>
      <p>He turned on the speakers to each cell, sang a comms line open, and
connected it between Sale’s comms and the speakers. “On your comms.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you.” Sale picked up her comms. “Chaudry, van Heel. Can you hear
me? This is Group Leader Sale, on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.” She spoke Lancian.</p>
      <p>“Yes.” Van Heel looked around warily.</p>
      <p>“We can see you through the cameras in the room, but we can’t hear you.
Nod if you can hear us.”</p>
      <p>They both nodded.</p>
      <p>Ean could hear her. Why couldn’t Sale? <emphasis>“Sound on the security feed?”</emphasis>
he asked the station.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Sound? No sound?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>So however Ean was getting it, he was getting it straight through the
lines; from line one, not through the feed he’d redirected for Sale. Who
didn’t put sound on a security feed?</p>
      <p>“Ean. Ean.” It was Captain Helmo, as insistent as Abram could be. “Are
you listening to me?”</p>
      <p>“Listening,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“Good. You cannot send those people unarmed into Radko’s room. Get them
some weapons before they get there. There’ll be weapons around. Find
some.”</p>
      <p>Weapons? Right. Line eight would know.</p>
      <p>He sang to line eight on the station. <emphasis>“Show me your weapons?”</emphasis> Much
like he had earlier on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, and again, like the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, he got an overwhelming overlay of weapons. “I don’t know
what’s what? Or what’s where.”</p>
      <p>“We have unlocked the doors for you,” Sale said to van Heel and Chaudry.
“We’ll unlock them all the way to Radko. First, we need to arm you.” She
glanced at Ean. “Are you ready?”</p>
      <p>“Working on it,” Ean said, cold with sweat. What if he couldn’t get them
anything? Think. What would Radko suggest?</p>
      <p>Get a plan to use with the overlays.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“I need a plan of the station,”</emphasis> he sang. To all the lines, for he
didn’t know which line would be responsible for it.</p>
      <p>He got his schematic, and still didn’t know which line had given it to
him. Maybe all of them.</p>
      <p>“And Lambert.” Vega’s tone was caustic. “Don’t sing the station into the
fleet. We’re in enough trouble as it is without adding theft to our list
of crimes.”</p>
      <p>It wasn’t her crime. It was his.</p>
      <p>“Understood.”</p>
      <p>“Understanding isn’t necessarily equivalent to not acting, in your
case.”</p>
      <p>Ean tuned her out by singing his request again to line eight. <emphasis>“Show me
your weapons. Only this time, put it on the station plan.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>The various weapons were overlaid on the schematic. Captains and seconds
conferred, but it was Admiral Orsaya, listening in on Confluence
Station, who said, “Level five, that looks like a bank of lockers. It’s
where we keep the blasters on station here. Might be worth a try.”</p>
      <p>Ean reoriented himself and the newly escaped prisoners. “I’ve got it.
Locking all the doors except those to the lockers.” He’d learned the
hard way that the simplest way to prevent anyone from stopping them was
to lock the other doors. Everywhere on the ship.</p>
      <p>Naturally, that caused a flurry of calls to the engineering section. Or
maintenance, rather, for it was a station.</p>
      <p>“Right,” Sale said to van Heel and Chaudry. “Follow the open doors to
the weapons. If anyone stops you, knock them out.”</p>
      <p>They took off running.</p>
      <p>Ean opened the doors for them.</p>
      <p>When they had a long stretch of corridor and no doors to open, he sang
up the cameras again, and sent them to the captains of the other ships
and Confluence Station. A five-by-four matrix, cycling through, one new
image every five seconds, with the oldest one dropping off. “See if you
can find Han.”</p>
      <p>He turned back to opening doors for van Heel and Chaudry, and the rest
of his attention to what was happening in Radko’s room.</p>
      <p>He was glad to have something to concentrate on, for the discomfort of
the linesmen was starting to get to him. Those who were still left
standing, for he was queasily aware that many of them weren’t moving.</p>
      <p>Why didn’t someone give them oxygen?</p>
      <p>In Radko’s interrogation room, Commodore Bach was saying exactly that.
“Give them oxygen, then. Those paramedics were sent with the trainees
for a reason.”</p>
      <p>“What the hell do they need oxygen for? The air on station’s fine.”
Jakob thrust readings in front of Bach.</p>
      <p>“Line eleven interferes with the heart-brain mechanism,” Radko said.
“Their heart tries to pump a different way. If you don’t get out there
and give them oxygen, some of them are likely to suffocate.”</p>
      <p>Ean cheered. <emphasis>“Thank you, Radko. Thank you.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>“And you know this? How?”</p>
      <p>“She is one of Galenos’s people,” Bach said.</p>
      <p>“Galenos has a lot of people under him.”</p>
      <p>“Do you want to save your linesmen?” Radko asked. “Because you should be
getting oxygen to them.”</p>
      <p>“She also works with Linesman Lambert. That’s why you need to keep her
alive.”</p>
      <p>“When did you plan on telling me this?” But at least Jakob called Dr.
Quinn. Ean followed the call through to the other end, where Quinn was
ignoring it.</p>
      <p>Jakob called up a soldier. “Get down to Dr. Quinn. I need him to answer
his comms.”</p>
      <p>Ean opened the doors for the soldier as he jogged down to where Quinn
was working on one of his linesmen. “Commander Jakob wants to talk to
you.”</p>
      <p>“I’m busy. I’ve got three linesmen down with heart attacks.”</p>
      <p>The soldier took out his own comms and called Jakob. “With Dr. Quinn
now, sir,” and held the comms close to Quinn’s ear.</p>
      <p>“Dr. Quinn. Your linesman needs oxygen.”</p>
      <p>“Suddenly you’re an expert on what the problem is.”</p>
      <p>“All of them. They all need oxygen,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>Radko said, at the same time, “They all need oxygen.”</p>
      <p>“Why doesn’t Dr. Quinn already know this?” Jakob asked.</p>
      <p>“I don’t know,” Radko said. “Any normal doctor would.”</p>
      <p>Why didn’t Quinn know it? It was the first thing Abram and Michelle had
tried when Ean had been struck down by line eleven. Thank the lines for
Radko, who did.</p>
      <p>“I love you, Radko,” Ean whispered. “Thank you, thank you, thank you.”</p>
      <p>He became aware Sale was looking at him. “She’s good,” he said, and
turned back to what was happening on station.</p>
      <p>“Send your own soldiers down to do it if Quinn won’t,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>Jakob glanced from her to Bach and back again.</p>
      <p>“Works with Lambert,” Bach reminded him.</p>
      <p>Jakob called up a group leader. “Get oxygen to the linesmen. Every
single one of them if necessary.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang the doors unlocked between them and the linesmen.</p>
      <p>Van Heel and Chaudry reached the weapons store.</p>
      <p>“Ean,” Sale said. Ean was already singing the locks on the cupboards
open. “I need to talk to them again.”</p>
      <p>He sang open the link to the speakers close to the weapons store.</p>
      <p>“Take extras for Radko and Han,” Sale ordered. “If you can find holsters
in a hurry, take them, and take spare blasters. Radko can fire two at
once.”</p>
      <p>And hit separate targets on the bull’s-eye with them, multiple times in
a row. Ean had been to weapons practice with her.</p>
      <p>Now he had to send van Heel and Chaudry back to Radko, avoiding any of
the soldiers Jakob had sent to treat the linesmen.</p>
      <p>And they still hadn’t found Han.</p>
      <p>“Sale,” Craik said. “You need to see this.”</p>
      <p>Sale came across to look. “What is it?”</p>
      <p>“Not sure yet.”</p>
      <p>“Ean,” Vega said, “the corridor where they’re holding Radko. All the way
down to the lifts. The security camera is on a loop. Someone has
tampered with it. We’re not getting the proper image. We can’t see it.
Someone is hiding out in that corridor. Find out who, and what?”</p>
      <p>Ean hurriedly dragged his attention away from what was happening inside
Radko’s prison room to the corridor outside. “Two men,” he said.
“Armed.”</p>
      <p>They were outside Radko’s door, one on either side of the doorway,
weapons raised. One of the men signaled.</p>
      <p>“They’re about to attack.” Ean readied himself to sing line eight.</p>
      <p>The second man nodded.</p>
      <p>Ean recognized him from the image Vega had sent through. He changed his
tune. <emphasis>“Unlock the door.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>“We’ve found Han,” he told Vega.</p>
      <p>The two men charged into the room together. As they did, Ean saw the
first man’s face. A man he’d only seen twice but whose features were
etched in Ean’s memory.</p>
      <p>Stellan Vilhjalmsson. Gate Union assassin, and a man who’d already tried
to kill Radko once.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Protect Radko,”</emphasis> he sang to station line eight.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Protect? Radko?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p><emphasis>“In the room. That one.”</emphasis> How did you explain to a strange line what
you wanted it to do? <emphasis>“The protection field.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Human-built lines didn’t have alien knowledge behind them. One thing was
for sure. The <emphasis>Havortian</emphasis> had never used its protective field. The
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> and the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis> must have learned it from the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>For a frantic few seconds, Ean considered singing the station into the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> fleet, no matter what Vega said. Instead, he sang the
lights down in a panicked hope that if they couldn’t see Radko, they
couldn’t fire on her.</p>
      <p>The emergency lights stayed up, and they weren’t run on lines.</p>
      <p>“Sale. Radko’s in trouble.”</p>
      <p>“So are we, Ean. A class-two warship’s just arrived.”</p>
      <p>“Two now,” Craik said.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_twenty_nine_dominique_radko">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE: DOMINIQUE RADKO</p>
      </title>
      <p>Jakob left the images of the linesmen on-screen. Radko didn’t relax
until she saw the first soldiers arrive with oxygen. There was something
about watching linesmen, and not being able to help, that made her feel
helpless.</p>
      <p>“I’m not liking the silence from your man, Rigg,” Jakob told Bach.</p>
      <p>“You know ops. They seldom go to plan,” but Bach looked at Radko as if
he wanted to ask if she knew what was happening.</p>
      <p>Radko would rather spit on him than tell him anything.</p>
      <p>Jakob’s comms sounded.</p>
      <p>“Warship <emphasis>Hellfire</emphasis> in position,” reported the man who’d called.</p>
      <p>Another call followed immediately after. “Warship <emphasis>Brimstone</emphasis> in
position.”</p>
      <p>“About time something went to plan. Attack the alien ship.”</p>
      <p>“What about my people on that ship?” Bach demanded.</p>
      <p>“They’re not responding. We can only assume they’re not in control.”</p>
      <p>Radko hid her grin. He’d be right about that.</p>
      <p>The door opened.</p>
      <p>Radko heard the distinctive hum of a blaster on stun. Jakob collapsed.</p>
      <p>Stellan Vilhjalmsson. And Han.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson had fired.</p>
      <p>The lights went out, leaving emergency lighting on the floor as the only
source of illumination. The sound of Ean singing came through the
speakers. Line eight, Radko guessed, but nothing happened.</p>
      <p>Han’s weapon was pointing at Bach. He made an “Oh” of recognized horror,
pushed his blaster up and away at the last moment, and fired into the
ceiling instead.</p>
      <p>Bach’s own weapon was out by then.</p>
      <p>He fired.</p>
      <p>Han went down.</p>
      <p>There was no associated smell of burning. Bach, at least, had his
blaster on stun.</p>
      <p>Bach turned to Vilhjalmsson. Vilhjalmsson had already moved. Bach fired
wide, to where the assassin would have been if he’d moved at his usual
speed.</p>
      <p>“You’re slowing down, Vilhjalmsson.”</p>
      <p>Even Bach knew the assassin.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson grunted. “If it saves my life.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel and Chaudry burst into the room.</p>
      <p>“Fire on the right,” Radko said, urgently. “Van Heel, take the man on
the right out.”</p>
      <p>Thank goodness the lights were too dim for her to recognize Bach
immediately. Otherwise, she’d stop, like Han had.</p>
      <p>Van Heel fired. She missed but distracted Bach long enough for
Vilhjalmsson to kick the weapon out of Bach’s hand.</p>
      <p>“Chaudry. Get me out of this chair.”</p>
      <p>“I can’t see,” Chaudry said.</p>
      <p>“Ean.”</p>
      <p>The lights came back up.</p>
      <p>Van Heel made a sound somewhere between a moan and a gasp. “Sir.” She
started to hold out her weapon.</p>
      <p>“Don’t,” Radko said sharply. “He’s a traitor. Chaudry,” for Chaudry
didn’t seem to recognize him and was stolidly working on the fastenings.
