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‘What did you tell him?’ Scorpio asked.

‘I told him we’d be looking at tens of thousands of casualties if he decided to lift off.’

‘And?’

‘He more or less said “too bad”. His only immediate concern was for the people already aboard the ship.’

‘Fourteen thousand at the last count,’ Blood commented.

‘That doesn’t sound too bad,’ Vasko said. ‘That’s — what? Not far off a tenth of the colony already?’

Blood toyed with his knife. ‘You want to come and help us squeeze in the next five hundred, son, you’re more than welcome.’

‘It’s that difficult?’ Vasko asked.

‘It gets worse with every consignment. We might manage to get it up to twenty thousand by dawn, but only if we start treating them like cattle.’

‘They’re human beings,’ Antoinette said. ‘They deserve better treatment than that. What about the freezers? Aren’t they helping?’

‘The caskets aren’t working as well as they used to,’ Xavier Liu said, addressing his wife exactly as he would any other colony senior. ‘Once they’re cooled down they’re OK, but putting someone under means hours of supervision and tinkering. There’s no way to process them fast enough.’

Antoinette closed her eyes and pressed her fingertips against her eyelids. She saw turquoise rings, like ripples in water. ‘This is about as bad as things can get, isn’t it?’ Then she reopened her eyes and tried to shake some clarity into her head. ‘Scorp — any contact with Remontoire?’

‘Nothing.’

‘But you’re still convinced he’s up there?’

‘I’m not convinced of anything. I’m merely acting on the best intelligence I have.’

‘And you think we’d have seen a sign by now, some attempt to communicate with us, if he were up there.’

‘Khouri was that sign,’ Scorpio said.

‘Then why haven’t they sent down someone else?’ Antoinette replied. ‘We need to know, Scorp: do we sit tight or get the hell off Ararat?’

‘Believe me, I’m aware of the options.’

‘We can’t wait for ever,’ Antoinette said, frustration seeping into her voice. ‘If Remontoire loses the battle, we’ll be looking at a sky full of wolves. No way out once that happens, even if they don’t touch Ararat. We’ll be locked in.’

‘As I said, I’m aware of the options.’

She had heard the menace in his voice. Of course he was aware. ‘I’m sorry,’ she said. ‘I just… don’t know what else we can do.’

No one spoke for a while. Outside, an aircraft swept low overhead, curving away with another consignment of refugees. Antoinette did not know if they were being taken to the ship or the far side of the island. Once the need to get people to safety had been recognised, the evacuation effort had been split down the middle.

‘Did Aura offer anything useful?’ Vasko asked.

Scorpio turned to him, the leather of his uniform creaking. ‘What sort of thing were you thinking of?’

‘It wasn’t Khouri that was the sign,’ Vasko said, ‘it was Aura. Khouri may know things, but Aura is the hotline. She’s the one we really need to talk to, the one who might know the right thing to do.’

‘I’m glad you’ve given the matter so much consideration,’ Scorpio said.

‘Well?’ Vasko persisted.

Antoinette stiffened. The atmosphere in the meeting room had never exactly been relaxed, but now it made the hairs on the back of her hands tingle. She had never dared speak to Scorpio like that, and she did not know many who had.

But Scorpio answered calmly. ‘She — Khouri — said the word again.’

‘The word?’ Vasko repeated.

‘Hela. She’s said it several times since we revived her, but we didn’t know what it meant, or even if it had any particular significance. But there was another word this time.’ Again the leather creaked as he shifted his frame. For all that he appeared disconnected from events in the room, the violence of which he was capable was a palpable thing, waiting in the wings like an actor.

‘The other word?’ Vasko asked.

‘Quaiche,’ Scorpio replied.

The woman walked to the sea. Overhead the sky was a brutal, tortured grey and the rocks under her feet were slippery and unforgiving. She shivered, more in apprehension than cold, for the air was humid and oppressive. She looked behind her, along the shoreline towards the ragged edge of the encampment. The buildings on the fringe of the settlement had a deserted and derelict air to them. Some of them had collapsed and never been reoccupied. She thought it very unlikely that there was anyone around to notice her presence. Not, of course, that it mattered in the slightest. She was entitled to be here, and she was entitled to step into the sea. The fact that she would never have asked this of her own swimmers did not mean that her actions were in any way against colony rules, or even the rules of the swimmer corps. Foolhardy, yes, and very probably futile, but that could not be helped. The pressure to do something had grown inside her like a nagging pain, until it could not be ignored.

It had been Vasko Malinin who had tipped her over the edge. Did he realise the effect his words had had?

Marl Pellerin halted where the shoreline began to curve back around on itself, enclosing the waters of the bay. The shore was a vague grey scratch stretching as far as the eye could see, until it became lost in the mingled wall of sea-mist and cloud that locked in the bay in all directions. The spire of the ship was only intermittently visible in the silvery distance, and its size and remoteness varied from sighting to sighting as her brain struggled to cope with the meagre evidence available to it. Marl knew that the spire reached three kilometres into the sky, but at times it looked no larger than a medium-sized conch structure, or one of the communications antennae that ringed the settlement. She imagined the squall of neutrinos streaming out from the spire — actually from the submerged part of it, of course, where the engines lay underwater — as a shining radiance, a holy light knifing through her. The particles sang through her cell membranes, doing no damage as they sprinted for interstellar space at a hair’s breath below the speed of light. They meant that the engines were gearing up for starflight. Nothing organic could detect those squalls, only the most sensitive kinds of machine. But was that really true? The Juggler organisms — taken as a single planet-spanning entity — constituted a truly vast biomass. The Juggler organisms on a single planet outweighed the cumulative mass of the entire human species by a factor of a hundred. Was it so absurd to think that the Jugglers in their entirety might not be as oblivious to that neutrino flux as people imagined? Perhaps they, too, sensed the Captain’s restlessness. And perhaps in their slow, green, nearly mindless fashion they comprehended something of what his departure would mean.

At the sea’s edge something caught Marl’s eye. She walked over to examine it, skipping nimbly from rock to rock. It was a lump of metal, blackened and twisted like some melted sugar confection, strange folds and creases marring its surface. Smoke coiled up from it. The thing buzzed and crackled, and an articulated part resembling the sectioned tail of a lobster twitched horribly. It must have come down recently, perhaps in the last hour. All around Ararat, wherever there were human observers, one heard reports of things falling from the sky. There were too many near these outposts to be accidental. Efforts were being concentrated above centres of human population. Someone — or something — was trying to get through. Occasionally, some small shard succeeded.