Authors: Piers Anthony
“I can imagine. Trust Polaris to think of something like that.”
The two ships came together. The Scepter, having expended two missiles in the first encounter, was far more cautious this time. “They have only six missiles,” Skot explained.
“I told you!” Yael exclaimed. “A six-shooter!”
Melody closed her eyes. “I've doomed my friend the Drone of
Deuce
to destruction, then. Even if he wins every match, when he runs out of missilesâ”
“Can't ever tell. Canopians are pretty sharp, and they have nerves like tungsten. Maybe the other ship will run out of ammunition too, and it'll be a standoff.”
A standoff. Was there a possibility for stopping the hostage fleet? Get them all to use up their ammunition uselessly?
How
?
Melody liked this situation less as she came to know it better. Yet the alternative was to throw all her ships into the fray against twice their number. To replace single slaughter with mass slaughter.
The Disk fired. The Scepter maintained course, not even firing back. “He's trying to intercept the anchor,” Skot said. “I don't think that stunt will work again, though.”
The Disk fired again. Now the Scepter jettedâbut not evenly. Instead of moving out of the way, it began to turn end over end. “Something's wrong!” Melody cried.
“Drive malfunction,” Skot agreed. “That's unusual in a Canopian ship; they're finicky about details. But those chemical boosters are tricky when they're hot. Only one side came on.”
The Scepter shook. It was only a token, magnified by the imaging mechanism of the globe, but it loomed like a planetquake to Melody's nervous eyes.
“He's anchored!” Skot cried as if feeling the shock of contact himself. “And he never ever fired back!”
The Scepter shook again.
“Second anchor,” Skot said gloomily. “That's the end.”
The Canopian ship twisted in space, tugged by two missiles on strings. The Disk moved in close. “But the ship has not been destroyed,” Melody said hopefully.
“They'll set hull-borers on him, or inject poisonous gas,” Skot said. “A ship anchored is a ship vulnerable. The Scepter will yield in a moment; pointless to stretch out the agony.”
Then the Disk exploded.
Melody and Skot both gaped. “What happened?” Melody demanded, staring at the fragments of ship spread outward.
Skot shook his head. “Sabotage, maybe. I can't figureâ”
Something clicked in Melody's mind. Sabotage.
A Knyfh looked up from his console. “The anchors fastened on opposite sides of the Scepter,” he said. “Their vectors canceled out. A very pretty maneuver on the part of the Canopian.”
“That single jet!” Skot exclaimed. “That was deliberate! To twist the ship so that the anchor misplaced. It seemed like a malfunction.”
“So the Drone won with a single missile this time,” Melody said wonderingly. “But he's playing it extremely close.”
“He has to. With three missiles left, and the entire fleet of Andromeda before him...”
But now the hostage fleet's sole Knyfh Atom came out of the enemy cluster. Melody sighed. “Poor Drone! I have sentenced him to death.”
“We have the right to recall him; he has fought two battles,” Skot pointed out.
Melody activated the net. “
Deuce of Scepters,
you have completed your assignment. Retire from the field.”
“Message declined,” the Drone replied.
Skot stretched his mouth in a way that certain Solarians had to express surprise and respect. “He's staying in the lists! That must be some entity!”
“He is that,” Melody agreed. “I suppose technically this is mutiny, but I'd hesitate to call it that. I have a personal interest in his welfare, and I suppose he feels he own me something. We'll just have to let him perform. He certainly has done well so far.”
The Atom and the Scepter drew close together. This time the Scepter fired first.
“He doesn't dare get within magnetic range,” Skot explained.
“True,” a Knyfh officer agreed. The involvement of a Knyfh ship seemed to have excited their interest. The Knyfh contingent had the best record for loyalty in this fleet, another testimony to the fomidability of the segment.
The atom narrowed the distance, unaffected. “Its repulsive magnetic force makes the missiles shy away,” Skot said. “You have to get very close to score with a physical missile on an Atom, and then you're in its power if you miss.”
The scepter fired again, without effect. “Only one chance left,” Skot said. “If the Scepter can loose a missile just as the Atom starts its pull-phaseâthere!”