“Cover Bach. Don’t let him near a weapon. Van Heel, come and free me.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry covered Bach.</p>
      <p>Van Heel came over to work on the clips. She lowered her voice. “Do you
know who he is?”</p>
      <p>“Of course I do. That makes his being a traitor even worse.”</p>
      <p>“How do you know he’s a traitor?”</p>
      <p>Bach seemed to watch Vilhjalmsson, rather than them, although Radko was
sure he knew exactly what they were doing and would seize any
opportunity.</p>
      <p>The restraining bands around her shoulders fell away. She flexed them as
she watched Vilhjalmsson. That last kick seemed to have done some
damage, for he was moving carefully, and a light sheen of sweat showed
on his face.</p>
      <p>“Why were you working with Han?” She had to assume he was, for he had
worked against Jakob and Bach.</p>
      <p>“Escape, pure and simple. It suited us both.” He spoke through clenched
teeth. “Han was the only one left when I arrived at the labs on Aeolus.
He’d overheard where you were being evacuated to. We joined forces to
get onto the station. Unfortunately, I was captured not long after. He
found me while he was looking for you.”</p>
      <p>“Radko.” Ean’s voice was urgent through the speaker. “You have to
hurry.”</p>
      <p>The bands around her wrists fell away.</p>
      <p>“I can’t control line eight on the station. It doesn’t understand.”</p>
      <p>“That’s fine, Ean. We’re good. We’re armed,” as van Heel handed her a
blaster.</p>
      <p>“What happened to the woman, Sale, who was telling us what to do?”
Chaudry asked. He, too, was watching Vilhjalmsson—with the professional
eye of a doctor. “We need to stabilize your back.”</p>
      <p>“Sale’s here,” Ean said. “You need to get to a shuttle, Radko. The
station commander has weapons ready to fire, and he’s sent soldiers down
to where you are. If you don’t leave soon, there won’t be any passages
to leave by.” A pause. “And we’ve got a problem our end.”</p>
      <p>Radko knew what that problem would be. “Two warships?”</p>
      <p>“Yes.”</p>
      <p>Warships weren’t something Radko could worry about. “You worry about the
warships, Ean. We’ll get to the shuttles. Right,” she added, as van Heel
loosened the bindings around her ankles. She stood up. “Let’s go.” Radko
pointed her weapon at Bach. “Chaudry, can you take Han?”</p>
      <p>Chaudry hoisted Han over his shoulders in a fireman’s carry. “Ready.”</p>
      <p>“I’ve sung the doors open,” Ean said. “Hurry.”</p>
      <p>Radko stopped first, to go through Jakob’s pockets. He had three comms.
She took them all, and made sure they were zipped securely in her pocket
before anything else. Then she indicated with her blaster. “You’re
coming with us, Bach. You’ll be tried for treason against Lancia.”</p>
      <p>Bach smiled faintly. “We’ll see.” He moved toward the door. “Which way?”</p>
      <p>“Follow the open doors,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>They turned left outside the door because the passage to the right was
blocked by massive breach doors. Ean, bless him, had closed every single
door they didn’t need. They moved as fast as they could but, hampered as
they were by Chaudry’s load and Vilhjalmsson’s back, they were slow.</p>
      <p>Every soldier on ship would be at the shuttle bay by the time they got
there.</p>
      <p>Radko didn’t think about that. Worry about what you could control, trust
Ean to do the rest. All the same, she’d be glad when they were on the
<emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>“What weapons does Captain Kari Wang have ready?” she asked Ean.</p>
      <p>There was a momentary silence, then a sheepish “Um” from Ean, through
the speakers.</p>
      <p>She knew how to read Ean. “You’re not on the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis>?” But the ship was
an Eleven class. There was only one other Eleven-class ship. “You
brought the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_thirty_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER THIRTY: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>“Ean,” Sale said. “Turn this ship. Now.”</p>
      <p>“Turn how? Turn where?” She’d be smarter telling the ship direct.</p>
      <p>“Seventy degrees any way. One of those warships is pointing directly at
the shuttle bay where we’ve housed the prisoners. Move Ean, move it
now.”</p>
      <p>The ship was already turning.</p>
      <p>“Thank you.”</p>
      <p>Ean hadn’t done anything. He added his own thanks. <emphasis>“Thank you. What
Sale wants, you give. Okay?”</emphasis></p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Of course.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>“Hit,” Craik said. “One of the big cargo bays in section six. Can’t tell
the damage.”</p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> was already closing the breach doors.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Weapons,”</emphasis> Ean sang to line eight. <emphasis>“What have you got?”</emphasis> Because he
knew that’s what Sale would ask next.</p>
      <p>He was swamped with the same overlay that had overwhelmed him before.</p>
      <p>“We’re sitting ducks here,” Sale said. “Ean, I need weapons. And don’t
give me that green protective field.”</p>
      <p>Ean seized on the only one he recognized. <emphasis>“That one.”</emphasis> Quiet, blue, hot
blood. “Sale, which ship do you want to aim at first?”</p>
      <p>“Shit.” A two-second pause. “<emphasis>Hellfire</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“Which one’s that?”</p>
      <p>Another second while Sale oriented herself between human screen and
alien displays. “That one.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“That one,”</emphasis> Ean whispered. <emphasis>“Do it now. Do it quick.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>“I need weapons, Ean. I need them yesterday.”</p>
      <p>“Coming.” But they were in the void, and he wasn’t sure if Sale heard
him. Line eight released the weapon, then they were out again. A blue
ball of flame engulfed <emphasis>Hellfire</emphasis>. Ean was ready for the metallic smell
of hot blood that flooded the ship, but he still staggered. The lines on
the <emphasis>Hellfire</emphasis> went dead.</p>
      <p>“Shit. Was that you, Ean?”</p>
      <p>“It was the ship.” Sale needed to learn what the ship was doing for her.</p>
      <p>He took a moment to see what was happening on the station. Radko was
taking forever to get to the shuttle bays.</p>
      <p>The commander had stopped trying to call Jakob, stopped trying to get
through the locked doors. He turned his attention to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.
“Weapons, armed.” He didn’t have a full crew at the weapons bay, but he
had enough to man and load them.</p>
      <p>“<emphasis>Hellfire</emphasis> is no longer firing,” Craik said.</p>
      <p><emphasis>Hellfire</emphasis> was a dead ship. But the <emphasis>Brimstone</emphasis> was still firing.</p>
      <p>“Nice shooting, Ean,” Sale said.</p>
      <p>“You should compliment the ship.”</p>
      <p>Sale looked at him, then said, “Thank you, ship,” but she turned back to
Ean immediately.</p>
      <p>“You should always thank the ship.”</p>
      <p>“Right, I get the message. Now what do we do about the other ship, and
how long is this one out for?”</p>
      <p>“We can’t use the blue thing again. It takes time to recharge.”</p>
      <p>“We need a miracle, Ean. We’re undermanned, we have no idea what this
ship can do yet, and no one to do it for us.”</p>
      <p>He couldn’t give her a miracle. “<emphasis>Hellfire</emphasis> won’t fire again, it’s dead.
I don’t—”</p>
      <p>“Perfect. Thank you. Open the comms to the bridge on the <emphasis>Brimstone</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>He sang the comms open for her.</p>
      <p>“<emphasis>Brimstone</emphasis>,” Sale said. “This is the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. We have destroyed
the <emphasis>Hellfire</emphasis>. If you don’t want the same fate, cease fire now.”</p>
      <p>Ean had just told her they couldn’t do it again yet. He turned his
attention to the other problem, because the commander on the station had
received a weapons ready from the gunners. He diverted the commander’s
comms into the speakers in the corridor where Radko was.</p>
      <p>“Gunnery one,” the commander said. “Fire a salvo in a three, two, five
pattern. We’re not aiming to destroy the ship yet, only scare it.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry stopped. “They’re firing at us.”</p>
      <p>“No they’re not,” Radko said, barely audible under the instructions and
calls from line five. “Those are the instructions from this station.
They’re trying to fire on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>. Keep moving, Chaudry.”</p>
      <p>“If they’re firing on our rescue ship,” van Heel said, “they’ll destroy
it before we get there.”</p>
      <p>“Keep moving. Ean’s deflecting the orders. Hurry on, he can’t do it
forever.”</p>
      <p>Radko always understood.</p>
      <p>“Small single-man craft exiting the <emphasis>Hellfire</emphasis>,” Craik said.</p>
      <p>“They’re lifepods,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“Correction, lifepods,” Craik said at the same time.</p>
      <p>Bhaksir called Sale then. “Prisoners are secure.”</p>
      <p>“What?” Sale said. “That was hours ago.”</p>
      <p>According to the time on Ean’s comms, they had been in the Worlds of the
Lesser Gods less than half an hour.</p>
      <p>“Can you get Ean to lock them in?”</p>
      <p>“He’s busy.”</p>
      <p>Ean used lines eight and three of the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> to sing the air lock
secure. In doing so, he lost control of line three on the station
momentarily, and two soldiers made it into the passage.</p>
      <p>“Radko,” he called. “There are two armed soldiers heading your way.”</p>
      <p>Radko didn’t give any indication she’d heard, and no wonder, for he was
piping all the comms into the corridor. If he stopped that, the
commander would get his order to the gunners.</p>
      <p>Radko rounded the corner and almost ran into the soldiers.</p>
      <p>They went down before Ean realized she had fired. She’d always had good
reflexes.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>After what felt longer than the longest forever in the void, Radko’s
group reached the shuttle.</p>
      <p>“In, in,” Radko said. “Don’t forget, Bach’s under arrest. Don’t let him
near a weapon. Strap yourself in,” she ordered Bach. “All of you.”</p>
      <p>Ean kept singing the commands into the empty corridor as Radko piloted
the shuttle out of the bay.</p>
      <p>The commander realized his commands weren’t getting through. “Get down
to the gunner’s station,” he ordered someone. “Tell them to fire.”</p>
      <p>Ean locked all the doors.</p>
      <p>“What the hell? Use the emergency tunnels.”</p>
      <p>“An unauthorized shuttle has left the station,” someone at another board
said.</p>
      <p>“Tell them to shoot the shuttle, instead,” the commander said to the
person who was unscrewing the emergency hatch.</p>
      <p>On the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> bridge, the only sound was Ean singing. Ean didn’t
know what agreement Sale had made with the <emphasis>Brimstone</emphasis>, but it wasn’t
firing at them.</p>
      <p>He kept singing as the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> grabbed the shuttle and brought it
in.</p>
      <p>Chaudry grabbed the arms of his seat. “We’re hit.”</p>
      <p>“No,” Radko said. “That’s normal.”</p>
      <p>“Felt like a hit,” van Heel said.</p>
      <p>“It wasn’t.”</p>
      <p>Ean stopped singing when the shuttle was safely inside one of the small
air locks on the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>“Comms back, sir,” someone on the station said.</p>
      <p>“About time,” the station commander said. “Fire on that blasted ship.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Take us home,”</emphasis> Ean sang to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>They entered the void as the first gunner pressed the fire button.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>“Welcome home, <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>,” Captain Helmo said.</p>
      <p>“Radko’s got prisoners,” Ean told Sale. “Two of them.” Was Vilhjalmsson
a prisoner?</p>
      <p>“Prisoners. Right. That’s where we started. It seems so long ago now.”
Sale called Bhaksir. “Stay where you are. We’re coming down. Ean says we
have a couple more for you.”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Faster?”</emphasis> Ean asked the ship.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Faster.”</emphasis> Confirmation, affirmative.</p>
      <p>Sale had already started running. She thumbed open her comms as she ran,
“Ma’am,” to Vega. “We’ve at least forty prisoners. The fake paramedics,
some Lancastrian linesmen, and two prisoners Radko brought back from the
station.”</p>
      <p>“Lancastrian?” Vega bit off anything more she might say.</p>
      <p>“Sale.” Ean and the ship called together. “Wait.”</p>
      <p>She paused. “What’s wrong?”</p>
      <p>“We’ll use the faster,” because he had no idea what it was called. At
least she’d stopped. “This way,” and let lines three and four guide him
to the wall.</p>
      <p>Sale kept talking to Vega. “We’ve around a hundred—”</p>
      <p>They were sucked into the tube and jerked sideways. Then up, then down,
then sideways again, and finally expelled into the shuttle bay, where
Ean bowled over three trainee linesmen.</p>
      <p>Ean heard the distinct snap of breaking bone. Two linesmen stayed down.
One of them was Arnold Peters.</p>
      <p>Lines three and four conferred. <emphasis>“Still too fast.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Sale picked herself up. Her voice shook as she continued. “Hundred
linesmen who need medical attention. One linesman is badly injured.
Blaster burns. Other problems are line-related. Except Burns, who took a
blaster in his suit.” She looked at the linesmen Ean had knocked over.
“At least two with broken bones from friendly fire.”</p>
      <p>They didn’t need the comms, for the lines were still wide open.</p>
      <p>Ean heard Jordan Rossi, somewhere in the background, “Lambert strikes
again.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir beckoned to Alex Joy and Hernandez, and pointed to the two
injured trainees. They came over.</p>
      <p>“Sorry.” Ean tried to help, but they didn’t want him to. He limped away.</p>
      <p>“We’ll send shuttles,” Vega said. “We don’t have room for them here.
