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Legroeder cursed. Cantha had thrown a simulated emergency at them, forcing him to use the implants. He was already failing. Focus, damn it, focus!

And then he remembered, like a punch to the stomach, the dream that had followed the marionette dream. All those strings had turned to streams of water, erupting in a complex of geysers that towered into the sky…

And the image of Com’peer’s lava storm came back to him, and he remembered how he had controlled that image by treating it not as an inner switch, but as a landscape feature of the Flux. He realized now what he needed to do. He could master the welter of inputs—not with the built-in controls, maybe, but by changing it all to image and letting his subconscious take charge. Let it all be streams of water. He didn’t need to conduct an orchestra; he needed to rig through his own mind.

As though in response to his thoughts, the white water image sprang back, and a great gusher of spray went up. For a frozen instant, as the ship dashed through the water, he saw—like a mushroom cloud at the center of his mind—a thundering wave of foam that was not a part of the white water of the Flux at all. It was datastreams from the augments gathered together in a curling wave. He could see, glimmering in its interior, the silver threads of a dozen or more individual inputs. He touched the streams and they bent to his touch. With difficulty at first, then with growing skill, he reshaped them into forms that curved toward him when he wanted them, and out of his way when he didn’t.

He felt the ship coming back under his control. He quickly damped out the back-and-forth yawing, and felt the Narseil behind him slipping into a closer coordination. The three riggers and their ship shot down the Hurricane Flume and out, dropped along a dazzling white waterfall, and spun away downstream. Legroeder laughed in triumph and heard the Narseil hissing their approval, and he knew that he had finally won the lesson, and it was one he would not soon forget.

* * *

For the next two days, his training accelerated to a blur. Battle sims were added to the basic rigging practice, and soon Legroeder was steering the fictitious ship as frantically as he had once piloted a scout ship out of the mine-strewn fortress of Outpost DeNoble. It was something he was good at, and he’d certainly done enough battle flying in captivity, but now he was being tripped up by something altogether different.

It was his rigger-mates, the Narseil.

He had always known that the Narseil had some kind of weird time sense, which was one of the things that made them exceptional riggers; but he’d never encountered it firsthand. They called it, in their own translation to human speech, the tessa’chron, or extended time. A form of temporal persistence, it enabled them to see the “present” as a smear of time fore and aft, ranging from about a second, under ordinary circumstances, to several seconds under stress. Battle, even simulated battle, seemed to bring it out in them. No doubt it was useful to them to have a continuing momentary glimpse into the future; but for Legroeder it meant always feeling half a step behind. The implants helped; they couldn’t give him the same time sense, but they could reinterpret some of the information that the Narseil were pouring into the net. But that meant adjusting to a whole new level of implant function.

It was going to take practice. A lot of practice.

In the meantime, the rigger crew racked up a score of six victories to three losses against programmed enemies, all in encounters in which they were outnumbered and outgunned by their adversaries. Mission Commander Fre’geel pronounced their progress satisfactory, and decreed additional exercises.

* * *

“We’re ready to go,” announced Cantha at breakfast a day later. “We’ll be boarding this evening, and departing during the night.”

The announcement stunned Legroeder.

“Is this a problem? Don’t you feel ready?”

“Well—not to invade a stronghold, no.” Legroeder suddenly felt a desire for a few more days of commando training. He suddenly felt hazy on the actual strategic plans. He suddenly wanted to go lie down in a meadow.

The Narseil chuckled, an almost musical sound. In the days they had spent together, Cantha seemed to have developed a pretty good understanding of Legroeder’s feelings. “None of us feels quite ready, either. Don’t worry, we’ll keep training on the ship. But you know—beyond a certain point, our strategy is going to have to unfold on the fly. If things go according to plan, you and I won’t have to fight; we’ll just follow the marines in.”

“Yeah, well, that’s a nice thought—”

“And between your knowledge of the raiders, and our own skills, I’m hopeful of acquiring some good intelligence and transmitting it out before we’re discovered and destroyed.” Cantha’s tall, amphibious eyes seemed to glimmer with an almost human humor.

“Very funny. Could you please refrain from using the word destroyed when you talk about our chances?”

“If you insist,” said Cantha. “Look, this is our last day here. What would you say to breaking training and having some of our excellent—” he struggled for the correct word “—the closest thing to it, I guess, would be your beer. Do you like beer?”

“I like beer.”

“Then let’s celebrate, my friend.”

* * *

It turned out that all the Narseil involved in the mission were celebrating that day. It also turned out that the average Narseil had a much higher tolerance for alcohol than Legroeder did. He was fairly woozy after just half a glass of what was definitely a fermented beverage, but seemed to him a cross between coconut milk and something called beermalt that was popular in rigger dives. Not only did it carry a kick; the Narseil served it in liter-sized flagons.

Legroeder began nursing his drink, watching the celebration from the sideline. He still wondered what made these Narseil tick, but he had grudgingly come to enjoy the conviviality of their company. Cantha turned out to be something of a singer, and while the singing sounded to Legroeder like the moaning of a walrus, it was well appreciated by the other Narseil. Legroeder sipped his drink and chatted with Korken, the young Narseil who’d been friendly with him on the trip here, who wasn’t coming along on the mission but wished he were; and with Com’peer the surgeon, who wasn’t coming along, either, and didn’t appear the least bit sorry.

After the celebration had gone on for a while, Fre’geel called for silence. A Three Rings priest stood up and spoke for a few minutes in a kind of singsong that might have been a prayer, or poetry, or both; and then Com’peer rose with a Bible in her hand and offered a prayer in Legroeder’s tongue. It sounded vaguely familiar to Legroeder, though he had trouble placing it. A psalm, perhaps?

…When I consider your heavens, the labor of your hands, the celestial bodies you have created, who are these beings that you are mindful of them, mortals that you care for them?

The other Narseil listened in respectful silence as Com’peer read several other psalms, then concluded with a benediction. Legroeder found himself unexpectedly moved by the offering. A moment later, Fre’geel returned and delivered an address that sounded more like a eulogy than a pep talk—except that he then broke into what could only be called a song and dance, jittering across the front of the room, waving a wand that was apparently some sort of data storage device, but looked to Legroeder like a wooden cane.