“Intrigued, we sent a submarine expedition beyond the Rift. Our explorers followed one of your dross ships, collecting samples from its sacred discharge. Then, returning to base, our scout vessel happened on the urrish ‘cache’ you were sent to recover. Naturally, we assumed the original owners must be extinct.”
“Oh?” Ur-ronn asked, archly. “Why is that?”
“Because we had seen living hoon! Who would conceive of urs and hoon cohabiting peacefully within a shared volume less broad than a cubic parsec? If hoon lived, we assumed all urs on Jijo must have died.”
“Oh,” Ur-ronn commented, turning her long neck to glare at me.
“Imagine our surprise when a crude vessel plummeted toward our submarine. A hollowed-out tree trunk containing—”
The voice cut off. The remote unit was in motion again. We edged forward as the camera eye skittered across sand mixed with scrubby vegetation.
“Hey,” Ur-ronn objected. “I thought you couldn’t use radio or anything that can ve detected from sface!”
“Correct.”
“Then how are you getting these fictures in real tine?”
“An excellent question, coming from one with no direct experience in such matters. In this case, the drone needs only to travel a kilometer or so ashore. It can deploy a fiber cable, conveying images undetectably.”
I twitched. Something in the words just spoken jarred me, in an eerie-familiar way.
“Does it have to do with the exflosions?” Ur-ronn asked. “The recent attack on this site vy those who would destroy you?”
The spinning shape contracted, then expanded.
“You four truly are quick and imaginative. It has been an unusual experience conversing with you. And I was created to appreciate unusual experiences.”
“In other words, yes,” Huck said gruffly.
“Some time ago, a flying machine began sifting this sea with tentacles of sound. Hours later, it switched to dropping depth charges in a clear effort to dislodge us from our mound of concealing wreckage.
“Matters were growing dire when gravitic fields of a second craft entered the area. We picked up rhythms of aerial combat. Missiles and deadly rays were exchanged in a brief, desperate struggle.”
Pincer rocked from foot to foot. “Gosh-osh-osh!” he sighed, ruining our pose of nonchalance.
“Then both vessels abruptly stopped flying. Their inertial signatures ceased close to the drone’s present location.”
“How close?” Ur-ronn asked.
“Very close,” the voice replied.
Transfixed, we watched a hypnotic scene of rapid motion. An ankle-high panorama of scrubby plants, whipping past with blurry speed. The camera eye dodged clumps of saber fronds, skittering with frantic speed, as the drone sought height overlooking a vast marshy fen.
All at once, a glint of silver! Two glints. Curving flanks of—
That was when it happened.
Without warning, just as we had our first thrilling glimpse of crashed flyships, the screen was abruptly filled by a grinning face.
We rocked back, shouting in surprise. I recoiled so fast, even the high-tech back brace could not save my spine from surging pain. Huphu’s claws dug in my shoulder as she trilled an amazed cry.
The face bared a glittering, gleeful display of pointy teeth. Black, beady eyes stared at us, inanely magnified, so full of feral amusement that we all groaned with recognition.
Our tiny drone pitched, trying to escape, but the grinning demon held it firmly with both forepaws. The creature raised sharp claws, preparing to strike.
The spinning voice spoke then — a sound that flew out, then came back to us through the drone’s tiny pickups. There were just three words, in a queerly accented form of GalSeven, very high-pitched, almost beyond a hoon’s range.
“Brother,” the voice said quickly to the strange noor.
“Please stop.”
Ewasx
WORD COMES THAT WE HAVE LOST TRACK OF A CORVETTE!
Our light cruiser sent to pursue an aircraft of the Rothen bandits.
Trouble was not anticipated in such a routine chore. It raises disturbing questions. Might we have underestimated the prowess of this brigand band?
You, our second ring-of-cognition — you provide access to many memories and thoughts once accumulated by our stack, before I joined to become your master ring. Memories from a time when we/you were merely Asx.
You recall hearing the human gene thieves making preposterous claims. For instance, that their patrons — these mysterious “Rothen”—are unknown to Galactic society at large. That the Rothen wield strong influence in hidden ways. That they scarcely fear the mighty battle fleets of the great clans of the Five Galaxies.
We of the battleship Polkjhy heard similar tall tales before arriving at this world. We took it all for mere bluff. A pathetic cover story, attempting futilely to hide the outlaws’ true identity.
BUT WHAT IF THE STORY IS TRUE?
No one can doubt that mysterious forces do exist — ancient, aloof, influential. Might we have crossed fates with some cryptic power, here in an abandoned galaxy, far from home?