Send them on to Confluence Station. Admiral Orsaya?”</p>
      <p>“I’ll need paramedics and guards.”</p>
      <p>“Done. Sale, once Lambert returns to a thinking, functioning linesman,
get him to move the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> closer to Confluence Station. And if
you’re listening, Lambert, there’s a difference between <emphasis>moving</emphasis> and
<emphasis>jumping</emphasis>. There’s also such a thing as ‘too close.’”</p>
      <p>“Hear that, ship?” Sale said, as she tucked her comms back into her
pocket. “You move. You don’t jump. And you don’t move too close.”</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“How close? Where?”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p><emphasis>“Closer to Confluence Station,”</emphasis> Ean said.</p>
      <p>The ship started to move.</p>
      <p>“What’s it doing now, Ean?”</p>
      <p>“Moving closer to Confluence Station.”</p>
      <p>“Shit.” Even though that was what Vega had suggested. “How does it know
when to stop?”</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Sale will tell you when to stop,”</emphasis> Ean told the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“Ship will tell.”</emphasis> A little smugness there. They could worry about that
later.</p>
      <p>Ean said to Sale, “I said you’d say when we’re close enough.”</p>
      <p>“Sh—. How am I supposed to tell it that? And what constitutes close
enough anyway?”</p>
      <p>Helmo said, “We’ll let you know with plenty of margin.”</p>
      <p>Sale took the comms out of her pocket again, looked at it, and put it
back. “Make sure it’s a big margin because Ean will have to stop the
ship. There’s no way it’s going to do it for me.”</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Yes we will.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Ean could have told her she’d insulted her ship, but the bay where
Radko’s shuttle was had finished recycling, and Radko was exiting.
Bhaksir and her team covered them.</p>
      <p>Radko spared a quick glance around the massive shuttle deck, then looked
him over.</p>
      <p>Ean relaxed for the first time since Radko had disappeared into the
shuttle bound for Lancia. This was how it was meant to be, with Radko
back, by his side.</p>
      <p>Although, there was something odd, based on the way she looked at him.
Then he realized his helmet was still in place from his trip through the
tubes. He grinned at her and kept watching her as he checked his
readings before he unclipped it. “Hi.” He couldn’t stop smiling, looking
at her, whole and healthy and alive.</p>
      <p>Sale looked the prisoners over. She scowled on seeing Bach. The lines
echoed something like betrayal. “You’re the reason I joined the Royal
Guard in the first place.”</p>
      <p>“Then Galenos poached you,” Bach said. “He always handpicked the best.”</p>
      <p>Van Heel watched them. Sale, to Radko, to Bach, and back.</p>
      <p>The best thing about the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> crew was they trusted
each other. If Radko said arrest Bach, then Sale and Bhaksir arrested
him. They didn’t argue about it.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Our crew, too.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>Ean ignored that.</p>
      <p>Sale turned to the other prisoner. “Captain Vilhjalmsson. Why am I not
surprised?”</p>
      <p>“I am. Surprised, I mean.” Vilhjalmsson had put up his hands as soon as
he saw Ean. “Especially since I’m helping Team Leader Radko.”</p>
      <p>Team leader. She had a team of her own to look after now. Chaudry, van
Heel, and Han. She wouldn’t be his bodyguard anymore. Ean pushed away
that niggling worry. “Helping. Last time you tried to kill her.”</p>
      <p>“Linesman, I know now the folly of doing that on a ship that you
control.” He looked around. “Interesting ship, by the way. It’s almost
worth getting arrested to see this.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry lowered Han carefully to the floor and looked around. Ean tried
to see it as the newcomers would see it. Soldiers from multiple worlds,
half of them still on the floor, many of them with oxygen. Kentish,
surrounded by people trying to keep her alive.</p>
      <p>“What happened?” Chaudry asked. “A war?”</p>
      <p>Something like that. Only it was their own people who’d started it.</p>
      <p>Two single-level linesmen came up with oxygen.</p>
      <p>“He’s been stunned,” Radko said. “Oxygen won’t help.”</p>
      <p>Chaudry checked Han over. “He’ll be fine.” He looked at Vilhjalmsson,
then over at Kentish. Ean heard the hum of uncertainty through line one,
and it wasn’t <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> line one.</p>
      <p>The lines were certainly listening, though.</p>
      <p>In fact, the whole of the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> fleet was considering Chaudry.</p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“Yes.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>
        <emphasis>“That one.”</emphasis>
      </p>
      <p>The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> cut over the top of them all, strong and loud and
brooking no dissent. <emphasis>“This one is mine.”</emphasis></p>
      <p><emphasis>“Yours,”</emphasis> agreed the other ships, and all 1,291 lines exuded
satisfaction. <emphasis>“We like him.”</emphasis></p>
      <p>Ean watched Chaudry make his way toward Kentish. “Radko. He’s a
linesman.”</p>
      <p>“I know. Level one?”</p>
      <p>He nodded.</p>
      <p>Radko looked at van Heel. “She’s a linesman, too.”</p>
      <p>“If you’re looking at me,” van Heel said. “I’m no linesman. I did
training, sure, but I failed certification.” She wasn’t bitter about it,
so for her it was a long time in her past.</p>
      <p>“I’ll tell you what I think she is. Turn around. I’ll tell Sale and
Bhaksir.”</p>
      <p>Ean turned around so he couldn’t see her. But after everything that had
happened, the lines were wide open. He couldn’t block them. “I can see.
You’re holding up eight fingers.”</p>
      <p>Radko clasped her fingers together under her chin and smiled. A proper
smile, that showed off the dimples that were so like Michelle’s. “It’s
good to be home, Ean.”</p>
      <p>Ean smiled, too, as he turned around. “It’s good to have you home.”</p>
      <p>“We’re glad you’re back, too,” Bhaksir said. “Couldn’t you have left a
user manual or something?”</p>
      <p>“It’s simple, Bhaksir. He’s a linesman. He thinks like a line. Remember
that, and you’ll be fine.” Then Radko sighed and looked at Bach. “Can I
borrow your comms, Ean? I need to call Admiral Galenos.”</p>
      <p>He handed it over. He hadn’t used it much recently. He was getting used
to working direct with the lines. “You can keep it, if you like.”</p>
      <p>“And if we need to track you?”</p>
      <p>“That didn’t seem to bother him last time he was without a comms,”
Vilhjalmsson said.</p>
      <p>“You’re fishing, Vilhjalmsson. Ean, can you make this secure, please? As
secure as it can be.”</p>
      <p>“With him here? He works for Gate Union.” They didn’t normally show
people what Ean could do.</p>
      <p>“Point taken. Let’s do this outside. Bhaksir, van Heel, you’ve got the
prisoners.”</p>
      <p>“I still fail to see why I’m a prisoner. After all, I was trying to
rescue you.”</p>
      <p>Radko stopped at the door. “Last time I rescued you. You repaid me by
stealing something from me.”</p>
      <p>Ean followed her out.</p>
      <p>“I missed you, Radko.”</p>
      <p>“I missed you, too, Ean.” He heard the truth of it through the lines.</p>
      <p>He smiled at her and kept on smiling as he sang the comms line secure.
“How private do you want this call?”</p>
      <p>“Very private,” and her face turned grimmer than he’d ever seen it
before.</p>
      <p>“I’d better tune the others out, then.” He sang the other ships out of
the loop, even the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, which was her home ship, and
she should have been reporting to Vega.</p>
      <p>“Do you want me to go back in there?”</p>
      <p>Radko shook her head. “Sir,” into the comms as Abram answered. “A
private word with you, if I may.” She stressed the “private.”</p>
      <p>“Give me a moment.”</p>
      <p>How much did Abram already know? He must know about the attempt to steal
the ship. All the admirals would by now. If they didn’t, they’d hear it
on the news vids soon enough, for Ean could hear the linesman from
Galactic News.</p>
      <p>“I’m telling you, Coop. That wasn’t an exercise, no matter what they put
it out as. You go after the full story.”</p>
      <p>“The success of your last call has gone to your head, Christian.”</p>
      <p>“Have I been wrong before? No. Go after the story, Coop.”</p>
      <p>“Line secure,” Abram said, and Ean dragged his attention away from the
Galactic News ship.</p>
      <p>“Thank you, sir.” Radko paused a moment. “I arrested Commodore Bach for
treason, sir.”</p>
      <p>Abram was off ship, so Ean couldn’t tell what he was thinking. “Where is
he?”</p>
      <p>“On the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> at the moment, sir. I plan to transport him to
Confluence Station.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll meet you there.”</p>
      <p>The first of Orsaya’s shuttles arrived as Radko and Ean went back
inside.</p>
      <p>Sale put Bhaksir in charge of the prisoners and Craik in charge of the
trainees. “Load the injured first—prisoners and linesmen. Then the rest
of the prisoners, and finally the rest of the linesmen.”</p>
      <p>They ran out of stretchers before they finished loading the prisoners.
Luckily, it wasn’t too far to Confluence Station, and the next two
shuttles were well supplied.</p>
      <p>“That’s it,” Sale said, as the last trainee was loaded. “Let’s go.”</p>
      <p>They took Bach and Vilhjalmsson on their own shuttle.</p>
      <p>As they waited for the air to cycle at Confluence Station, Bach said, “I
want His Imperial Majesty present when we talk to Galenos.”</p>
      <p>“No,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“He has the right, Ean,” Sale said.</p>
      <p>“I don’t care. Yu is not getting anywhere near Abram.”</p>
      <p>“Why not?” Radko asked.</p>
      <p>“Because Yu wants to kill Abram. To get his seat on the council.”</p>
      <p>Bach’s mouth turned down in a twisted smile, leaving Ean with the uneasy
feeling he was missing something. Off to one side, Vilhjalmsson’s eyes
widened. It was the only change in his expression.</p>
      <p>Maybe one day Ean could keep his face as expressionless. And remember
not to blab personal Lancian information to their enemies. Vilhjalmsson
didn’t need to know about Yu and Abram.</p>
      <p>“Fair point,” Sale said, and turned back to the other prisoners.</p>
      <p>“When Galenos arrives,” Bach said. “I will make the same request of him.
He will be obliged to grant it.”</p>
      <p>Sale looked at Radko. Radko took out her comms.</p>
      <p>Ean hastily sang it secure for her. This time, they couldn’t go outside
to hide what he was doing.</p>
      <p>“Sir, Commodore Bach requests the presence of His Imperial Majesty when
we question him.”</p>
      <p>Abram blew out his breath. “Transfer Bach to the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>
instead.”</p>
      <p>“Ean says the Emperor is trying to kill you.”</p>
      <p>“Probably.” Abram didn’t look surprised.</p>
      <p>He’d known about it.</p>
      <p>“We can’t let you go, sir.”</p>
      <p>“You have arrested the Emperor’s right-hand man, Radko. I can’t let you
face that alone.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll release him, then.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you, Radko, but His Majesty will catch up with me eventually.
Let’s not sacrifice your work. I will meet you on the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis>.” Abram clicked off.</p>
      <p>Ean became aware he’d taken Radko’s hand in his own. She gripped tight.</p>
      <p>He stayed close to Radko as they exited the shuttle. He wouldn’t have
changed what he’d done, but it had brought Abram into the very danger
Michelle had worked so hard to avoid. Yu would arrest Abram. He had an
excuse now because Ean had taken the ship without permission, and Sale’s
team, who should have demanded he come home immediately—with a weapon to
his head if necessary—had stayed to help. Abram, as head of Alien
Affairs, was responsible for the alien ships. He was responsible for
what happened on them. Was forcing the linesmen onto the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>
part of a plan to discredit Abram?</p>
      <p>Ean called Michelle. She’d tried so hard to prevent this meeting. She
didn’t answer. She was already talking on her comms to Abram.</p>
      <p>The call was nearly over. “I’m sorry, Misha. I have to do this.”</p>
      <p>“I know.”</p>
      <p>Ean couldn’t tell what she was thinking.</p>
      <p>“Take care. See you soon.”</p>
      <p>He shouldn’t be listening in, but Michelle was clearly hiding her
thoughts. From him? Or from Abram?</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Ean and Orsaya watched Captain Auburn march the last of the paramedics
down to the cells and tried not to think of the meeting ahead.</p>
      <p>He wiped his palms down the side of his trousers. Maybe he should sneak
in a blaster. He didn’t know how to fire one, but how hard could it be?
