Jaydium (5 page)

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Authors: Deborah J. Ross

BOOK: Jaydium
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“It's true that Hank married my sister,” Eril said slowly, not wanting to rush things. “But he was also one of the best
duo
pilots in my squadron —”

“Your
squadron?” Her gray eyes widened.

“The war's officially over,” he went on, “but we're still scrambling to keep order in the settled worlds. You've been lucky here on Stayman — not like Pandora or Albion or half a dozen other worlds that somebody considered easy pickings. The Fed protected you better than most because of the jaydium.”

Eril paused. Stayman could barely feed herself as it was, and it had been nothing short of criminal to abandon the scientists and their families here. He didn't want to appear to be defending the Fed. “I'm not on a pleasure trip, I'm recruiting.”

“Recruiting?”
Her eyes got even bigger.

He smiled. “Hank told me about this brushie he'd run jaydium with. He said she could fly circles around him in her sleep. I had to see for myself.”

“Hank said that? About me?”

“You got any other candidates? I didn't come five parsecs across space to fly
duo
with that old sourbug in the tavern.”

Kithri choked down the last of her bread, lowering her eyes so he could no longer read in them. “Entrance,” she repeated. “To what, exactly?”

“Courier Corps.”

She shook her head. “Never heard of it.”

“It never existed before, it's the brainchild of First Councillor Eades. The Council's too isolated and settled space too spread out. They need agents who can be their eyes and arms out there so their resources get put where they do the most good. There are lots of situations when speed and inspiration are needed more than brute force. At least that's the theory.”

“And you're recruiting for this thing?”

He nodded.

She took a deep breath and looked away. “I can fly surface, yes, but space — that's something else. I don't have any formal training, my astrophysics is ten years out of date —”

“Never mind the rest,” he said, trying to keep his voice smooth. “You've got what it takes, all right. Compared to a coriolis, space is a vacuum, remember? You kept your head in that storm, so I know you can think straight.” It was a risky thing to say, but if she was going to hold what happened against him, he might as well know now.

Kithri scowled, her face flushing. “Why me? There must be more than enough out-of-work veterans begging for the job.”

“Can you picture Hank on a diplomatic mission?”

“Skies, no!” The scowl vanished into a fleeting grin.

“Actually, that's not the real problem,” he said. “The training sessions will teach you whatever you need to know. The problem is finding the right people, and it's even harder when you're looking for pairs who can fly
duo.
Yes, we can recruit from within the Service, but too many of those pilots are like Hank, and those that are left are spread even thinner than before, with all our losses and the number of trouble spots to watch. Eades wants new, fresh blood.”

He studied her face and saw mostly confusion. But there was something darker behind her eyes. Something he could but not put a name to. He decided to take a chance and push harder.

“What do you say? Or are you so afraid of trying something new that you'd choose a jaydium tunnel over the stars?”

“No! I — I — ,” Kithri stammered. “I'm not afraid. It's just that I don't like to be pushed into things.” She was talking too fast, her words tumbling over one another. “Of course I'd jump at the chance to get off this dust-chip. Your offer sounds good —
too
good. There's got to be a hitch somewhere. Like — like, Why should I give a damn about your Federation?” Her voice turned harsh. “They were the ones who left us here to rot, cut off the lithicycline, stuck Port Ludlow
there
when the jaydium was
here
because they didn't give a
shit
about what the miners had to go through to scratch out a living. I just want
off
this rock, not into someone's Do-Good Club!”

Eril brushed the rest of the bread crumbs from his fingers to give himself time to think. He'd expected her to object to him personally or else to vent some vague resentment against the Fed. He hadn't expected this raw hostility.

No, not hostility, he realized with an echo of their brief
duo
rapport.

Pain.

“If that's the way you feel about it,” he said quietly, “we'd better get this jaydium back to the Port.” The muscles behind his shoulders felt tight, as if the only way to release them was to hit something. He forced gentleness into his voice. “Think about it, would you.”

