“I think you’re running scared, Kim. I’m disappointed in you. But after what you’ve been through, I can understand—”
“Don’t be stupid, Sheyel. This may be the thing that killed Emily and Yoshi. Look, let’s take the night to talk about it. Go up to Eagle Point. Hear me out. If you still want to do this tomorrow, then okay, I’m with you.”
She watched the lights of his flyer disappear below the trees. “Kim, do you know for sure of anyone it has attacked?”
“No. But—”
“There you are then. We’re going to make history tonight, you and I. Are you with me?”
“Sheyel—”
“Do you know what I have on board?”
“Yes,” she said. “I know.”
“No, I don’t think you do. You think I have a replica of the celestial.”
“No. You have the ship itself.”
“Oh.” She heard the respect in his voice. “Well done, Kimberly. Well done indeed. How long have you known?”
She was tempted to lie, to tell him she’d realized, as he undoubtedly had, from the moment she found out there were identical ships on the mural and in Tripley’s office. “I’ve known for a while,” she said. “You didn’t tell me the whole truth, did you?”
“You mean about my conversation with Yoshi? Yes, that’s so. I did hedge a bit. She told me they’d brought back a ship. But she wouldn’t answer any questions. Told me I’d have all the details soon enough.”
“What did you think? That they’d hidden it in the outer system somewhere?”
“To be honest, Kim, I didn’t know what to think. I suspected maybe they’d brought back something completely different from what we’d expect. And I wasn’t sure they hadn’t hidden it in the lake. It’s why I came here so often.” She heard his engine shut off and his door open. “Now, I have to get set up. Come join me if you want.”
“I wish you wouldn’t do this, Sheyel.” She ordered her flyer to lift off, to find the other vehicle and land beside it. It left the ground and followed the shoreline east.
Sheyel’s aircraft was down on Cabry’s Beach, where she and Solly had landed. “Careful,” Kim pointlessly cautioned her own vehicle. There wasn’t much room left. And then to Sheyeclass="underline" “We don’t know what this thing might be able to do if it gets access to the microship.”
“It won’t go anywhere with this.” He was out of the flyer, dragging a packing case down from the cargo compartment.
“Why not?” Her aircraft settled into weeds and high grass, and she popped open the door and jumped out.
“Because I’ve scanned it. It has an antimatter power source. But there’s no fuel. No antimatter.”
“Oh.”
“So now we know what blew the face off Mount Hope, right?”
“I guess we do.”
He pulled a collapsible table from the flyer, locked its legs in place, and set it on the sand at the water’s edge. He pushed on it to make sure it was stable.
Now he opened the case, moved the packing out of the way, and lifted out the Valiant. He gazed at it with affection and reverence, and put it on the tabletop.
Kim could have seized it by force. She could have thrown it into the back of her own aircraft and gotten out of there with it. But something stopped her, an inability to defy her old teacher, a need to see what might happen, perhaps simply a reluctance to make the decision.
Whatever the reason, she chose not to act.
He brought out a battery-powered lamp, set it on the table beside the spacecraft, and snapped it on. The Valiant sparkled. Kim walked toward it, trying to grasp what she knew to be true: that it was a vessel built by celestials. That it had traveled among the stars. That it had housed an entity like the one that had stalked the corridors of the Hammersmith.
Sheyel watched her carefully. For the first time she read distrust in his eyes. “It’s beautiful, isn’t it?” he asked.
“You said you’ve scanned it. What’s inside?”
“Other than the dimensions, and the propulsion system, or lack thereof, it could almost be one of ours. Control room, individual quarters, pilot’s room of some sort. No chairs. Nothing to sit on.”
“What about the propulsion system?”
“I can’t find one. But that just means we need some experts to look at it.”
Kim thought about Kane’s offer to assist. “It must have been in trouble when the Hunter found them.”
“Why do you—?” Something out on the lake caught his eye. She followed his gaze and saw a reflection. Possibly distant lightning. She looked off toward Mount Hope and saw flashes around its summit.
“Do you have pictures of the interior?” she asked.
He was slow to look back toward her. “Yes.”
“May I see them?”
“Of course.” But he made no move to get them. His attention had returned to the lake.
She saw again the luminous patch. Far out, but brighter this time.
Uh-oh.
His right arm went slowly up in a gesture of triumph.
It might have been a cloud of fireflies, out on the water, but it moved with unnerving precision, a spiral mounting up as she watched, a cloud, a fog, a mist.
Sheyel raised both hands to welcome it.
“Back off,” said Kim. “Get into the flyer.”
The cloud was alive with tiny stars, floating, moving, swirling.
It was growing noticeably larger. And brighter.
“Coming this way,” said Kim.
“Hello,” he called. His voice echoed in the night. “I know you can’t understand me. But we need to talk.”
The cloud was lovely, but its purposeful advance filled Kim with alarm.
“We brought your ship.” Sheyel half-turned to indicate the Valiant.
The wind picked up and the trees shuddered. Kim was suddenly aware that another flyer was setting down back in the trees somewhere. It was the Cloudrider. Its lights blinked off and the engine died. Sheyel was too preoccupied to notice.
Moments later, three figures, two men and a woman, appeared out of the woods. They surveyed the situation and fanned out. Kim thought she could see weapons. And then a fourth person came out of the trees.
Tripley.
“We want to talk to you.” Sheyel continued to address the manifestation. “We are your friends.”
The cloud kept coming.
Kim measured the distance between the Valiant and her flyer and the angle the intruders had if she decided to grab the starship and run.
Tripley stood watching, his gaze shifting between Sheyel and the cloud. Apparently he wasn’t as dumb as she’d thought.
The cloud was now just a few meters off the beach. It floated on the water, almost, she thought, taking sustenance from it. Several patches of internal luminescence formed, distributed randomly through its upper levels, and as she watched they became eyes, the same eyes she’d seen in Kane’s sunken villa.
Everyone on the beach froze.
The eyes were deranged. This was not the cool malevolence she’d seen on the Hammersmith. This was pure madness.
Kim edged closer to her flyer.
Where the entity touched the lake surface the water misted and swirled, and Kim recalled the missing footprints on her first visit to the area.
Tripley moved up beside her. “My God, Kim,” he whispered, “what is that thing?” The people who were with him brought weapons to bear. They wore gray uniforms, and they looked efficient. The woman was only a few meters away. Her name patch identified her as BRICKER.
“I think it was the crew of the Valiant,” Kim said, recognizing that Tripley’s presence demonstrated that he now knew the truth about his model. She was pleased that her voice sounded almost normal. “I’m glad you brought help.”
“Security. I thought the thief might be dangerous.”
“You followed me.”
“Of course. You have a number of talents, Kim. But acting is not among them.”
Sheyel stumbled forward into the water, advancing on it. He was continuing to talk to it, raising his hands in greeting. The emerald glow alternately intensified and faded, as if a great heart were beating somewhere within.