Point and grip.</p>
      <p>“Katida is bringing in her own warship to transport the prisoners to
Haladea III,” Orsaya said. “Given they were attempting to steal an
eleven ship, we deem it’s better to get them onto a world as fast as we
can.”</p>
      <p>“Especially since they were trying to steal the whole fleet.” It was
hard to concentrate on mundanities. “They knew they could take one ship,
and all of them would go.”</p>
      <p>Radko looked shattered, and Ean didn’t know what to do about it. Short
of begging Yu not to arrest Abram.</p>
      <p>They watched four members of Bhaksir’s team march a handcuffed Commodore
Bach onto the shuttle.</p>
      <p>“But then, it’s easy to see how they knew so much,” Orsaya’s voice was
harsh.</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t answer.</p>
      <p>Sale was giving last-minute instructions. “Bhaksir, full report to
Orsaya about what happened with the trainees.”</p>
      <p>Bhaksir nodded.</p>
      <p>“Craik, you’re responsible for the injured. And for getting the trainees
back to the <emphasis>Gruen</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>Not the Lancastrian trainees; they were prisoners.</p>
      <p>“Tell Gruen to keep them under lockdown, and if a word of this emerges
before the Department of Alien Affairs says it can, whoever leaks it is
out of the program.”</p>
      <p>Craik nodded.</p>
      <p>“The three spacers who came with me,” Radko said. “Can someone look
after them?”</p>
      <p>“Hana, Ru Li,” Bhaksir said. “You’re responsible for looking after
Radko’s team. Look after them well, or you’ll have Radko to answer to
later.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, ma’am.”</p>
      <p>Sale looked at their last prisoner. “Admiral Orsaya. Prisoner
Vilhjalmsson will likely escape if he’s imprisoned in a regular cell.”</p>
      <p>“I don’t see why I am a prisoner. I was working with Radko.”</p>
      <p>“You’re in enemy territory,” Sale said.</p>
      <p>“You and I will talk, I think,” Orsaya said. “The images the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> sent back of the inside of that station—the experiments on
the linesmen—looked most interesting.”</p>
      <p>Ean shuddered. “How do you know they were experimenting?” But then,
Orsaya had seen everything Sale and her team had seen, and one thing she
knew well was linesman.</p>
      <p>“I would think it obvious. Their reactions to line eleven. The
references to Dromalan truth serum, which, before it became the favored
drug of interrogators everywhere, was used to enhance line ability until
they realized its side effects. I wouldn’t mind Dr. Quinn’s notes.”</p>
      <p>Ean had to force himself not to move away. “You’re not experimenting on
any of the linesmen here.”</p>
      <p>“I wouldn’t dream of it, Ean. I know what you can do with the lines. But
it would be good to see what they did.”</p>
      <p>“You should ask Vilhjalmsson about Quinn’s work,” Radko said. “He stole
the report I was sent to collect.”</p>
      <p>Orsaya’s eyes gleamed.</p>
      <p>“I sent it on to Markan straight away,” Vilhjalmsson said. “I was
worried someone might steal it back.”</p>
      <p>“She would have, too,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“Pity.” Orsaya motioned to more of her staff to cover Vilhjalmsson. “Be
extra careful with this one. He’s a trained assassin and works directly
for Markan.”</p>
      <p>The little group of Sale, Bhaksir, and Craik broke apart.</p>
      <p>“Talk to you when we get back,” Sale said. “If I’m not in jail.”</p>
      <p>Ean and Radko followed them onto the shuttle. Bach was already seated,
restrained at the wrists and ankles. “You won’t be in jail.”</p>
      <p>“You think not. Disobeying a superior officer comes to mind.”</p>
      <p>“You didn’t disobey anyone.”</p>
      <p>Sale looked at him.</p>
      <p>“I should be in jail then. Not you,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“On a line ship. That’d be effective.”</p>
      <p>They both glanced at Bach and fell silent.</p>
      <p>“You’re not telling me anything I don’t know already,” Bach said.</p>
      <p>“That’s for sure,” Radko said grimly, but they were all silent for the
rest of the trip.</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_thirty_one_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Vega and a team of guards waited for them as they docked on the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>“His Imperial Majesty is in his apartments,” Vega said. “Admiral Galenos
will be here soon. Group Leader Sale, I expect a report on my desk by
the time this meeting is over.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, ma’am.” Sale left to record her report.</p>
      <p>“Speaking of reports.” Radko unzipped a pocket, took out three comms.
“One of these is a copy of the report Callista OneLane acquired.
Unfortunately, Vilhjalmsson got the original. He’s already sent it on to
Admiral Markan.”</p>
      <p>Vega nodded and handed the comms to one of the people with her. “Decode
it. I want that report when I come out of this meeting.”</p>
      <p>The meeting. What could Ean do to prevent Yu’s arresting Abram for
treason? He checked the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. <emphasis>“Is everything all
right?”</emphasis></p>
      <p><emphasis>“Waiting,”</emphasis> came the reply.</p>
      <p>Helmo was in the captain’s chair, sitting back, letting his instinct
tell him what was happening. Michelle was working at one of the screens
in her workroom. Yu and Sattur Dow were smiling over a drink in Yu’s
quarters.</p>
      <p>As Ean watched, Abram’s shuttle signaled that it had arrived. Helmo
stood up. “Give Galenos’s shuttle permission to land. Inform Her Royal
Highness he is here. Vanje, you’re in charge. I want you on the bridge,
staff on alert.”</p>
      <p>He left at a brisk walk.</p>
      <p>After Michelle received Vanje’s call, she moved over to a cupboard on
the wall. Ean could hear through the lines that the lock was coded only
to her, Abram, and Helmo. She took out a small, needlelike weapon and
slipped it into an inside pocket of her jacket.</p>
      <p>Had Michelle just armed herself?</p>
      <p>She whispered something that might have been a prayer, her emotion too
raw for Ean to read properly—or too raw and personal for him to want to
read—and started for the meeting.</p>
      <p>The atmosphere in the large meeting room was suffocating. Ean found it
hard to breathe. Ship lines were a dirge.</p>
      <p>Ean checked the other ships in the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> fleet. On Confluence
Station, armed soldiers in Balian uniform were loading prisoners onto a
shuttle. Orsaya’s captain, Auburn, and two teams of Yaolin soldiers
stood ready to assist if required.</p>
      <p>Katida and Orsaya were dining with Jordan Rossi and Stellan
Vilhjalmsson.</p>
      <p>Both admirals looked grim.</p>
      <p>Ean suppressed a shiver.</p>
      <p>Radko said, quietly, “Relax, Ean. Do what you do naturally. Things have
a way of working out.”</p>
      <p>They wouldn’t work out all the time. You only had to miss once, and Ean
didn’t even understand what the problem was yet. It should have been
simple. A Lancastrian traitor, trying to steal the ships. But it wasn’t
about that at all. It was about a ruler who was prepared to frame a
good, honest man to gain a seat of power.</p>
      <p>He breathed in deep. There was no word in Abram or Michelle’s vocabulary
for failure. Not in Radko’s, either. There were just setbacks to be
overcome. Abram was right when he’d told Radko that Yu would catch up
with him eventually. Keeping Abram away from Yu wasn’t the solution.
Getting Yu to change his mind was.</p>
      <p>Helmo arrived, followed quickly by Michelle, and finally Abram.</p>
      <p>Abram smiled at Michelle, nodded to Helmo and Ean’s group, then looked
at Bach, still cuffed at the wrists. “Commodore Bach.”</p>
      <p>“I request His Imperial Majesty be present at this meeting,” Bach said.</p>
      <p>Michelle nodded—once—though the refusal was pouring out of her. A hot
yellow denial through line one.</p>
      <p>“I shall request His Majesty’s presence,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>Ean watched Vega’s brisk march through the ship to the Emperor’s
quarters.</p>
      <p>Yu was still holding court with Sattur Dow. Guards in pairs stood at
attention around the room. Two behind Yu, two off to one side, another
two near the door. Tiana Chen and Ethan Saylor were among the silent
observers. Chen’s hands were balled into fists as she glowered at the
back of Dow’s head. Ean wished her glare were more lethal.</p>
      <p>Vega saluted, then stood to attention. “Commodore Bach requests your
presence in the large meeting room.”</p>
      <p>“That was quick.” Yu looked pleased as he stood up. He turned to Sattur
Dow. “Sattur, would you like to be present at this historic occasion.”</p>
      <p>“I don’t think Yu is expecting this,” Ean said. “But he is expecting
something.”</p>
      <p>Bach said, “You should refer to him as Emperor Yu, or His Imperial
Majesty.”</p>
      <p>In Emperor Yu’s quarters, Vega said, “It would be inappropriate to
invite a civilian to this meeting. This is a matter for the Crown
alone.”</p>
      <p>Yu towered over her. “You presume to tell me what to do?”</p>
      <p>Vega inclined her head and turned away. “The large meeting room, Your
Majesty.”</p>
      <p>Ean’s back itched until she was around the first turn in the corridor.
“He’s bringing Sattur Dow.”</p>
      <p>Abram blew out his breath but didn’t say anything.</p>
      <p>Ean didn’t want Sattur Dow in the same room as Radko. If Dow attempted
anything, he wasn’t sure what he’d do. He’d think of something.</p>
      <p>The Emperor swept in three minutes after Vega arrived. He’d changed his
clothing and was now wearing a traditional, wide-sleeved, ceremonial
jacket. He was accompanied by Sattur Dow and the full team of guards.</p>
      <p>Helmo made a face, and Ean got a strong sense through the lines that
this was unexpectedly fast.</p>
      <p>Yu smiled when he saw Abram, stopped smiling when he saw Bach under
restraint. “What is this?”</p>
      <p>Vega spoke before anyone else could. “Please be seated, Your Imperial
Majesty. Merchant Dow.” She indicated the seats around the table. “Team
Leader Radko has returned and is ready to make her report to Admiral
Galenos and me. Commodore Bach has requested your presence.”</p>
      <p>“Radko.” The Emperor rolled the word around his tongue. He looked
closely at Radko, then at Michelle and Abram, and settled into a seat.
“Cousin. So you are back. And just in time.” He smiled at Sattur Dow,
then waved a hand. “Report.”</p>
      <p>Radko looked to Abram, then to Vega, who nodded brusquely. “Go ahead,
Team Leader.”</p>
      <p>“My mission was to meet with a trader on Redmond and investigate the
sale of a report purportedly about line experiments.”</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow started. Ean watched him closely.</p>
      <p>“Our team managed to contact the seller, but we weren’t the only ones
after the report. Gate Union sent someone in as well. Stellan
Vilhjalmsson.”</p>
      <p>Abram made a face but didn’t interrupt.</p>
      <p>“Redmond soldiers attacked the shop just after we arrived.” She looked
to Vega and Abram. “Unfortunately, Vilhjalmsson got away with the
report.”</p>
      <p>“So you failed,” Yu said.</p>
      <p>Radko turned back to stare him in the eyes. “Of course we didn’t fail,
Your Imperial Majesty.” Cold and professional.</p>
      <p>Ean wanted to cheer.</p>
      <p>“We traced the report to a Redmond company, TwoPaths Engineering.
Specifically, to a TwoPaths site on the Lesser Gods world of Aeolus.
Right against the palace wall, actually.”</p>
      <p>Did Ean imagine it, or did the Emperor sit up straighter?</p>
      <p>“The Lesser Gods?” Vega asked.</p>
      <p>“Yes, ma’am. We discovered later that the experiments were a joint
venture between TwoPaths Engineering, and the militaries of Redmond and
the Worlds of the Lesser Gods.” Radko glanced at Bach. “We discovered
artifacts that could only have come from the alien line ships; could
only have come from one of the New Alliance worlds. From someone who had
access to the alien line ships.”</p>
      <p>“Enough,” Yu said. “We don’t need the details.”</p>
      <p>Ean moved to stand close at Radko’s back.</p>
      <p>“I sent Radko on the mission,” Vega said. “<emphasis>I</emphasis> need the report. And
there is the matter of the consequences. If you prefer not to be here,
by all means, there is no obligation to remain. Commodore Bach requested
that you be here.”</p>
      <p>Yu looked at Abram. Ean couldn’t see any reason for the look, especially
since it was Vega who’d spoken. Or for the look he shared with Bach
afterward.</p>
      <p>Yu waved irritably. “Proceed.”</p>
      <p>“We were captured attempting to retrieve the report and the artifacts,”
Radko said. “The site was a laboratory and a hospital. They appeared to
be experimenting on linesmen.”</p>
      <p>The linesmen Ean had heard on the station. No wonder they had seemed
crazy.</p>
      <p>“After our capture, the people in charge there believed the lab had been
compromised. They withdrew the linesmen from Aeolus and took them to the
fallback lab on the space station I was rescued from.”</p>
      <p>The Emperor stood to pace. Everyone seated rose, as was custom.</p>
      <p>It was better to be standing. More voice for the lines when Ean needed
it. He was starting to worry that Radko’s report was putting her in
danger. Would Emperor Yu leave her alive to testify against Bach?</p>
      <p>But then Yu would have to imprison them all. Including Michelle. He
wouldn’t do that. Would he?</p>
      <p>“We have heard enough.” Yu turned to Bach. “Free this man.”</p>
      <p>Vega said, “Commodore Bach is under arrest, Your Majesty. For treason
against Lancia.”</p>
      <p>Ean was surprised Yu didn’t order her immediate demise.</p>
      <p>The Emperor glanced at his guards and at Bach again.</p>
      <p>“If it pleases Your Imperial Majesty, I would prefer to have the issue
resolved.” Bach bowed low.</p>
      <p>Yu turned to Radko, who stared him down again. Ean readied himself to
sing, for the tension was a sudden crackling energy that tasted like
ozone on his tongue.</p>
      <p>Line eight was ready. It might not know what it had to do yet, but it
was ready. He could hear it, now he was listening properly to the lines.
