There was no response from the silth aboard the starship.
Marika had not expected one, really, though she had hoped that an attack of sense would smite the Groshega once they knew she was there to evict them. She drifted closer. The Redoriad darkships spread out. She glanced back at Grauel and Barlog, who had refused to be left behind, no matter their dreams of ending their days at home.
Go! she sent.
Three Redoriad darkships darted toward the alien starship.
Beams and rockets leaped to meet them. They pranced away, unharmed.
Marika scanned the surrounding space. The great black still lurked at the system's fringe, but it was not under control, not moving. It seemed disinterested in what was happening down near the sun.
Did the Groshega intend to maintain their claim with technical weapons?
Marika vacillated. There was something wrong with the whole situation. How could the Groshega hope to best her with alien armaments? They could not have the use of the suppressor suits and weapons developed by the rogue scientists. She had had those removed to the surface of the planet before departing. They were in the care of one of Balbrach's most trusted Mistresses ...
She hardly thought about what she did. She grabbed ghosts and clambered into the Up-and-Over, bringing herself out beside the great black.
Was she mad? Had she begun seeing plots where none could exist?
Or had she been guided gently into a trap?
The Groshega had a strong champion. The Redoriad had numbers. They were silth, as subject to pestilential silth blindnesses and shortcomings as sisters of any other order. The Redoriad had been allies for years, but that did not guarantee an alliance forever.
And nobody loved Marika, who had the strength to thwart greed and crush schemes.
She took the great black under control almost without direct thought and leaped back to the heart of the system.
She dropped into an atmosphere of confusion. They did not know where she had gone, or why. Marika sent, Balbrach, I want you to take High Night Rider and your darkships back to the last milestar. Wait there three hours, then return.
Why, Marika? Balbrach could not disguise the disappointment in her touch.
This is an uncomfortable situation. It has some very unpredictable aspects. To avoid potential problems arising from the uncertainties I have decided to handle it alone. I believe I can accomplish our ends more quickly that way, and with fewer silth killed.
Balbrach understood the message behind the message. She sensed the great black roiling around Marika, angry at being disturbed, eager to rip and slay. She sent, As you wish, Marika.
Marika did not move until the Redoriad had vanished.
Now she must move quickly, lest they not do as she had ordered, and try to surprise her.
Brodyphe. Are you coming out? Must I come after you? You have no chance against me.
She nudged her darkship toward the alien. No beams or rockets greeted her. After ten minutes two darkships left the derelict.
There should be another. Hurry. I am impatient. Come to me here.
Another darkship left the alien. Marika eased closer. She sent a lesser ghost into the starship and detected no Groshega silth.
The Groshega voidships floated toward her, into visual range. She sent, Who were your allies in this venture?
They did not respond.
She touched the great black.
Aboard Brodyphe's darkship silth screamed into the otherworld. Their bodies twisted, tore apart. The golden glow faded around them. Blood crystals and flesh fragments scattered.
Marika touched the Mistresses of the remaining ships. Who were your allies in this venture?
They confirmed her worst suspicion.
She touched the great black again, then turned away before it was over. Down to the alien starship she went, sending before her small ghosts to locate and disarm booby traps. Then she went aboard.
The moment they could talk, Grauel demanded, "Did you have to kill them?"
"Are you getting soft, Grauel? They intended to kill us." Huntresses were not wont to mourn enemies, nor to give them a second chance.
"No. It just did not seem necessary."
"It was, Grauel. I struck a blow at an idea when I eliminated them."
"What idea?"
"The idea that one sisterhood or a cabal of Communities can seize this ship for the purpose of limiting its benefits."
Grauel nodded, but was not entirely mollified. Marika reminded herself that in some ways the Wise were more tolerant than were younger females, who had to face danger more directly.
Barlog asked, "Are you sure you were not more interested in crushing any doubts about your own invincibility?"
Marika scowled at her and turned away. She stalked through the alien ship to the control area. She did not relax her hold upon the great black, which she moved far enough away that its presence would not be immediately obvious. She replayed the final message from the alien crew, again studying their smooth-faced strangeness, their methlike yet alien forms. How well had the brethren unraveled their language with the times and clues they had had available?
She settled into an alien chair and wondered what the rogues really had hoped to accomplish, wondered what had become of the few Serke who remained unaccounted for. Starstalker and one or two darkships. Where had they gone?
She sensed the return of High Night Rider and its escort and sighed. She did not look forward to the next few hours.
Balbrach. Come to the alien. I must speak with you. III High Night Rider departed the system unaccompanied, without Balbrach aboard. It carried Marika's message to the most seniors of all the dark-faring silth. It had left behind the brethren scientists and the darkship crews who had accompanied it out. Marika touched the great black, told it to let the voidship pass.
She had made that monster her creature entirely, a deadly sentinel guarding her system.
She told the Redoriad crews that they could not leave the system, that the great black would devour them if they tried to go. They would be released in time if they behaved. In the interim they must do ferry duty between the starship and the planet, where former Serke bonds continued farming and manufacturing, their lives little touched by changes in ruling Communities.
Marika made her home in the starship's control section. The brethren she assigned to the quarters that had been occupied by their rogue predecessors.
The very typical bit of silth treachery that had brought her back to the alien ship sent her into a depression that lasted for weeks. Her homeworld, and her deadly littermate with his bloodthirsty movement filled with hatred, slipped from her thoughts entirely. When she recovered she found she had very little interest in her roots.
She did not leave the starship for a year, not until she was convinced that her control would not be disputed by any element of the meth race.
During that year she mourned Balbrach often, for theirs had been a good partnership while it had lasted. At times it had approached the friendship she had had with Kiljar. But Balbrach had not had Kiljar's mental scope or character and had not been able, in the end, to resist typical silth greed. She had made her move. She had lost. Though it hurt still, Marika had had to demand that she pay the price of failure.
Darkships came and went, their movements carefully monitored by Marika's tame great black. The dark-faring sisterhoods were keeping a sharp watch upon her. After that year, though, even the most suspicious and paranoid of Communities had become convinced that she did indeed mean the starship to benefit all meth. The watchers came less frequently, but their visits lasted longer, and they joined in the unraveling of alien secrets. Each departing darkship carried a full report of everything that had been learned about the starship and the aliens who had built it. Which was not that much, considering the time and effort that had gone into opening it up.