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Authors: Larry Niven,Jerry Pournelle

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Speculative Fiction

The Gripping Hand (61 page)

BOOK: The Gripping Hand
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"Through the Sister. What thrust?"

 

 

Renner let the computer work for a moment. "That's a god-awful amount of radiation they're aiming at us. If it keeps up, we'll have to duck. What are they trying to do?"

 

 

"Kill us?" Freddy suggested.

 

 

"Well, if they can, but what else?" Renner studied the screens. If the Motie fleet continued on course, it would get to the Sister in about twenty-five hours. Another moment of indecision. Then, "Keep it reasonable. Say point three for now." The Field was dull red. Not bad, but they'd be bathed in that green laser glare for hours to come. "I want to see what those Warriors will do."

 

 

"What of our ships?" Omar asked.

 

 

"I'll keep
Atropos
," Renner said. "Have all your Motie ships reinforce Balasingham. Look, he's going to be a bit wary of them."

 

 

"We have discussed this," Omar said. "Our ships will position themselves to aid your warship without threatening it."

 

 

Horace Bury's voice trembled with exhaustion, but there was triumph, too. "Mercy of Allah! Kevin, we have sent our message to the Empire, and the Khanate has turned back. We have fulfilled our mission, whatever happens. Now we survive if Allah wills it."

 

 

"We may have fulfilled the mission," Kevin said. "It all depends on that Khanate Warrior fleet. We don't know what they're going to do, and as long as they're in this system, they're dangerous. They could still batter their way past Balasingham." Renner studied the screen again. "Well, as long as they're chasing us, they're not doing that. If they're back in Mote system, they're for sure not doing that. Maybe we can lead them there."

 

 

"Good," Bury said.

 

 

Kevin thought,
Can you take another Jump?
and didn't speak. What if he said no? "I'll tell Rawlins."

 

 

 

 

 

"My viewers may not understand," Joyce said. "I'm not sure I understand. First we come through to the red dwarf system. Then we fight. We win. Now for the past four hours we've been slowing down, and we're headed back the way we came." She looked at her screens, noted the yellow glow of the Field.
Sinbad
was under continuous attack.

 

 

"It's all part of the same battle," Freddy Townsend said.

 

 

"The important thing is that the Khanate fleet is moving toward the Sister, not going after
Agamemnon
," Glenda Ruth said. "We have to keep them heading toward us."

 

 

"But are they after us, or would they go back to the Mote anyway?"

 

 

"It doesn't matter, Joyce," Victoria said. "Anything that gets them back into the Mote system."

 

 

"So we're bait," Joyce said. "I guess that wouldn't be so bad—but to be bait when you don't even know it's you they're after!"

 

 

"They're after us," Freddy said.

 

 

"How can you be sure?" Joyce demanded.

 

 

"If they're not, they're sure wasting a lot of energy," Freddy said. "They can't spare the fuel. I think it's this way. If they can kill us, they won't go through, but if we run through, they'll follow us. Glenda Ruth?"

 

 

"Best bet," Glenda Ruth said.

 

 

Joyce said, "And there you have it."

 

 

 

 

 

"Situation unchanged, Commodore," Rawlins said. "They haven't tried to intercept the allied ships we sent to reinforce Balasingham. It's us they care about, all right, and there's too many to fight. Our only chance is to run. I suggest we increase acceleration. The less of this fire we take, the better chance we'll have once we're through."

 

 

"Agreed. Take it up to one point five gee."

 

 

"One point five, aye, aye." Rawlins's image turned away for a moment.

 

 

"Once we're stabilized in the Mote system, thrust along this vector," Renner said. There was a twitter of data. "And I had the Moties record some orders. You'll recover before we do. Send these messages to Base Six as soon as you can."

 

 

"Messages to Base Six. Aye, aye."

 

 

"Keep the comm link," Renner said. He sighed and touched the intercom buttons. "Stand by for increased gravity. One point five g." He touched another button. "Horace—"

 

 

"I will survive."

 

 

"Yeah. If they keep that beam on us too long—"

 

 

"Kevin, you will do what you must do."

 

 

 

 

 

Renner had been at work. Sailing Master aboard
MacArthur
, Bury's pilot for thirty years: this he could have done in his sleep. "Horace, can you take one point seven gee for eleven minutes?"

 

 

"Yes, of course, Kevin."

 

 

Of course. The danger to Bury wasn't from another increase in thrust, but from Jump shock. "Townsend, do it."

 

 

Ali Baba's eight kilograms hit him in the chest. The pup cried, "No, Kevin! Not again!"

 

 

"Here, Ali Baba," Bury said, and the Mediator went, fearfully.

 

 

Freddy said, "Aye, aye. Done. Any margin of error there?"

 

 

"We'll be violet when we go through the Eye."

 

 

Freddy shuddered.

 

 

The Engineers were up and crawling; the Mediators watched. Kevin bit back his questions and presently understood. The Moties had Cynthia's couch disassembled and were putting it back together next to Bury's water bed. That crowded Glenda Ruth, so they had to move her couch before they could return to their couches and collapse.

 

 

"Commodore? I've got the Master ships' target. It's the brown dwarf. Maybe they expect to take cover in the ring."

 

 

"Once they kill us."

 

 

Cynthia had finished her exercise set in the kitchen space. The view through the window was a uniform cheerful green.

 

 
* * *

On the enlarged screen that the Watchmakers had finished erecting, one blazing point reached the Sister and disappeared without exploding. Then the second. Jennifer heaved a great sigh of relief. "They're through," she said.

 

 

Terry squeezed her foot. She reached around to pat his cheek. "How are you doing?"

 

 

"Healing. You?"