He didn’t have to force it to work his way. It was ready to work its own
way.</p>
      <p>“Continue,” Yu said.</p>
      <p>Radko glanced at Bach. “I was about to be interrogated when the Factor’s
bodyguard, Jakob, came in with Commodore Bach.” She paused again, then
continued, flat and harsh and unlike her usual tone. “Jakob accused Bach
of having had him arrested. Bach countered by saying he had given Jakob
access to the ships, and that Jakob was the one who had mucked things
up. Then Jakob said Bach had promised that if they brought one ship
through, the whole fleet would come. But it hadn’t.”</p>
      <p>She tilted her chin and looked directly at Bach. “It was obvious to me
that Commodore Bach was working with Captain Jakob to steal the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> fleet. When the opportunity arose, I arrested him and
brought him home to face trial.”</p>
      <p>“It’s a grave accusation,” Abram said to Bach.</p>
      <p>“It is,” Bach agreed. “But I am loyal to Lancia.”</p>
      <p>Michelle rubbed her arms, as if she was cold. “Loyal. As in attempting
to steal a New Alliance fleet and hand it over to our enemies.”</p>
      <p>Ean remembered, suddenly, the earlier conversation between Yu and Sattur
Dow, with Dow saying, “She bought it,” and Yu’s reply. “I knew exactly
how my daughter would react, Sattur. She has been protecting this
linesman all along. Of course she would send him to what she perceives
as safety.”</p>
      <p>Maybe Bach was telling the truth.</p>
      <p>“This isn’t about killing Abram to get onto the council at all, is it,”
Ean said. Emperor Yu had set the whole thing up. “That was to distract
us, and keep Abram away from Michelle, because together they might
suspect something. Yu tricked us into going out to the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>
today so <emphasis>Lancia</emphasis> could steal the ships. This isn’t Bach’s plan, it’s
Yu’s.”</p>
      <p>For a moment, the silence was absolute, except for the whispering of
life support.</p>
      <p>To Ean, that sound was gradually overcome by a stronger susurrus of
betrayal. It came with a strong, sweet scent. Who would believe betrayal
could smell so beautiful?</p>
      <p>Yu’s smile had the same dimples his daughter had.</p>
      <p>“Why?” Michelle’s voice broke on the words. “You have destroyed Lancia’s
future.”</p>
      <p>“Future, Daughter? When we are treated like second-rate citizens here?
Everything we want, everything we do, has to go through a committee and
be voted on. Where is the power Lancia once had? Given away. By you and
Galenos. We have no wish to be part of a government in which we are
powerless.”</p>
      <p>“Whether we want to or not, we have to be.” They could have been the
only two in the room. “We had two choices. Give in to Gate Union and
become a second-rate world, for Gate Union would never let us remain a
power. Or join up with the New Alliance and use the one lucky break we
had—Ean and the alien fleet—to give us a chance at starting afresh.”</p>
      <p>“We had a third choice.”</p>
      <p>“Go it alone?” Michelle said. “We can’t even get jumps. Most of Lancia’s
income is derived from New Alliance worlds. Our people would starve;
we’d have nothing. How long will Lancia last as a power when we’re stuck
in our own solar system?”</p>
      <p>“Your imagination has become limited of late, Daughter. Are they the
only options you can think of? You are right. Lancia doesn’t care about
the New Alliance. The New Alliance doesn’t care about us, either. We
have been left powerless and helpless. Because you will not think past
the obvious.</p>
      <p>“I do not plan on being part of a government I have no control over,” Yu
said.</p>
      <p>“So you planned to steal a fleet of ships and start out alone.”</p>
      <p>Yu smiled. “Hardly alone.”</p>
      <p>A fleet of alien ships didn’t make it any less alone.</p>
      <p>Michelle opened her mouth to speak. Closed it again.</p>
      <p>“Warships will not keep Lancastrians fed,” Abram said. “Lancia is an old
world and has never been particularly fertile. We import half our food
and 90 percent of our technology. We can use the alien ships to bomb
worlds and ships as much as we want, but other worlds will stop
supplying us with goods long before it is effective. That’s assuming we
had full crews for the ships and could replenish supplies. Which is also
unlikely.”</p>
      <p>Yu spun around to Abram. “I plan for everything, Galenos. Even supplies.
Even your opposition.”</p>
      <p>Michelle put a hand to her head in sudden understanding. “You teamed up
with the Worlds of the Lesser Gods.”</p>
      <p>“Of course I did.”</p>
      <p>“And when Gate Union stops the Worlds of the Lesser Gods from jumping?”</p>
      <p>“Ah, Daughter. This is where you lack imagination, and I can see the
future. A grand future for Lancia. Can Gate Union stop Redmond jumping?”
Yu looked at Abram again. “Can they?”</p>
      <p>“It would be more difficult,” Abram admitted. “Redmond controls the line
factories.”</p>
      <p>“Precisely.”</p>
      <p>Michelle went white. “You conspired with Redmond, as well as the Worlds
of the Lesser Gods?”</p>
      <p>“Of course.”</p>
      <p>“Father, Redmond will use you to get the ships, and once they have them,
they will spit you out.”</p>
      <p>“Daughter, you go too far.”</p>
      <p>“You have already gone too far. Once people know you—we—were behind this
crazy plan to steal the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>, and its fleet, Lancia will be
expelled from the New Alliance. You have destroyed us, no matter what we
do now.”</p>
      <p>“Have I not just told you we do not wish to be part of the New
Alliance?”</p>
      <p>The emotion creeping through the lines from the humans in the room was a
fine brown mist that twisted Ean’s gut and made him want to be sick. It
didn’t show on anyone’s face, except Michelle’s. She was white, her lips
parted as if she wanted to speak but couldn’t say the words.</p>
      <p>“You don’t have the alien ships,” Abram said. “I presume that was what
you brought to the coalition with Redmond and the Worlds of the Lesser
Gods. Will they honor an agreement if you don’t have the ships? Of
course not, because you are no use to them.”</p>
      <p>“We do not have the ships, Galenos, because of your interference. Had
you not interfered, those ships would be in Redmond territories right
now.”</p>
      <p>Abram smiled faintly. Ean didn’t have to listen to the lines to know
what he was thinking. Abram had nothing to do with it.</p>
      <p>“You may laugh now, but Lancia has decided. This is the future. Choose
to be part of it, or be executed for treason.” Yu shook his sleeve, and
suddenly there was a blaster in his hand.</p>
      <p>Ean was the only one who jumped. The only one who reacted, even. Had the
others known Yu had a weapon?</p>
      <p>Michelle put her hand to the inside of her jacket.</p>
      <p>“Execute me,” Abram said. “But first, let’s talk about the fundamental
flaw in your plan.”</p>
      <p>Yu raised his blaster.</p>
      <p>“Hold.” The needle weapon was in Michelle’s hand. So fast Ean hadn’t
seen her pull it out. “Touch Abram, Father, and you are a dead man.”</p>
      <p>There wasn’t any anger in her, only a steely determination very like her
father’s.</p>
      <p>“The fundamental flaw, Galenos,” Yu said. “The fact that Lancia doesn’t
control the line ships?”</p>
      <p>“Exactly,” Abram said.</p>
      <p>“No. My daughter does, through her level-twelve linesman.”</p>
      <p>After that, things happened so fast it was a blur, but at the same time,
it was like forever in the void, and Ean could recall each event
clearly.</p>
      <p>Yu swung his weapon around to Ean.</p>
      <p>Radko grabbed her blaster.</p>
      <p>Yu’s arm kept swinging. Past Ean. To Michelle. “I can fix that.”</p>
      <p>His finger tightened.</p>
      <p><emphasis>“No!”</emphasis> Ean and line eight were swamped by a massive blast of denial.
Ean wasn’t sure he was the one who’d invoked line eight at all, but Yu
went down.</p>
      <p>Burned almost beyond recognition by Abram’s blaster.</p>
      <p>Stunned into immobility by Radko’s blaster.</p>
      <p>Thrown back against the wall by line eight.</p>
      <p>Yu’s guards fired on Abram and Radko, but line eight sang true. The
blaster fire bounced back. Half of them went down under their own fire.</p>
      <p>By then, Vega and Helmo had their blasters out.</p>
      <p>“Nobody move,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>Commodore Bach stopped Yu’s guards with a gesture. “Weapons down.”</p>
      <p>Michelle attempted to pick something off her jacket. It might have been
burned flesh. Her hand shook so much, she couldn’t pick it off.</p>
      <p>“That’s the second time you’ve shot someone so close I’ve got body parts
over me.” At least, Ean thought that was what she said, for her voice
was shaking as much as her hands.</p>
      <p>Ean was shaking, too.</p>
      <p>Abram knelt in front of Michelle and silently proffered his weapon.</p>
      <p>“Don’t.” It ended up a sob. She put her hands on his shoulders, gripping
so tightly her fingers were bloodless. A tear splashed down onto Abram’s
head, then another, and another.</p>
      <p>Abram tried to move Michelle’s hands off his shoulders. She wouldn’t let
go, so he put his arms round her waist instead. She fell into his
embrace, and they both ended up kneeling on the floor.</p>
      <p>Radko moved over to Vega and held out her own blaster.</p>
      <p>Vega didn’t take it. “You’d be more useful helping me collect their
weapons.” She nodded at Yu’s guards.</p>
      <p>“But, ma’am, I—”</p>
      <p>“Stunned an already-dead body from the looks of it. Not to mention, you
were doing your job.” Vega’s voice was steady, but her hands weren’t.</p>
      <p>Radko silently helped Vega collect the blasters. Ean sang line eight to
keep everyone safe, could see the field as a hazy, waist-high wave
surrounding them.</p>
      <p>One soldier surreptitiously lifted her weapon.</p>
      <p>Line eight—and Ean—blasted her over to the other side of the room.</p>
      <p>“Anyone else goes for a weapon, and I fire,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>Abram put his own blaster onto the floor and put his hands to Michelle’s
waist, lifting her as he stood. He wrapped his arms round her. She
buried her face in his chest.</p>
      <p>It was probably the first time anyone watching had seen her cry. Ean
looked away, at Bach, who was watching him.</p>
      <p>“It never was for the seat on the council, was it?”</p>
      <p>“No. That was to keep Galenos away from the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. So
he wouldn’t work out what was happening.”</p>
      <p>“Was Yu ever going to kill Abram?”</p>
      <p>“No. Galenos has always proven loyal to Lancia. He would have come
around. It was your contract we wanted. Her Royal Highness held that.”</p>
      <p>“Were you part of it?” Vega asked. “This assassination?”</p>
      <p>“Yes.” Flat and bald.</p>
      <p>“But why?” Ean asked. “What’s Michelle ever done to you?”</p>
      <p>“Nothing. In fact, I admire her. But I support my Emperor. I support
Lancia. It was obvious to many people that while she held your contract,
we would never have control of the alien ships, for Her Royal Highness
was committed to the New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>Ean had seen his contract. He’d signed it. With Michelle, and Rigel, and
Leo Rickenback. “If Michelle dies, my contract goes to Admiral Katida,
of Balian.”</p>
      <p>“If the contract owner dies, the contract goes back to the cartel
house,” Bach said.</p>
      <p>That was a standard contract, not Ean’s. Michelle, Rigel, and
Rickenback’s lawyers had spent days on it. But Ean didn’t argue. It
didn’t matter anyway. If Yu had killed Michelle, he would have ensured
that Yu never got a single alien line ship.</p>
      <p>“You’re a fool.” Vega came over and cut the restraints around Bach’s
hands. “But I imagine you’re not the biggest fool, for a commodore
doesn’t come up with plans like this. I suspect Admiralty House at
Baoshan may be a little empty for a while. Galenos will not take kindly
to a plan to murder Michelle.”</p>
      <p>“You can’t let him go,” Ean said. “What if he decides to kill Abram, for
killing Yu?”</p>
      <p>“That’s Emperor Yu,” Bach said.</p>
      <p>“He’s dead. He’s not Emperor anymore.” Michelle was, and that was too
strange to think of now.</p>
      <p>Vega said, “Emperor Yu isn’t the first of his family to be assassinated
by the incoming Emperor. He killed his own father, and his father killed
his father before him. If Bach is loyal to the Crown, he will now be
loyal to the Empress.”</p>
      <p>But Yu hadn’t been assassinated by his daughter. Abram had killed him to
save Michelle. It might have been better if Radko had done it. At least
she was part of Yu’s family.</p>
      <p>Ean was glad she hadn’t, all the same.</p>
      <p>“What about your people?” Vega asked Bach.</p>
      <p>“They serve the Crown of Lancia. They will support the new Empress.”</p>
      <p>Technically, they’d been negligent because their job was to save the
Emperor.</p>
      <p>Vega looked at Yu’s guard. “Does anyone wish to complain, argue, or
support anyone other than the Empress Michelle?”</p>
      <p>There was only one answer to that, and it wasn’t “yes.”</p>
      <p>“Good.” She turned to Sattur Dow. “And you?”</p>
      <p>At least he’d stopped smiling. “I support the ruler of Lancia.”</p>
      <p>Of course he did. But he would find the new ruler harder to influence
than he had the old ruler.</p>
      <p>Ean realized something else. “Radko doesn’t have to marry you now.”
