“No one is sure what they were intended for originally.” Darya rapped the side of the unit, and it produced a hollow booming sound. “But we know they can be used to preserve things pretty much indefinitely — objects, or organisms — and we assume that was their main purpose. There’s a stasis field inside each unit, externally controlled. You can see the settings on the end there. Clock rates in the interior have been measured for the Flambeau units, and they run an average of sixty million times slower than outside. Spend a century in one of those stasis tanks, and if you remained conscious you’d feel as though one minute had passed.”
Rebka did not seem to be listening. He was still poised with his face against the port.
She tapped his shoulder. “Hey, Hans. Come up for air. What’s so fascinating in there? Let me take a peek.”
She moved to his side. The stasis tank did not seem to be empty, but its inside was almost dark. Darya could see vague outlines, but for details she would have to wait a couple of minutes until her eyes had adjusted to the interior light level.
She took his arm and squeezed it. “Can you see what’s in there? Come on, if it’s interesting don’t keep me in suspense.”
Still he did not speak, but at Darya’s words and touch he finally turned to face her.
She looked at his twitching face, and her grip on his arm slackened. Her hand dropped to her side.
Nothing shocked Hans Rebka. Nothing ever touched his iron self-control.
Except that now the control had gone. And behind his eyes lurked an unreasoning terror that Darya had never expected to see.
CHAPTER 16
After Atvar H’sial had knocked Julius Graves headlong into Birdie Kelly, broken the connection between E. C. Tally’s brain and body, and sent J’merlia rolling and spinning into the pattern of concentric rings, Louis Nenda did not hesitate.
As the Cecropian went scuttling out of the chamber, wing cases wide open, Nenda followed at once.
Let the mess back there sort itself out!
He was cursing — silently. It was no use shouting. Atvar H’sial had astonishing hearing, but she did not understand human speech. And his own pheromonal augment was worthless when she was in full flight, because the necessary molecules had no chance to diffuse into her receptors.
The near-darkness of Glister’s interior made no difference to Atvar H’sial. Her echolocation vision worked as well in pitch blackness as in bright sunlight; but it made things hellishly difficult for Louis Nenda. A Cecropian did not care where she moved, into chambers light or dark, just so long as there was air to carry sound waves. But he sure cared. He was bouncing off dark walls, tangling in nets, tripping over loose cables, diving down steep slopes without any idea what he would meet at the bottom. And all the time he had not the slightest idea where she was heading. He doubted that she knew it herself.
Enough of this, he thought.
He slowed down after a particularly bruising collision with an invisible partition. It would be too easy to knock himself out, and he could not afford that.
The good news was that he could track her, infallibly. The Zardalu augment had been designed for pheromonal speech, with all its subtleties, so simply following another’s scent through Glister’s sterile interior was ridiculously easy. Even if she crossed and recrossed her own path, the strength of the trail would show him exactly where she had gone.
The corridors of Glister turned and twisted, apparently at random. He patiently followed the unmistakable airborne molecules of Cecropian physiology, turn by turn, wherever they led. The only thing he could be sure of was that they were descending, following a gravity gradient to regions of steadily increasing field. But the stronger field increased the danger of injury from a fall. He slowed his pace still further, confident that Atvar H’sial could not get away from him. As he walked he began to make plans.
One word with Graves had been enough to convince him that telling the truth to the councilor would be a terrible idea. He had fought back his own initial urge on awakening — violent flight — because Atvar H’sial was still trapped in the Lotus field. At that point it made sense to blame the field itself and “forget” anything that had happened back on Quake.
Of course, he remembered it all perfectly: the wild ascent from the planet’s surface, the capture of the Have-It-All by the dark sphere, the giddy plunge through space, their arrival at Gargantua and the little planetoid that orbited it — and, finally, the release of the ship onto the surface, while the sphere that had captured and held them moved inside. He had been aware of events right up to the moment on the planetoid’s surface when the orange cloud surged up around them. He even had a vague memory after that, of being carried down, down, down through multiple levels of the interior. Then came a blank, until he had wakened to find Julius Graves crouched over him.
Graves’s mention of the Lotus field allowed him to piece together most of the rest. He and Atvar H’sial had been locked in the field — but why, when it would have made more sense just to kill them — until the others had come along. And finally that crazy robot with the human body and the pop-top skull case had dredged them out.
Pity that Atvar H’sial had run wild before E. C. Tally had been able to get Kallik, too. Nenda missed his Hymenopt servant. No matter. There was plenty of time for Tally to pull Kallik free now — if ever they could stick Tally’s popout brain back in his dumb head and connect it so it worked.
Louis Nenda paused. He was standing in an unlit passageway, but the pheromonal scent was increasing in strength. He concentrated and generated his own message, sending it diffusing out from his chest nodules. “Atvar H’sial? Where are you? I can’t see you — you gotta steer me in.”
As usual, he found it easiest to speak his message at the same time as it was generated chemically. It was not necessary to identify himself. If the Cecropian received any message at all, Nenda’s individual molecular signature would be built into it.
“I am here. Wait.” The messenger molecules drifted in through the darkness. A few seconds later, Atvar H’sial’s hard claw took Nenda’s hand. “Follow. Tell me if the thermal source ahead is also for you a source of seeing radiation.”
“Why’d you take off like that?” Nenda allowed himself to be led through the darkness, until he saw a glimmer of light ahead. “Why didn’t you wait until they got Kallik out? She’s my Hymenopt — she shouldn’t be doin’ work for them.”
“Just as J’merlia is mine, and he should not be serving humans. But he is.” The Cecropian led them into a long rectangular room, warmed and dimly lit by a uniform ruddy glow from the walls. “The failure to recover J’merlia and Kallik is, I agree, regrettable, but I judged it necessary. As soon as I became conscious I smelled danger to you and me. Councilor Graves was dominant in that group. He had a clear intention to restrict our freedom at once. I was not sure we could prevent that. With an imperfect understanding of events, it is always better to remain unimpeded in one’s actions. Therefore, we had to escape.”
“How’d you know I’d follow you?”
There was no explicit message of reply, but the chemical messengers of grim humor wafted to Nenda’s chest receptors.
“All right, At. So I don’t like the idea of being locked up, any more than you do. What now? We’re not safe. Graves and the rest of them can come after us anytime. J’merlia can track you, easy as I could. We’re still in deep stuff.”
“I do not disagree.” The Cecropian crouched in front of Nenda, lowering herself so that the blind white head was on a level with his. The open yellow trumpet horns quivered on either side of the eyeless face. “We must pool information, Louis Nenda, before we make a decision. I lack data items that you perhaps gained from Julius Graves. For example, where are we now? Why were we brought here? How much time did we spend unconscious? And where is our ship, the Have-It-All, and is it in working condition for our escape?”