The ships drew together more quickly. Then suddenly they reversed. There was an explosion. “The Atom out-timed him,” Skot said sadly. “The missile didn't make it before the field reversed. Now Knyfh will shake Canopus apart.”
Sure enough, the two ships drew together, then apart, then together again. “But the Atom is shaking itself as badly as its opponent,” Melody said.
“The Atom is constructed to take it,” Skot said. “That nucleus and shell system, cushioned by magnetismâyou could just about throw it against the wall and it would bounce.”
“Like Slammer,” Melody said gloomily, and the magnet bobbed behind her, thinking she was addressing him.
“Tougher than Slammer. You can hardly hurt a Knyfh by concussion.”
Melody remembered how readily Captain Mnuhl had stopped Slammer, just as a Solarian with a club might handle an Earth-planet canine. If the hostages had been no more successful with the main fleet of Segment Knyfh than they had been with this small contingent, the loyalists would be secure. Perhaps it would then send out more aid to the other segments, and the Milky Way would be saved. So she was not disappointed to witness the power of the Atom, but oh, why did it have to be demonstrated on the
Deuce of Scepters
?
No miracle strategy saved the Drone this time. He was finished. Finally the Atom hurled the Scepter away. It turned over and over, obviously dead. Andromeda had won this one. “Poor Drone,” Melody said again, feeling the tears in her eyes. “I wishâ”
“Let the Sword of Sol avenge him,” Skot suggested. “The
Four
is with us; that's a bold ship.”
“
Four of Swords
to the lists,” Melody said into the net. Privately to Skot: “I hope you're right. If I had any better way to stave off Andromeda, I'd take it instantly.”
The
Four of Swords
moved out immediately, as if it had been expecting the call. Melody couldn't help experiencing a particular quickening of interest. She was aboard the
Ace of Swords
; just how good a ship was this type?
Sword and Atom moved toward each other. “Why don't any of these ships maneuver more?” she asked.
“It wastes energy and fouls up their spin,” Skot said. “It's hard to turn a spinning ship in space; precession sets in and fouls it up. Better to orient on the target and knock it out fast, and dodge only when you have to.”
Melody again visualized the two gunslingers of Yael's imagination walking grimly toward each other. Dodging bullets was hardly worthwhile; better to shoot fastest and best. Yet she felt somehow disappointed. The contest seemed to lack flair.
The atom exploded, startling her. “The Sword didn't even strike, did it?”
“Lasers don't make recoil,” Skot said. “It was firing as soon as it got within the five-second range. It scored before the Atom could get hold of it. A laser strike in the right place can fission an Atom.”
Melody smiled, but Skot wasn't joking. He spoke with deep pride. Then she looked again at the fragmented ship of Knyfh, and shuddered. No joke at all! Captain Mnuhl was aboard an Atom. If Swords took Atoms so easilyâthe enemy fleet had over twice as many Swords as the loyalists did.
Now a Scepter came out from the Andromedan mass. Melody bit her human lip nervously. She had already seen what a Scepter could do. Somehow she had to stop this destructive exhibition. Thousands of sapient lives were being lost, and for what purpose? Why had Galaxy Andromeda ever set out to take what it had no right to: the binding energy of the Milky Way? Andromeda was surely wrong, and there had to be some way to stop it, to chain the lady and make her behave. Even those ships she used had been pirated from the Milky Way's own fleets, taken hostage.
That was it! She had assumed that the counterhostage effort had to be completed before the battle began. But the enemy was actually more vulnerable now than it had been before. With proper strategy, she could destroy its fleet without the loss of any more of her own ships.
“I have to go see Captain Mnuhl,” she said, rising. “You keep an eye on things here; don't let on to the net that I'm gone.”
Skot nodded. She hurried to the transfer unit, and a Knyfh officer activated it. She landed in the same host she had had before, and in a moment met with Mnuhl.
“I declined to honor the Galactic Convention,” she reminded him. “Does that mean there are no rules to break?”
“Anything, as you Etamins put it, goes,” Mnuhl agreed. “However, while the individual contests are in progress we are under an understood truce.”