 

 

"Just waiting. Harlequin's up front getting battle data. Should I really stop talking, or try to talk them into something?"

 

 

"Talk. They'll read you anyway."

 

 

But it was over an hour before Harlequin rejoined them. "The Sister hides your ships for the moment," he said. "We did not expect they could survive our barrage."

 

 

"That's another thing about resources," Jennifer said. "Our ships are bigger, better defended, more powerful."

 

 

Harlequin laughed in great amusement and some scorn: Freddy's laugh. Harlequin must have had it from Pollyanna. "Another thing about our breeding problem: our ships are more numerous by far! Jennifer, our intentions are not your concern. We will discuss
strategy
. These two ships—"

 

 

"I must stop listening—"

 

 

But the Mediator's big left palm was out,
pause a minute
, while the Warrior spoke.

 

 

They finished. Harlequin said, "Jennifer, we sent most of our Warriors to chase your two Empire ships down, under the command of our junior Master. Medina's lizard-raping Warriors managed to destroy that command ship as they passed, but our Warrior ships are nearly untouched. They will follow your Empire-built ships through the Sister to Mote system. They can't hide, Jennifer, their drives are too peculiar."

 

 

In fact, the blue sparks of the Warrior ships' drives were disappearing even as Harlequin spoke. Other, larger sparks had flown past: the Khanate Master ships were on their way to Bury's Star. "Where will your Masters hide?"

 

 

"In the rocks. Does it matter? We've given up hope of bursting through the other bridging point into your Empire. We must wait until our Warriors report success at the Mote."

 

 

"You intend to kill us all?"

 

 

"Yes. Your ships will have the advantage in the first instants because they will go through first and recover first from the shock. Unless humans tolerate the shock worse than we do?"

 

 

Jennifer laughed.

 

 

Harlequin frowned. "No? We watched you. You recovered very slowly."

 

 

"Harlequin, I'm half-dead of fatigue. Poor Terry's half-dead, period." An instant later she could have bitten her tongue off. Too late: Harlequin was leaping aft.

 

 

Terry's hand closed on the Motie's ankle and yanked him backward. Jennifer shrieked, "Kill him! Kill him, Terry!"

 

 

The Warrior was arrowing toward them.

 

 

Terry's arms closed around the Motie's head and shoulders. He twisted. "Dammit!" he muttered, and set himself and twisted much harder. The lopsided head turned with a pop like a branch breaking, and then the Warrior was wrapped around Terry like strangler vine, with his gun in Terry's ear.

 

 

Terry let go. Harlequin floated loose, still screaming thinly.

 

 

Under the Warrior's gun, they watched the Doctor pull and twist the Motie's head back into place. Harlequin's screaming died to a moan.

 

 

"No good," Terry said. "I forgot. No vertebrae, just that kind of handle that connects the skull to the shoulders. I only dislocated it, and the spinal cord isn't even in it, it's underneath. He'll talk."

 

 

"Jump shock. It hurts them much worse than it hurts us. They didn't know it."

 

 

"Yeah. But that was the last Warrior ship going through. I'm right, aren't I, Jennie?"

 

 

Jenny looked. "Yeah. Those other lights are all big Master ships, and they're all past the Sister."

 

 

"Hah. Slowed Harlequin down just enough. Now their whole Warrior fleet is in Mote system chasing down
Sinbad
and
Atropos
, and no Master to tell them different. Isn't that interesting? I wonder what a Navy man can do with that."

 

 

"We may not live to see it."

 

 

"Jenny, that took everything I had. If they decide to shoot me, don't bother to wake me." Terry's eyes closed.

 

 
8: Stern Chase

Retreat, hell! We're just attacking in the opposite direction

 

—U.S. Marine Corps commander, Changjin Reservoir, Korea

 

 

 

 

I'm just too damned old for this. Renner gradually became aware . . .

 

 

. . . Cynthia was swearing in a loose-lipped mumble. Her body covered Bury's, obscenely, kissing . . . breath for him, squeeze his rib cage closed, blow into his mouth, squeeze . . .

 

 

Freddy said, "
Atropos
calling."

 

 

"Put'm through. . . . Hello, Rawlins." ' ;.

 

 

"Commodore, you're a flawless diamond on black velvet. Brilliant blue-white."

 

 

"Flattering. Ss'a quote—" From a historical novel,
The Taking of Serpens Peak
, just before the ship exploded. "Any threats here?"

 

 

"We're clear. Bandit Group One-Two-Three pulled well back from the Medina ships. East India is still holding the Crazy Eddie point for us, but not with enough ship to defeat what's coming here. Byzantium hasn't got here yet. Nobody's shooting at us. What's our move?"

 

 

Renner's eyes were properly focusing now.

 

 

"General order: Make for the Crazy Eddie point. Keep station with
Sinbad
. Are we in communication with the Motie fleet?"

 

 

"Yes. I'll relay."

 

 

Bury was trying to sit up. Cynthia braced him.

 

 

Renner didn't recognize the Motie on-screen. A young Mediator, presumably male. "Commander Rawlins has informed us that a large Khanate war fleet, too large for our power, will arrive here through the Sister within the hour," the Motie said. "I am ready to convey your instructions to our Master."

 

 

"Avoid combat with the main fleet," Renner said. "Preserve your power, but we want you to take out any command ship that comes through. We expect the main Khanate fleet to chase us. As long as it does, leave it alone, but we don't want that fleet to get new instructions.

 

 

"Same for the Jump point. Make it expensive to go back through the Sister. Their main war fleet can do anything it wants to, and you can't stop them, but you can stop them reporting back to the Masters on the other side with anything short of a real battle group. Do that, please."

BOOK: The Gripping Hand
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