Something too strong to be relief flooded his mind and the lines.</p>
      <p>“I am still prepared to take her,” Dow said. “Despite the gross
negligence she showed today.”</p>
      <p>He stepped back as Ean stepped toward him.</p>
      <p>“I have a lot to offer a wife.”</p>
      <p>Radko stepped between them. “I am sure we would both prefer to choose
our own partners.”</p>
      <p>Sattur Dow wouldn’t.</p>
      <p>Abram said, “I’m sorry, Misha. I failed you by staying away you when you
needed me most.”</p>
      <p>Michelle pulled away, and looked at him. She shook her head.</p>
      <p>“I will never do that again.” Abram kissed her.</p>
      <p>A strong hum of satisfaction exuded from the ship. From .</p>
      <p>Ean glanced at Helmo. You couldn’t see it from his face. It was as
expressionless as Abram’s was normally.</p>
      <p>“Do you mind?” Radko asked quietly from beside Ean.</p>
      <p>He looked at her.</p>
      <p>“Michelle. And Abram.”</p>
      <p>Why would he?</p>
      <p>She held his gaze. He held his breath. He was drowning, he was… a choir
in the void. Ean blinked, and shook his head.</p>
      <p>She smiled. “Good.”</p>
      <p>Ean smiled back. “You know, Radko. I’m really, really, really glad
you’re back.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_thirty_two_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Vega and Helmo sent Bach’s guards to the cells. “We’re locking you down
because we want to control news of this ourselves,” Vega said. “Lambert,
make sure they can’t get a signal out.”</p>
      <p>“It’s a bit late for that,” Ean said. “The engineer on the Galactic News
ship already knows.”</p>
      <p>Indeed, he was already on at the producer. “Coop. Coop. Something has
happened to Emperor Yu. I don’t know what, but it’s big news. Big, big
news.”</p>
      <p>“What, bigger than someone’s stealing spaceships? And no, Christian, I’m
not calling up the Emperor of Lancia. Five minutes ago, you wanted me to
report on stolen spaceships. Which weren’t stolen at all, incidentally.
At least, not according to the Department of Alien Affairs.”</p>
      <p>“You know Spacer Grieve always misdirects. If he didn’t say outright
someone hadn’t stolen that ship, then someone probably did. But Coop,
what about Emperor Yu?”</p>
      <p>Ean realized suddenly. “That engineer on the Galactic News. I assumed he
was a six because he’s an engineer. He’s not. He’s a one.” He was
picking up emotions from the lines in much the way Tinatin did, except
his pickup was a lot more accurate. Tinatin was probably already giving
Kari Wang her own garbled version.</p>
      <p>“Well then,” Radko said. “It goes to show, you shouldn’t assume. Ever.
Especially for someone who relies so much on listening.”</p>
      <p>It was good to have Radko back.</p>
      <p>“Lambert,” Vega said. “When you’ve quite finished, can we have lockdown
on the soldiers, and on Sattur Dow.”</p>
      <p>It would be a pleasure. “We should stop comms from everyone in Yu’s
party.”</p>
      <p>“Do it.”</p>
      <p>Ean sang instructions to the ship. No communications in or out for any
visitors. Only comms for Michelle and Abram, Vega, and Captain Helmo and
his regular crew.</p>
      <p>Bach tried his comms. “Impressive. I see why Lambert was so important.
And we can train linesmen to do this?”</p>
      <p>“Provided you get the right combination of lines,” Vega said.</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>Neither Michelle nor Abram was the sort to spend much time whispering
romantically to each other.</p>
      <p>“Lancia knew as well as you did that the old Alliance was dead,” Bach
said, when the room had been cleared, and they were settled with tea.
Michelle, Abram, Vega, Helmo, Bach, Ean, and Radko. Radko had been going
to stand against the wall in her usual guard position. Ean was glad when
Michelle motioned for her to sit down with them.</p>
      <p>“I need all the support I can get today.”</p>
      <p>So Radko had left the wall and come to sit beside Ean.</p>
      <p>“We could see we were better off in the fledgling New Alliance than we
were as a secondary world in Gate Union,” Bach told Abram and Michelle.
“Until you started to send back reports of what the ships could do. What
the linesmen could do—particularly a level twelve—and we realized how
much power we had at our fingertips.”</p>
      <p>He wasn’t talking about himself here when he said “we.” He meant the
Lancastrian admiralty, and the palace. Had he even agreed with what they
were doing? They’d never know.</p>
      <p>“Emperor Yu sounded out his daughter; the admirals sounded out Galenos.
Unfortunately, both of you were determined to work with the New
Alliance. So His Imperial Majesty looked elsewhere. Redmond and Gate
Union were having problems. After Redmond tried to implicate Gate Union
in the destruction of the <emphasis>Kari Wang</emphasis>, it was obvious to everyone that
their alliance was fracturing. And Sattur Dow knew of a way we could
approach Redmond.”</p>
      <p>Abram raised an eyebrow.</p>
      <p>“Renaud Han,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>“Yes.” Bach gave a twisted smile. “He was smuggling for Redmond in
return for silence about his son.” Renaud Han, paying silence money for
a secret that wasn’t a secret at all. “I don’t know how you found out
about it.”</p>
      <p>Vega didn’t say it was coincidence.</p>
      <p>“We knew Tiana Chen was blackmailing him, didn’t know Redmond was until
Chen started working with Sattur Dow. When Dow wanted something sent to
Redmond, she organized it for him through Renaud’s smuggling links.”</p>
      <p>Two people couldn’t deserve each other more.</p>
      <p>“What were they blackmailing Renaud over?” Abram asked.</p>
      <p>“The fact that Han is not his son,” Radko said.</p>
      <p>Ean looked at her. She hadn’t been there when he and Vega had
interviewed Lord Renaud.</p>
      <p>“He’s supposed to be a linesman.” Radko smiled at Ean. “He’s
right-handed.”</p>
      <p>“His son joined the fleet,” Vega told Abram. “Except his DNA didn’t
match the Han family’s. So Lord Renaud paid someone on Redmond to fix
the records, opening himself to blackmail from Redmond, too. They got
him to smuggle medical supplies.”</p>
      <p>Abram blew his breath out, didn’t say anything.</p>
      <p>“Lord Renaud’s life is his own to destroy,” Bach said. “Our concern was
contact with people in Redmond.”</p>
      <p>“Let me get this straight,” Abram said. “You used the contacts Renaud
made while smuggling to approach interested parties in Redmond. To offer
them the alien ships in return for being part of a new alliance of
Redmond, Lancia, and the Worlds of the Lesser Gods. How did the Lesser
Gods come into it?”</p>
      <p>“They’ve been working with Redmond for years, building ships based on
alien technology. And experimenting on the linesmen even longer. They
know more about linesmen than the New Alliance and Gate Union combined.”</p>
      <p>Ean shuddered, remembering the feel of the lines—the wrongness of the
linesmen—on the station orbiting Aeolus.</p>
      <p>Red-mint-cinnamon amusement wafted from the lines. “I’d pitch our line
knowledge against anyone’s,” Michelle said.</p>
      <p>“Perhaps,” Bach said doubtfully. “Regardless, all three powers could see
advantages. Redmond had line factories. The Lesser Gods the linesmen.
Lancia brought the ships, and the level-twelve linesman although he was
to remain under our control.”</p>
      <p>Michelle made a sound that might have been a laugh. “Our level-twelve
linesman is a thinking, rational human being.” Ean was glad Vega didn’t
comment. “How did you think you would control him?”</p>
      <p>Bach’s gaze flicked toward Radko. “He has shown loyalty to the woman who
is minding him.”</p>
      <p>“By marrying her off to Sattur Dow,” Ean said. “What was that supposed
to do?”</p>
      <p>“Sattur Dow would expect access to his wife.”</p>
      <p>“That was never going to happen,” Abram said.</p>
      <p>Instead, it had triggered the start of events that had ruined Yu’s
plans. Ean couldn’t understand how they’d even expected it to for a
moment. Didn’t Yu know that Radko couldn’t give them access? Although
Vega had sent Radko away because they were worried she’d have to.</p>
      <p>Vega said, “With Lancia giving away the ships, it would be hard to see
us as anything but a lesser contributor to any union of worlds.”</p>
      <p>“Giving away, Vega? No, I don’t think so. We’d still have the linesman.”</p>
      <p>Michelle’s smile was full dimple. “You know, Ean, sometimes I think we
should hand you over to our enemies and let them find out the hard way
they have no control.”</p>
      <p>Everyone except Ean and Bach laughed.</p>
      <p>“I fail to understand,” Bach said.</p>
      <p>“You don’t have to understand, Bach.” Radko’s dimples were as deep as
Michelle’s. “That’s what I’m here for. To prevent people like you ever
understanding.”</p>
      <p>The others laughed again.</p>
      <p>“Who was involved in this grand plan?” Abram asked.</p>
      <p>Bach shrugged.</p>
      <p>Michelle and Abram shared a glance. A glance that was a whole
conversation in a single look. Like they used to, back when Ean had
first joined the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>.</p>
      <p>Ean blinked and had to look away. This was how it had been. This was how
it would be again.</p>
      <p>“Commodore Bach,” Michelle said. “As the Empress of Lancia, I order you
to tell me who was involved. Fleet Admiral Galenos, as the head of the
Lancian fleet, orders you to tell us who was involved.”</p>
      <p>Head of the Lancian fleet. Ean wasn’t the only one who had to hold in a
smile, and the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>’s lines made a choir to match.
Lancia couldn’t make trouble anymore. Not with Abram in charge. Even
Bach looked pleased, and Ean could tell from the lines that he truly
was.</p>
      <p>Bach half bowed from his seat. “Everyone at Admiralty house was
involved. Emperor Yu, of course. Everyone except you and Admiral
Galenos.” He stopped. “Sorry. Fleet Admiral Galenos.”</p>
      <p>Michelle nodded.</p>
      <p>“His Majesty believed Galenos would come around eventually. He has
always had the interests of Lancia at heart.” He smiled faintly as he
glanced toward Abram. “He might have underestimated Galenos’s feelings
for you. None of us expected it to come down to Emperor Yu or Crown
Princess Michelle.”</p>
      <p>Everyone on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> would have chosen the way Abram
had.</p>
      <p>Helmo must have been thinking the same thing, for he raised his
eyebrows. Ean wasn’t the only person who shrugged back. As Radko would
say, was the sky on Lancia purple?</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>After that, Vega escorted Bach down to his room and locked him in, while
everyone else decamped to Abram and Michelle’s workroom.</p>
      <p>Helmo went via the bridge. “Give me ten minutes to talk to Vanje. I have
the ship on alert.”</p>
      <p>Radko held Ean back. “Give them five minutes to themselves.”</p>
      <p>He was glad to have five minutes of his own, just him and Radko. “Thank
you for saving my life. Again.”</p>
      <p>Radko half laughed. “He wasn’t trying to kill you, Ean. I should have
seen that.”</p>
      <p>“You would have protected Michelle anyway.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, I would, but I wouldn’t have been fast enough.”</p>
      <p>Ean thought she would have been.</p>
      <p>They started walking slowly.</p>
      <p>“Was it bad? The job?”</p>
      <p>“It was different. I made some mistakes. There were times I could have
used a linesman. Especially a level twelve.”</p>
      <p>“If you’d taken me with you, I could have helped.”</p>
      <p>“Wasn’t that the whole point? To keep us apart? And without you here, we
would have lost the station, <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> fleet, and Michelle. Nor would
you have taken the <emphasis>Eleven</emphasis> to war.”</p>
      <p>Maybe so, but next time they’d work something out, so Radko didn’t have
to go away. But then, there wouldn’t be a next time, for the dual
enemies of Sattur Dow and Emperor Yu didn’t exist anymore.</p>
      <p>“Now that you’re not engaged,” Ean said, “what are you…” He stopped.</p>
      <p>Radko smiled. He heard it through the lines. “That depends, Ean.”</p>
      <p>“On what?”</p>
      <p>“Lots of things.”</p>
      <p>What did that mean? He looked at her.</p>
      <p>Her smile was affectionate. “Let’s see what happens, Ean?”</p>
      <p>He wanted to slip his arm through hers. Did he dare? Not quite. Not yet.</p>
      <p>They walked in silence for a while.</p>
      <p>Even Vega delayed coming back, stopping at her own office to frown down
at the decoded report on the desk, then pick it up and start flicking
through the screens.</p>
      <p>Ean broke the silence, eventually. “We have a problem with the
<emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.”</p>
      <p>“What sort of problem?”</p>
      <p>“It’s choosing its own crew.”</p>
      <p>“I thought you wanted crew for it.”</p>
      <p>“Yes, but it’s chosen its own Ship.”</p>
      <p>“Captain, you mean? Who?”</p>
      <p>“Sale.”</p>
      <p>“Hmm,” Radko said. “It’s not going to happen, Ean. She’ll be good, but
no one will ever let her take it. She’s nowhere near qualified yet.”</p>
      <p>“You don’t have to be captain to be ‘Ship’ for the lines. On Confluence
Station, Ship is not the station manager, he’s a guy called Ryley, who’s
part of engineering.”</p>
      <p>“Have you told Abram about this?” Radko asked.</p>
      <p>“Sort of. But Abram never followed up on it. And he has been busy with
other problems.”</p>
      <p>“Then he knows, Ean. I wouldn’t worry.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>“Damage control,” Abram said, when they were all back in the workroom.