“Yes, of course,” she signaled. “But when that truce ends?”
“Only the practical laws of physics prevail,” Mnuhl said. “No, I must qualify that. I would not condone treachery.”
“Nothing like that! Here is what I have in mind.” And while she kept one perceptor current attuned to the Knyfh equivalent of the viewglobe, tracking the single combat of champions, she described her plan.
“That is legitimate,” Mnuhl agreed at last. “I shall implement it the moment truce abates. I compliment you on an innovative strategy.”
“It is a desperation strategy,” Melody said. “I can't stand to seeâ”
The Scepter exploded. The sudden burst of magnetism made her shield blanch.
“One of its own missiles detonated before it fired, Mnuhl remarked. “Exceedingly apt laser accuracy at that range.”
“The Sword of Sol strikes again!” Melody said, pleased in spite of her horror. She was slowly getting acclimatized to this sudden, massive killing. “That's four to one, our favor. Do you think our management is better than theirs?”
“It may be,” Mnuhl pulsed. “A hostage probably is not as efficient or motivated as a natural entity or volunteer transferee. This could throw judgment off, make close decisions harder, gunnery less accurate, encourage errors under stress. I would not wish to take an examination on marksmanship with a hostile or insane host dephasing my surface.”
“So maybe that two-to-one ship advantage of theirs is not so much as they think,” Melody said. “I'm better get back to my ship.” She rolled to the transfer unit, and in a moment was back in Yael. She hurried to the control room.
“We won that last,” Skot announced. “But now they're sending out another Sword.”
“You seem to enjoy the prospect.”
He looked embarrassed. “At least this is fair play. If our handling is better, this will show it.”
“I suppose it will,” Melody agreed. “Skot, please get in touch with the crew's quarters and get some more volunteers. They'd better have Kirlians of at least two. Make sure they understand that this will be dangerous, uncomfortable work, but extremely important.”
He looked curiously at her and left after a last glance at the viewglobe. Melody knew he wanted to watch this particular match, but her other project was more pressing. She could have set it up herself, but if Hammer of :: called her on the net while she was away he might catch on that she was up to something.
The two Swords approached each other, and again she watched compulsively. While she hated this destruction and loss of sapient life, and the emotions it roused in her, she was nevertheless fascinated by the competitive aspect. All sapient species were highly competitive, she thought; that was how they got to be sapient. Every Spherical species lusted for death and glory, however much individuals disguised it with the veneer or civilization. If even an old neuter like herself felt the urges, what of the young males?
The hostage Sword fired first. Melody had learned to interpret the flash on the globe. It could not be a direct glimpse, for that would mean the laser had struck her own ship; but there was always some trace leakage and refraction that the instruments could pick up and amplify. Lasers were designed to diffuse with distance, so that those that missed their targets were not a menace to other ships of their own fleets. Missiles were also detonated or defused automatically after a certain number of minutes, for the same reason.
The hostage bolt missed. Now the
Four of Swords
firedâand scored. There was a bright splay of light as the globe amplified the reflecting beam. But though struck, the hostage was not dead. The trouble with lasers, she realized, was that unless they struck a vulnerable section, they didn't do much damage. It took several scores to put away an opponent, and in that time the enemy might reverse the advantage by a good or lucky shot of his own.
So there really was no inherently superior weapon, she concluded. The lasers had speed and range, being impossible to avoid or intercept, but no punch. The missiles had plenty of punch, but could be dodged or triggered prematurely. The magnetic fields were fast and could not be avoided, but their range was short. So it all came out even, with a good sharp ship of any type able to overcome a sloppy one of any other type. Chance was a considerable factor. Ideally, ships should fight in sets, with a Sword to snipe long distance and an Atom to handle any enemy ship that tried to move in close. But that led right back to the present mixed-composition fleet.
The two Swords were very close now, within a thousand miles of each other. Both were firing and scoring, but neither was disabled. In moments one of them would die, though both had been built in the shipyards of Sphere Sol and were crewed primarily by Solarians. Whoever won, Solarians would die. Friend was killing friend.