She looked away. “Maybe I will, maybe...when I've got a choice.”

Chapter 5

For a moment Eril considered telling her the truth, that he had as much chance of getting into the Corps without her as she had getting off Stayman without him. In the mood she was in, she'd probably tell him to stuff a comet up his
pitouchee.
The only thing to do was to keep his mouth shut and wait for another opening. He hoped he'd get one.

Kithri picked up the water bottle, took a long swallow and then dropped it, sputtering. She pointed down the tunnel.

As he followed her gesture, Eril's mouth went electrically dry. The last time he'd looked, the tunnel had been empty except for the two of them and the scrubjet. Now a man-shaped mist hovered in the middle of the ‘hole, one moment diaphanous, then condensing into near solidity. In stark contrast to the rosy glow of the partly-sealed jaydium, it was a clear, untinted gray. Eril made out a bulbous head, two arms, and two splayed-out legs. He thought he saw markings on the head section, but they faded so quickly he could not be sure.

“What the hell is
that?”
Kithri whispered. “I've been running these tunnels for years, and I've never seen anything like it.”

“Space ghost,” he said, dredging his memory. “They're sighted along the old interstellar routes. There are only about six or seven documented cases known, never this close to a planet. By our best guess, they're relics of early attempts to exceed the speed of light. Residues of energy that just happen to be shaped like humans. They probably don't actually exist in three-space.”

As he spoke, the figure descended until its feet seemed to touch the tunnel floor. For a moment it stood there, motionless. Then it began to move. First one leg and then the other stretched out and swung back as it drifted along in a mechanical parody of walking.

“Whatever you are,” Kithri called out, “you stay away from my ship!”

“There's no danger. The ghost can't interact with ordinary matter,” Eril said with a confidence he did not feel. It was one thing to listen to a lecture on “quasi-dimensional oddities” when you were sitting safely in an Academy classroom, and quite another to confront one in the middle of a jaydium tunnel.

“There's nothing to worry about,” he repeated. “It'll dematerialize again in a moment.”
I hope.

Moving one awkward step at a time, the shape continued to advance, not toward the two humans, but the scrubjet and its precious cargo. Kithri jumped to her feet, as tense as a coiled dust-viper.

“I don't care what that thing is, if it messes with my ‘jet —”

Eril grabbed her hand. “You stay here. I'm going in for a better look before it disappears.”

He shoved her bodily behind him and took a couple of steps towards the diaphanous figure. For a moment he wondered if her instincts might be right about the thing's innocuous nature. A familiar thrill shot down his spine, reminiscent of the moments before his first battle in space. He'd been just as terrified as all the other rookies, but he'd never before felt so intensely, exhiliratingly alive.

Maybe Eades was right. Maybe he was some kind of thrill junkie, a real glory-boy.

The ghost was close enough to the scrubjet to touch it, still floating stiff-legged, as if all its joints were frozen. It stretched out one thick-fingered hand, now clearly visible as it took on greater and greater solidity. Eril saw the arm reach for the curved side of
Brushwacker —

“No!”
Kithri screamed. She shoved him aside with surprising force and lunged for the scrubjet.

Eril grabbed her shoulders and jerked her to a halt. She pushed against him, hard. He wrestled her around to face him, holding her close to his chest. She wasn't trying to hurt him, just struggling ineffectively to get free.

“Calm down!” he said. “There's nothing to be —”

Kithri twisted away and dropped her weight, breaking his hold. Too late, Eril realized that in their struggle she'd slipped his force whip out of its shoulder holster and was now pointing it at the shape leaning towards her ship.

Ineffective, indeed!
He'd never underestimate her like that again.

Aiming mostly by instinct, Kithri pushed the force whip trigger, a broad, flat lever set in a protective groove. Eril grabbed for the weapon, but the beam of the whip was already arcing through space. It touched the phantom shape and exploded in a tiny noval flare.