“If Michelle doesn’t go back to Lancia soon, one of her younger siblings
will take over. But if we don’t stay here with the council, we’ll lose
credibility.”</p>
      <p>“If we haven’t lost it already,” Michelle said. “The lines know how much
support we lost with my father and the Factor arriving.”</p>
      <p>“You might get some back now he’s dead,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>He looked at Michelle, who had loved her father despite all he did. He
couldn’t tell her he was sorry, because he wasn’t, so he didn’t say
anything. He’d talk to Katida and Orsaya himself, and maybe Shimson and
Trask. Somehow, he’d convince them things would be better now.</p>
      <p>“Whom do we tell first?” Michelle asked. “The council or Lancia?”</p>
      <p>“Tell them at the same time,” Abram said. “Warn the council we will be
making an announcement, then jump the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis> to Lancia,
so that we get communication between sectors, and make the announcement
from the palace at Baoshan. Walk in as you mean to continue, Misha. I’ll
walk into Admiralty House and do the same.”</p>
      <p>“Both of you with bodyguards,” Vega said. “I will supply them.”</p>
      <p>“And the council?” Helmo asked.</p>
      <p>“We come back for the sessions and spend part of our time here, part
there. Until Michelle can sort out a government loyal to her.”</p>
      <p>“That’s a lot of jumps.” The terror that Ean associated with Helmo and
jumping cold started to seep into the lines.</p>
      <p>“We order a lot of shellfish,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>“They’ll pick that up by the third jump,” Helmo said. “If not earlier.”</p>
      <p>Ean had to convince the captains to jump cold. Or they had to come up
with a way to stop Gate Union’s blocking New Alliance jumps. Both needed
a miracle. Could they convince Vilhjalmsson to get the jumps for them?
After all, he needed to get home.</p>
      <p>“Do we trust Markan?” he asked. Admiral Markan was in charge of Gate
Union military. He was also Vilhjalmsson’s boss, and Markan valued
Vilhjalmsson, for he had rescued him before.</p>
      <p>Michelle choked on her sip of tea.</p>
      <p>“No,” Vega said.</p>
      <p>“Vilhjalmsson was investigating the same thing Radko was. He must know
Redmond was about to defect. Maybe you could exchange some of the
information Radko brought back in return for jumps. About Redmond. About
their experimenting on the lines.”</p>
      <p>Gate Union had more to lose from Redmond’s defection than the New
Alliance did. Especially if House of Sandhurst proved to be as deeply
involved as they looked to be, for Markan had supported Iwo Hurst’s
failed bid to become Grand Master. If Hurst proved to be knowingly
involved in the experimentation on linesmen—and how could he not be—then
Markan stood to lose the support of the line cartels if he didn’t do
something about it.</p>
      <p>Radko shook her head. “Markan already knows. Vilhjalmsson got the
original report from OneLane’s.”</p>
      <p>“Ha.” Vega brought out the comms she’d been looking at earlier. “The
problem is, if he bases his information on this report and tries to
replicate it, all he’ll do is destroy a few extra linesmen.” She tapped
the report. “Quinn and his friends think they’ve found a way to make
linesmen out of nonlinesmen. But they haven’t.”</p>
      <p>She couldn’t possibly have read the whole report already.</p>
      <p>“They find someone with line potential, feed them full of drugs, then
test them. All the way up to level ten.”</p>
      <p>Michelle understood before anyone else did. “Single-level linesmen. It’s
probably the first time they’ve ever been tested for every level.”</p>
      <p>“They’ve been testing fully for six months now. I’m guessing Lancia
suggested that.” Vega tapped the comms. “There’s a list in here of
people who might be suitable for the treatment. Fergus Burns, Mael St
Mael. Nadia Kentish.”</p>
      <p>Failed linesmen.</p>
      <p>“They think it’s a simple matter of finding the right combination of
drugs, and they’ll get themselves another twelve.”</p>
      <p>The lines didn’t work like that. “Didn’t Bach or Yu tell them?”
According to Katida, single lines were a badly kept secret.</p>
      <p>“Maybe not,” Abram said. “I suspect they kept line-related information
close to their chest.”</p>
      <p>Michelle sighed. “It would have been Lancia’s only bargaining tool.
Lines and the linesmen.”</p>
      <p>“However,” Abram said, “we may have enough to bargain with Markan.
Especially if we do it with the Grand Master of the line cartels
present. We can’t keep line training and single lines secret forever.”</p>
      <p>“Vilhjalmsson knows Bach was arrested,” Radko said. “If he goes free,
he’ll take that back to Markan.”</p>
      <p>Abram tapped eleven-time on the console. “We hand Vilhjalmsson back so
he can tell them how Redmond planned to defect from Gate Union. Give
Markan information about how line testing is flawed.” He frowned. “It’s
enough to get us jumps to Lancia, but it has to benefit the whole of the
New Alliance. Otherwise, we’re no better than Yu himself, and they’ll
still look on us as traitors.”</p>
      <p>He looked at Michelle. There was a blue snap through the lines. From one
of them? Or both?</p>
      <p>“Ask for a temporary truce,” Michelle said. “Three months. They give us
unrestricted line travel. Jumps when we ask for them. We provide all we
can about Lancia’s plans with Redmond and the Worlds of the Lesser
Gods.” Her dimple showed. “We’ll put Bach in charge of that.”</p>
      <p>Gate Union needed time to regroup. After all, Redmond owned the line
factories. And Markan had elevated House of Sandhurst over the other
houses. Their participation in line experiments wouldn’t go down well.</p>
      <p>“And line twelve?” Vega asked.</p>
      <p>“That’s not part of the deal. They don’t get information about that.
Just about the singles.”</p>
      <p>“We do need to warn some people,” Michelle said. “Annette Jade, for one,
as well as Admiral Katida. Balian and Aratoga have both supported us
longer than they should have.”</p>
      <p>They wouldn’t be able to hide it from Orsaya, either.</p>
      <p>“I’ll talk to Vilhjalmsson and Katida,” Abram suggested. “While you talk
to Governor Jade.”</p>
      <p>Michelle nodded, and they shared a quick, smiling glance before Abram
inclined his head toward Ean. “Linesman, you might ask Admiral Katida to
linger over dinner.”</p>
    </section>
    <section id="_chapter_thirty_three_ean_lambert">
      <title>
        <p>CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE: EAN LAMBERT</p>
      </title>
      <p>Stellan Vilhjalmsson looked as if he should still have been in a
hospital.</p>
      <p>“Young Chaudry patched me up well enough,” he said, in answer to Abram’s
query. “The medical staff at the station here looked at me as well and
pumped me full of drugs. Unfortunately, I need my wits about me, so I
can’t take too many painkillers. But I will stand, if that’s okay?”</p>
      <p>Abram nodded, but he didn’t sit down either. Nor did Orsaya or Katida.
Radko took her normal position over near the wall. Ean perched on the
edge of the table.</p>
      <p>“Markan must have few people he can trust if he sent you on this
mission,” Abram said.</p>
      <p>“Not really. I went to investigate a stolen report about line
experiments. How important could it be? I was bored sitting around
headquarters.”</p>
      <p>It even sounded reasonable, but the lines heard evasion.</p>
      <p>“He’s not telling the whole truth,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson looked at him, then at Abram. “Do we have to have the human
lie detector in on this meeting?”</p>
      <p>Radko dropped her stance to stand straight. Vilhjalmsson flinched. Ean
stood up, too.</p>
      <p>“Easy,” Abram said to them both. He smiled at Vilhjalmsson. “In this
room or out there, won’t make any difference. He’ll still know.”</p>
      <p>“I confess,” Vilhjalmsson said. “I find him rather alarming.”</p>
      <p>That was the truth.</p>
      <p>“So Markan is worried,” Abram said.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson glanced at Ean as he considered his answer. “You know as
well as we do the ramifications of Redmond’s choosing to go it alone.
They’re only ten worlds, but they have all the line technology for the
foreseeable future. And if they’re actively recruiting worlds—as appears
the case with this business of the Worlds of the Lesser Gods—it won’t
take long for them to become a formidable foe. Especially not if they
manage to steal a line ship, which I presume was their plan.”</p>
      <p>“I think you were worried about more than that,” Abram said. “You knew
Redmond was building ships based on alien technology.”</p>
      <p>A tiny spurt of surprise from Vilhjalmsson. Should Ean tell Abram
Vilhjalmsson hadn’t known that?</p>
      <p>There was none of the blue flash of instant decisions as Abram spoke. He
must have thought hard about what he would say to the Gate Union man.
Calculated dropping of important information that Vilhjalmsson had to
take back to Markan was probably part of the plan.</p>
      <p>“You also knew they were building weapons based on alien technology. The
destruction of the <emphasis>Kari Wang</emphasis> proved just how far they were prepared to
go.”</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson raised a brow, but that was all the reaction that showed.
Underneath, the lines amplified the quickening of his pulse. “Is there a
point to this?”</p>
      <p>“We want a truce.”</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson tried to laugh, didn’t fool anyone.</p>
      <p>“A temporary truce,” Abram said. “Three months. Time enough for Gate
Union to work out what they’re going to do. Time enough for them to
decide what to do about Redmond. We both know Gate Union is as
vulnerable as the New Alliance is if they can’t get access to new
lines.”</p>
      <p>Orsaya and Katida were silent. Ean glanced their way. Neither showed any
emotion.</p>
      <p>“As part of that truce, Gate Union lifts the ban on jumps for three
months. Unrestricted jumps for all New Alliance ships. No delays.”</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson laughed. “You offer three months to think about things
we’re already thinking about. Why would we agree?”</p>
      <p>“I can also offer you access to Commodore Bach. He’s been working with
Redmond for months. He knows who the ringleaders are. He knows the whole
plan.”</p>
      <p>If Vilhjalmsson said he wasn’t interested, he’d be lying. Ean didn’t
need the lines to tell him that. He was more worried about the hum of
concern that had come from Katida’s line eight. He wanted to tell her to
trust Abram but knew it wasn’t the time.</p>
      <p>“And that’s your sweetener?”</p>
      <p>Abram nodded. “But I’ll add another. We’ll tell you why we’re looking
for failed linesmen.”</p>
      <p>That wasn’t going to be a secret for long, anyway. Plus, they needed to
know that. Otherwise, they’d take Quinn’s experiments and start
destroying more single-level linesmen.</p>
      <p>“Offer it to Markan,” Abram said. “See what he says. We have all been
caught out by Redmond’s machinations. We both need time to regroup.”</p>
      <p>“So you’re more desperate for jumps than even we realize, or there’s
something I don’t know.”</p>
      <p>“Take our offer to Markan, Vilhjalmsson. See what he says.”</p>
      <p>“I do get out of here, then? I thought I was a prisoner.”</p>
      <p>Abram smiled. “Organize a jump for me. I’ll take you myself, on the
<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. Somewhere close to Lancia because I need to take
Commodore Bach home. And I need a jump back to Haladea III afterward.”</p>
      <p>Ean hid his smile. It was clever, and it solved their initial problem.
What would Vilhjalmsson say when he found he’d been used to transport
Michelle to Lancia to take over as Empress?</p>
      <p>“You’ve a nerve, Galenos. Using me to transport your prisoners for you.
