We held a party in the cockpit that night, toasting the red star and congratulating one another. For the first time since I’d known her, Chase drank too much. And for several hours, the Centaur lacked a pilot. She was passionate and sleepy by turns, and several times I looked away from her at the myriad stars, wondering which was the general direction from which we’d come. Odd that the vast political entity of several hundred worlds and a thousand billion human beings could disappear so utterly.
Two planets floated within the biozone. One seemed to be in a primitive stage of development: its nitrogen atmosphere was filled with dust thrown up by global rings of volcanoes. Its surface was ripped by continual quakes and convulsions. But the other: it was a blue and white globe of unsurpassing loveliness, like Rimway and Toxicon and Earth, like all the terrestrial worlds on which life is able to take hold. It was a place of vast oceans and bright sunlight and countless island chains. A single continent sprawled atop the north pole. "I suspect it’s cold down there," said Chase, peering through the scopes at the land mass. "Most of it’s covered with glaciers. No lights on the dark side, so I don’t think anyone lives here."
"I’d be surprised," I said, "if anyone did."
"It looks comfortable in the temperate zones. In fact, downright balmy. What say we get out the capsule, and go down for a swim? Get away from walls for a while?" She stretched, enticingly, and I was about to reply when her expression changed.
"What’s the matter?"
She passed her hand across the search control, and a blip sounded. "There’s what we came for," she said.
It rose out of the dark, above the terminator, indistinguishable from the blazing stars.
"It’s in orbit," whispered Chase.
"Maybe it’s a natural satellite."
"Maybe." She keyed analyses onto the screens. "It’s reflection index is pretty high for a rock."
"How big is it?"
"Can’t tell yet."
"Or it could be something the Tenandrome left behind," I said.
"Like what?"
"I don’t know. A monitor of some kind."
She shielded her eyes and peered into the scope. "We’re getting some resolution," she said. "Hold on." She put the starfield on the pilot’s monitor, filtered out most of the glare, and reduced the contrast. A single point of white light remained.
Over the next hour we watched it take shape, expanding gradually into a cylinder, thick through the middle, rounded at one end, flared at the other. There was no mistaking the forward battle bridge, or the snouts of weapons, or the classic lines of Resistance Era design. "We were right," I breathed. "Son of a bitch, we were right!" And I clapped her on the shoulder. It was a good feeling. I wished Gabe could have been with us.
By the standards of modern warships, it was minuscule. (I could imagine it dwarfed beside the enormous girth of the Tenandrome.)
But it had a hell of a history. It was the kind of ship that had leaped the stars during the early days of the Armstrong drive, that had carried Desiret and Taniyama and Bible Bill to the worlds that would eventually become the Confederacy. It had waged the endless internecine wars. And it had fought off the Ashiyyur.
"I have its orbit," said Chase, with satisfaction. "I’m going to lay us in right alongside her. Right under her port bow."
"Good," I said. "How long will it take?"
Her fingers danced across the instruments. "Twenty-two hours, eleven minutes. We’ll have a close pass in about an hour and a half, maybe a hundred kilometers. But it’ll take a few orbits before we can match course and speed."
"Okay." I watched the image in the monitor. They were lovely ships. We’ve had nothing like them, before or since. We were in sunlight, and this one was a rich silver and blue. Her lines curved gently: there was about her a sense of the ornate that one does not see in the cold gray vessels of the modern age. The parabolic prow with its sunburst, the flared tubes, the swept-back bridge, the cradled pods—all would have been of practical use only to an atmospheric flyer. But she possessed an aura that was gently moving: whether it might have been the sheer familiarity of a type of vessel that symbolized the last great heroic age; or whether it was some sense of innocence and defiance designed into her geometry; or the menacing thrust of her weapons, I could not say. It reminded me of a time when I’d been very young.
"There’s the harridan," said Chase, centering our long-range telescope on the bow. I could almost make it out, the dark avian form caught in furious flight against the burnished metal, as though it would draw the ship itself hurtling down its track. She tried to increase magnification, but the image grew indistinct; so we waited, while the range between the two ships shortened.
Chase’s attention was diverted by a blinking light on one of the panels. She listened to an earphone, looked puzzled, and threw a switch. "We’re getting a signal!" she said. Her eyes had widened.
It got very quiet in the cabin. "From the derelict?" I whispered.
She was holding the phone against her ear, but shaking her head. "No. I don’t think so." She hit a switch, and an electronic whine fluttered through the sound system.
"What is it?"
"It seems to be coming from the surface. There are a couple of them, in fact. But no visual."
"They’re beacons," I said. "Left by the Tenandrome."
"Why are they still running? Does it mean they cleared out in a hurry?"
"Not really. They could be any number of things. Most likely geological sites. Survey uses transmitters to send different types of pulses through the planet over extended periods of time. The devices make a record, which gives you a pretty good picture of its internal dynamics. Anytime a ship enters the area, the record is automatically broadcast. There are probably other signals too if you can find them." She smiled, embarrassed by her tendency to jump to nervous conclusions.
"How do you know so much about these missions?" she asked.
"I’ve done a lot of reading about them over the past couple of months." I was about to say more when Chase’s complexion went bone white.
The antique ship had been drawling closer, growing larger in the overhead monitor. I followed her gaze toward its image, but saw nothing. "What’s wrong?" I asked.
"Look at the sigil," she whispered. "The harridan."
I looked, and I saw nothing unusual, just the prow, with its feathered symbol—
—Enclosed by a curving slice of light—
—A silver crescent.
—So the enemy can find me.
"My God," I said. "It’s the Corsarius."
"Impossible." Chase was scrolling through old accounts of the final battle, stopping periodically to point out specifics:… Destroyed while Tarien looked on helplessly… Sim’s operational staff and his brother watched from the Kudasai while the Corsarius made its desperate run, and vanished in nuclear flame… Et cetera.
"Maybe," I said, "the Ashiyyur were right: there was more than one."
She surveyed her instruments. "Axial tilt’s about eleven degrees. And it’s rolling. I think the orbit is showing signs of decay." She shook her head. "You’d think they would have corrected that, at least. The Tenandrome, I mean."
"Maybe they couldn’t," I said. "Maybe there’s no power after all this time."
"Maybe."
Images flickered across the command screen, tail sections and communication assemblies and lines of stress factors. The ship itself was beginning to pull away again. "If it can’t move on its own, they’d have no way to get it home. I mean, even if they could get it into a cargo bay, which I doubt, how the hell could they secure it? And the goddam thing could blow up at any time. Remember the Regal?
"Chase," I said, "that’s why Gabe wanted the extra pilot. And had Khyber along. To try to take it back!"