Eril gasped as a shock wave rattled his teeth. Tears blurred his vision, but not enough to obscure the figure still looming towards the scrubjet.

Kithri raised the whip again, this time holding it in both hands and carefully sighting down the barrel. Eril caught her hand, pulling it backwards before she could press the firing stud again.

“You idiot, it'll go away on its own!”

“Skies damn you, Eril! If you won't do something about it, I will! I won't let that thing mess with my ship!”

Kithri yanked the force whip around again. It lashed out, this time in a wide, unfocused sweep. She clung to the firing button, despite Eril's attempts to pry her fingers free. The whip beam spiralled downwards to touch the point of the specter's shoulder.

A blast of air and searing brightness, many times more powerful than the first, stunned Eril. In an instant, the breath was stolen from his lungs, the strength from his muscles. He staggered under the sudden impact of Kithri's weight and they both went down.

The light gave way to enveloping darkness. For an agonizing moment, Eril was afraid he'd been blinded. He struggled to sit upright, blinking furiously.

“Of all the comet-brained things to happen...” moaned Kithri.

“I warned you,” Eril grumbled. “We had no idea how the whip's energy would interact with that thing. I'll bet your damned heroics haven't even touched it. The ghost will disappear in its own sweet time when the dimensional gap shifts. Meanwhile, there's no way we can
duo
that jaydium back now. We're half blind — hardly fit to fly — or at least I am. Can you see anything yet?

“No...yes, I think that blob is
‘Wacker.
” Her voice took on a new urgent tone. “Eril! There's something on the ground next to it.”

Eril forced himself to concentrate on the gray soup before his eyes, with very little success. “Don't trust your vision, not so soon after a blast like that. Our eyes were pretty well dark-adapted —”

“Stuff it!” She pulled herself free and clambered to her feet. “There
is
something. Something that
wasn't
there before.”

Eril's vision cleared as he stumbled after her towards the nebulous shape of the scrubjet. Tone-on-tone gray replaced velvet black, slowly resolving into the outlines of objects. No rosy glow came from the cut jaydium face. It must have become sealed under a layer of protective ash, quicker than he'd thought possible.

They were almost on top of the sprawled figure before he was able to make it out. The thing was flat gray instead of its previous luminous transparency. The bulbous head absorbed light without any hint of gloss.

Eril touched it cautiously with the tip of one boot. The surface yielded like stiffened cloth. His vision cleared a little more and he saw — not a ghost, nor any inhuman figure — but a Terran spacesuit of ancient design.

“There's someone inside!”

“He's not a space
ghost
, that's for sure,” came Kithri's voice from beside him. “But what — who
is
he?”

Without waiting for his answer, she knelt down. Eril crouched beside her and began searching for the seals of the globe helmet. In a few moments, he found the primitive lock-clasp. As they wrestled the helmet free of its moorings, he wondered what they would find inside — a human spaceman, in all likelihood long dead — or something else, some horrendous relic from the depths of space? A thrill raced along his nerves.

The opaque globe came free with a snap and a burst of humid but not stale air. Inside was no desiccated corpse, but the fully fleshed head of a living man, lolling in unconsciousness. Eril shoved the helmet into Kithri's hands and ran his fingers along the man's neck. The flesh felt warm and resilient under his touch. “I've found a pulse, slow but he's alive.”

Kithri sat back on her heels. “Where did he come from? How did he get from deep space to the middle of this tunnel? And, more to the point, what are we going to do with him?”

“Take him back to Port Ludlow,” Eril said. “He seems stable enough to move. He's breathing regularly and his pulse is steady. Do we have room for him in the hold?”

Kithri considered for a moment. “We've more than half a load of jaydium, but if we leave the sealing equipment here, we can make it. It'll be a tight fit.”

“Don't worry. Our friend here is in no position to object.”

Kithri insisted on reorganizing
Brushwacker's
hold by herself. She managed to create a space large enough for the spaceman. Together they lifted him in and strapped him in place.

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