Not to mention handing me off in enemy territory.”</p>
      <p>“Tell me you can’t get passage off Lancia if you need it.”</p>
      <p>“Why should I trust you?”</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson looked at Ean rather than Abram. Ean stared back and tried
to look as trustworthy as he could. And as expressionless as Radko.</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson considered a while. “I’m tired, I’m sore, and I need to
report to Markan. I know there’s something I’m missing, but I’ll take
the opportunity, anyway. I trust I will get there safely.”</p>
      <p>“You will,” Abram said. “I’ll leave you to arrange the jumps then. We’ll
give you a secure line.”</p>
      <p>Ean nodded. He knew what he had to do.</p>
      <p>“<emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>,” Orsaya said, frostily, after her guards had
escorted Vilhjalmsson away. “That’s quite presumptuous, given all that’s
happened these last few days. And taking Bach back to Lancia sounds
eerily reminiscent of a recent traitor sent back to the Worlds of the
Lesser Gods. We know how well that turned out.”</p>
      <p>Abram blew out his breath again. “Personally, I don’t care whether Bach
goes or stays. <emphasis>Michelle</emphasis> must go to Lancia.”</p>
      <p>The pause after that felt as long as a ship’s passing through the void,
and to Ean it seemed he had the same void time to check the other ships.</p>
      <p>Governor Jade had arrived on board the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>. Michelle
went down to the shuttle bay to meet her personally. “Annette, I
appreciate your coming, especially at such short notice.”</p>
      <p>“My own brand of support,” Governor Jade said. “You’re under immense
pressure at the moment, Michelle. It’s the least I can do.”</p>
      <p>“Thank you. That’s what I wanted to talk to you about, actually. Before
I announce this to the council. But we’ll both need a drink.”</p>
      <p>Ean watched Governor Jade’s face as they walked to Michelle’s formal
office, the one she seldom used. Jade was bracing herself for bad news.</p>
      <p>“Emperor Yu is dead,” Abram said. “He, and Lancia’s military, were
working with Redmond and the Worlds of the Lesser Gods.”</p>
      <p>Orsaya and Katida stared at him.</p>
      <p>“Dead,” Katida said. “Are you sure, Galenos?”</p>
      <p>“Very sure. I killed him myself.”</p>
      <p>Another void-long silence.</p>
      <p>On the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, Michelle was telling Governor Jade, “My
father is dead. He betrayed the New Alliance, and we had to—” She
couldn’t continue.</p>
      <p>Jade moved in close and hugged her. “Oh, Michelle.”</p>
      <p>Ean could hear Katida’s lines. He expected shock and betrayal. Instead,
he heard a wild, singing hope.</p>
      <p>“Yu planned to take the alien ships with him,” Abram said. “We had given
him enough information to know that if one ship jumped, the others would
follow when we didn’t have a seven singing them apart.” He glanced at
Ean, and there were smile creases around the corners of his eyes,
“Unfortunately for them, they underestimated the impact of line twelve.”</p>
      <p>“So Lady Lyan is Empress now,” Katida said.</p>
      <p>“If we can get back to Lancia to consolidate it.”</p>
      <p>Both admirals finally smiled. The toothy smiles Ean was used to from
both of them.</p>
      <p>Orsaya’s smile was wider. “Vilhjalmsson won’t be pleased at being your
pawn.”</p>
      <p>“I think I can offer him enough. If we can negotiate a three-month
armistice, we might have a chance at genuine peace between Gate Union
and the New Alliance. Our biggest problem right now is the damage
Michelle’s father did to Lancia’s credibility within the New Alliance.
Do we have any power left to negotiate these things?”</p>
      <p>“The old Lancia doesn’t,” Katida said. “The new Empress might.”</p>
      <p>“We’ll notify the council,” Abram said. “We also need to inform Lancia.
It’s better to do that there rather than from here.”</p>
      <p>The buzz of Orsaya’s comms made them all jump. One of the guards
stationed at Vilhjalmsson’s door.</p>
      <p>“Captain Vilhjalmsson, Admiral.”</p>
      <p>Orsaya put it onto speaker.</p>
      <p>“I’ve spoken to Markan,” Vilhjalmsson said. “Your jump is in two hours,
with a window of one.”</p>
      <p>Abram grimaced. “Just enough time to get back to the <emphasis>Lancastrian
Princess</emphasis>. I’ll bet that was deliberate.”</p>
      <p>He clicked off and turned back to Orsaya and Katida. “We’ll set up an
interim ruling committee for Lancia. Until that’s done, we’ll spend some
time there, but come back here for council meetings and other items as
required.”</p>
      <p>“Markan will know he has you over a barrel,” Katida said. “You can’t do
it without jumps.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll offer him what I can of Yu’s plans. I will also, as a gesture of
goodwill, tell Vilhjalmsson about the Emperor before he leaves the ship.
Speaking of which”—Abram glanced at the now-silent screen—“we’d best get
to the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, given the jump window is so small.”</p>
      <p>“And while you’re away?” Katida asked. “What happens here?”</p>
      <p>“The Department of Alien Affairs will run well enough without me.”</p>
      <p>“And the council?”</p>
      <p>Abram smiled faintly and looked across at Ean. “There were only ever
three Lancastrians the councilors trusted. Now there’s probably only
one. Ean, can you make yourself available for any questions or issues
the councilors might have? We’ll be back for the council meetings.”</p>
      <p>That meant Ean would stay here, on Confluence Station. If Ean wasn’t
going on the <emphasis>Lancastrian Princess</emphasis>, Abram would expect to have Fergus
as the seven to delink the ships.</p>
      <p>“Abram, you should know Fergus is—” How did he put it? “Sore. He stepped
in front of a blaster. Although he was wearing his suit.”</p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>“I’m fine,” Fergus told Abram. “A silly mistake on my behalf. Everyone’s
told me how stupid I was.” He shuddered. “And Arun Chaudry explained, in
detail, exactly how the heat produces the concussive effect.”</p>
      <p>“You were lucky,” Abram said. “I’m sure it’s a lesson well learned. Can
you sing?”</p>
      <p>Fergus sang to line seven. The sevens answered back.</p>
      <p>“You’ll do.” Abram took time to give quick instructions to Sale—who’d
arrived back on a separate shuttle—before he left. “Ean will explain
further, but he will report to you for the moment. Help Radko protect
him. He’ll be spending a lot of time talking with councilors. Orsaya has
overall control of the linesmen for the moment.”</p>
      <p>Katida joined them at the shuttle bay while they waited for
Vilhjalmsson.</p>
      <p>“I’d love to stay and hear the full story. But I’ve some fires to fight
of my own. I’m looking forward to the announcement.” And she rubbed her
hands together. “I’ve lost count of the people who’ve said to me, ‘If
only we can be sure Lady Lyan truly was in charge, but we can’t.’”</p>
      <p>“And now she is.” How different would Lancia be with Michelle in charge?
Maybe, for people like Ean, from the slums, there’d be no change at all,
but Lancia had a future now. And a place in the New Alliance.</p>
      <p>Provided Ean didn’t say anything too stupid.</p>
      <p>“You’ll be fine,” Katida said, though he hadn’t said anything. “Be
yourself, Ean. That’s all anyone ever requires of you.”</p>
      <p>That’s all he could be, so that’s what people were going to get. “What
will happen now, do you think? To the New Alliance.”</p>
      <p>“We have a future,” Katida said. “And if Galenos can pull another rabbit
out of his hat, we’ll have peace, too.”</p>
      <p>What exactly was a rabbit, anyway? And why did you pull one out of a
hat?</p>
      <p>Katida’s shuttle arrived at the next bay. She turned to go, hesitated.
“You realize some members of the council will take the opportunity while
you are away to push for their own captain for the <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis>.” A
strong sense of Admiral Carrell came through the lines. Chocolate, with
a bitter aftertaste and a jagged tone.</p>
      <p>“It may be no bad thing,” Abram said. “Let them feel they have some
control. You should push for it yourself, Katida. A sideways promotion
this time. Someone political, like your own Captain Terrigal.”</p>
      <p>A song of affront rolled off Katida, strong enough to make Ean step
back. “Are you planning to weaken Balian that much? Terrigal will be
admiral when I retire. You know that.”</p>
      <p>“I do know that,” Abram agreed. “And I approve.”</p>
      <p>“So why condemn him to a ship?”</p>
      <p>“Maybe it doesn’t have to be that way, Katida. Ean seems to think it
doesn’t.”</p>
      <p>Abram had listened. He had understood.</p>
      <p>Katida’s glance at Ean was sharp. “I thought Ean was all for this
bonding.”</p>
      <p>Ean bit his lip. How did he say it? “The <emphasis>Confluence</emphasis> has already chosen
its Ship.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll make a deal with you, Katida,” Abram said. “I will support your
applicant, Terrigal, provided you and Terrigal support my applicant when
Terrigal retires. It will work for both of us. Everyone on the council
knows Terrigal is ambitious. Your enemies will be happy to have him out
of the way.”</p>
      <p>Vilhjalmsson and his escort of Orsaya’s guards turned into the corridor
leading to the shuttle bays.</p>
      <p>Abram lowered his voice so that the approaching prisoner didn’t hear.
“And between us, we might be able to hide the fact that we no longer
have any say over who controls the ship.”</p>
      <p>Katida’s eyes seemed to see forever. “Sale. It can only be Sale.”</p>
      <p>Ean breathed deep and didn’t say anything.</p>
      <p>“Imagine it, Katida. Terrigal will be the only admiral who’s ever
captained a ship,” and Abram raised his voice to normal levels as he
turned to greet Vilhjalmsson.</p>
      <p>As both admirals turned to their own shuttle bays, the other line eights
caught the echo of Katida’s eight, and amplified it throughout the
fleet. <emphasis>“Imagine it.”</emphasis></p>
      <subtitle>— ⁂ —</subtitle>
      <p>“Abram understood,” Ean said to Radko, as they turned to go back to
their temporary home on Confluence Station. Or maybe not so temporary
for a while.</p>
      <p>“Of course he did. He’s Abram Galenos.”</p>
      <p>Sale met them halfway. “Did Galenos say what I thought he said? Emperor
Yu?”</p>
      <p>“He did,” Ean said. “But you shouldn’t say it in words, Sale. Not till
they make the announcement. There’s a level-one linesman on the Galactic
News ship, and he picks up everything.”</p>
      <p>“Now he tells us.”</p>
      <p>“I’ll let Galenos know about him. After this other business.” Radko
glanced at her comms. “Meantime, I need to talk to Han. Vega says his
father is here. They have something to say to each other.”</p>
      <p>“We put your team in with the linesmen,” Sale said. “We weren’t sure if
we should have put them in with our own or not, but they are linesmen.”</p>
      <p>Yves Jaxon Han wasn’t.</p>
      <p>“Thanks.”</p>
      <p>Radko’s three team members came across as soon as Radko arrived.</p>
      <p>“I see what you mean about the singing,” Han said. “They’re all
singing.”</p>
      <p>They weren’t, but enough of them were that Ean was pleased. There was
one group of five, but most of those practicing were individuals,
sounding out their new talents. One of them was Alex Joy, the Xanto. He
was singing to line three on Confluence Station.</p>
      <p>Ean went over to him. “There’s another line trying to talk to you as
well.” The scout that had claimed the Xantos for its own. “You should
listen and reply. It’s only polite.”</p>
      <p>Joy looked at him, listened, then extended his song to include the other
line.</p>
      <p>The line came back with enthusiasm.</p>
      <p>Ean returned to Radko and her team of three.</p>
      <p>“How’s it going?” Radko asked them.</p>
      <p>“Weird,” van Heel said. “I think they’re all crazy.”</p>
      <p>“You’ll be one of those crazies very soon, van Heel, so you’re talking
about yourself.” She turned to Han. “A private word with you.”</p>
      <p>Han made a face and followed her out. Ean followed. Han frowned at him.</p>
      <p>“I go where Ean goes,” Radko said. “Get used to him.” She settled in the
corridor, left foot up against the wall. “You have to be honest with
your father.”</p>
      <p>“It’s kind of hard to—”</p>
      <p>Here, Ean could help Radko. “He knows you’re not his birth son, if
that’s what you’re worried about. He’s being blackmailed by everyone on
and off Lancia to keep it a secret. Including Redmond.”</p>
      <p>“What?” Han turned to Radko. “You told him?”</p>
      <p>“Your father told us,” Ean said. “Talk to him. Tell him to stop letting
himself be blackmailed.”</p>
      <p>Han walked the rest of the way in silence.</p>
      <p>Orsaya’s guards stopped them in the corridor where Renaud’s apartment
was. They recognized Ean and Radko and let them through.</p>
      <p>Han turned to watch the guards. “Is he a prisoner?”</p>
      <p>“The station’s on lockdown,” Ean said.</p>
      <p>“For what?”</p>
      <p>Mutiny, attempt to steal a fleet of spaceships, crimes against the New
Alliance.</p>
      <p>“Not in your need to know,” Radko said. She pressed the comms on the
door. “Lord Renaud. It’s Dominique Radko. May we come in.”</p>
      <p>“Dominique.” Ean tasted the syllables.</p>
      <p>“Don’t you ever. Either of you.”</p>
      <p>“But you introduced yourself as—”</p>
      <p>“He’s a friend of my parents.”</p>
      <p>And indeed, he seemed to be, for Renaud, on opening the door, said,
“Lady Dominique. It’s a pleasure.” Then he saw Han. His eyes widened.
“Yves.”</p>
      <p>“Papa.”</p>
      <p>Father and adopted son hugged each other, laughing and crying.</p>
      <p>Ean and Radko backed away.</p>
      <p>“It’s a crying sort of day.” Ean sang the door closed on the Han family,
and they made their way back to the control center, and their own
people. “How do you feel, Radko? About everything?”</p>
      <p>Radko considered it. “Glad to be home,” she said, finally, and slipped
her hand into his.</p>
      <p>Her fingers were warm, comfortable against his. It felt natural. Ean
smiled at her. “I’m glad you’re home, too.”</p>
    </section>
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</FictionBook>
