“Unless you’re a lightning rod!”
Perkin relaxed, a little ashamed for having distrusted her. “I’ll keep you informed, Lunzie. You may count on it. But what about my leg here?”
She pointed to the discolouration on his skin. “Well then, except for the aurora borealis, and no one need know about that but you and your roommate, there will be nothing to draw attention to your er, mishap,” Lunzie said, reseating his magnetic seams. “There’s no permanent damage of any kind. The leg will be stiff for a while until the haematoma subsides, and there might be some pain. If the pain gets too bad, take the analgesic which I’m programming into your cabin synthesiser, but no more than once a shift.”
“Make me high, will it?” the engineer asked, pushing himself off the table with extra care for his sore leg.
“A little. But more importantly, it will stop up your bowels better than an oatmeal-and-banana sandwich,” Lunzie answered, her eyes dancing merrily. “I never prescribe that mix for young Seti. They have enough problems with human-dominated menus as it is.”
Perkin chuckled. “So they do. I had one working for me once. He was always suffering. The cooks grew senna for him. Didn’t know much about him other than that. They’re the most private species I’ve ever known.”
“If you like, I’ll also give you a liniment to rub in your leg following a good hot soak.”
“Thank you, Lunzie.” Perkin accepted the plastic packet Lunzie handed him and slipped out the door past the next patient waiting to see the doctor.
After that day, Lunzie began to notice things about the ship which weren’t quite right. It was hard to tell under all the ornamentation, but the clues were there for eyes paying attention. Perkin was right about the lack of maintenance on ship’s systems. There was a persistent leak in the decks around the methane environment, which made various passengers complain of the smell in the hallway near the fitness center. Perkin and the other engineers shrugged as they put one more temporary seal on the cracks, and promised to keep the problem under control until they made the next port with repair facilities, months away at Alpha Centauri.
Lunzie began to worry whether there was a chance that the ship might fail somewhere en route to Alpha Centauri. The odds of meeting with a space accident twice in a lifetime were in the millions, but it still niggled at her. It couldn’t happen to her again, could it? She hoped Perkin was exaggerating his concerns. With an uncomfortable feeling that ill fate was just past the next benchmark, Lunzie started listening more intently to the evacuation instructions. True to her word, she didn’t mention Perkin’s confidences to anyone else, but she kept her eyes open.
Seating arrangements in the dining room had been changed over the course of the last month. Lunzie, Admiral Coromell, and Baraki Don had been given seats at the Captain’s table, presided over at the early seating by the First Mate. This was a distinguished woman of colour who was probably of an age with Commander Don. First Mate Sharu was very small of stature. The top of her head was on a level with Lunzie’s chin. Sharu wore a snugly cut long evening dress of the same regimental purple as her uniform. Her military bearing suggested that she had been in the service before coming to Destiny Cruise Lines. The ornate gold braid at the wrist of the single sleeve showed her rank, and hid a small, powerful communicator, which she employed to keep in touch with the ship’s bridge during the meal. The other arm, which bore a brilliantly cut diamond bangle, was bare to the shoulder. To Lunzie’s delight, Sharu, too, loved a good yarn, so Coromell had a responsive audience for his tales.
Not that he appeared to appreciate it. He was still grouchy at times, and occasionally snapped at them for humouring an old man. After a while, Lunzie stopped protesting her innocence and turned the tables on him.
“Maybe I am just humouring you,” she told Coromell airily, who stopped in full harangue and glared at her in surprise. “I’ve gone to school lectures where there was more of a dialogue than you allow. We have opinions, too. Once in a while I’d like to voice one.”
“Heh, heh, heh! Methinks I do protest too much, eh?” Coromell chortled approvingly. “That’s Shakespeare, for all you beings too young to have read any. Well, well. Perhaps I’m at the age when I’m at the mercy of my environment, in a world for which I have insufficient say any more, and I don’t like it. Rather like those poor heavyworlder creatures, wouldn’t you say?”
Lunzie perked up immediately at the phrase. “What about the heavyworlders. Admiral?”
“Had a few serving under me in my last command. When was that, eight, ten years ago, Don?”
“Fourteen, Admiral.” Coromell thrust his jaw out and counted the years on the ceiling. “So it was. Damn those desk jobs. They make you lose all track of intervening time. Heavyworlders! Bad idea, that. Shouldn’t adapt people to worlds. You should adapt worlds to people. What God intended, after all!”
“Terraforming takes too long. Admiral,” Sharu put in, reasonably. “The worlds the heavyworlders live on are good for human habitation, except for the gravity. They were created to adapt to that.”
“Yes, created! Created a minority, that’s what they did,” the Admiral sputtered. “We have enough trouble in politics with partisanship anyway. Just when you have all the subgroups there are already getting used to each other, you throw in another one, and start the whole mess over. You’ve got people screaming about that Phoenix disaster, saying that the heavyworlders were dancing on the graves of the lightweights who were there before ‘em, but you can bet they paid a hefty finder’s fee to whoever helped them make landfall - probably a goodly percentage of their export income to boot.”
“I’ve heard that planet pirates destroyed the first settlement,” Lunzie said, angrily remembering the anguished two years she had spent believing that Fiona had been one of the dead on Phoenix.
“Doctor, you may believe it. Probably they cut off Phoenix’s communications with the outside first, destroying their support system, traders and so on. Soon as a planet’s population can’t take care of itself, the rights go to the next group who can. My ship got the mayday from a merchant ship being chased by a pirate outside of the Eridani system. They had been damaged pretty heavily, but they were still hauling ions when we came on the scene. My communications officer kept up chatter with their bridge for three weeks until we could come to the rescue. Lose your spirit, lose the war, that’s what I say!”
“Did you capture the pirate?” Lunzie asked eagerly, leaning forward.
The Admiral shook his head regretfully. “Sunspots, no. That’d have been a pretty star on my bow if we had. We engaged them as they streaked after the merchant ship, exchanging fire. That poor little merchant begged heaven’s blessings down on us, and scooted! The pirate had no choice. He couldn’t turn his back on me again. My ship was holed, but no lives were lost. The pirate wasn’t so lucky. I saw hull plates and other debris shoot away from the body of his ship, and the frayed edges curled, imploded! Must have been an atmosphered chamber, which meant crew. I hope to heaven it didn’t mean prisoners.
“Whatever they had in their engines, ours was better. We chased them outside the system into the radiation belt, we chased them past comets. Finally, my gunner struck their port engine. They spiralled in circles for a couple of turns, and got back on a steady course, but my gunner hit them again. Dead in the water. As soon as we relayed to them that we were going to board them with a prize crew, they blew themselves up!” The Admiral held out his hands before him, cupping air. “I had them like this, so close! No captain has ever succeeded in capturing a planet pirate. But I flatter myself, that if I couldn’t, no man can.”
“You do flatter yourself. Admiral,” Sham remarked flippantly. “But most likely, you’re right.”
Lunzie still joined the Admiral and his aide in the holo-room during the evenings after she held infirmary call. Coromell had two favourite holos he requested in the alcove in which he and Don spent the hours before turning in. The first was the bridge of his flagship, the Federation. The second appeared when Lunzie suspected that Coromell was in a pensive mood. It was a roaring fireplace with a broad tiled hearth and an ornamented copper hood set in a stone-and-brick wall.
The quality hologram system was equipped with temperature and olfactory controls as well as visual display. She could smell the burning hardwoods and feel the heat of the flames as she took a seat in the third of the deep, cushiony armchairs furnished in the alcove. Don stood up as she approached, and signalled a server to bring her a drink. As she suspected, Coromell sat bent with one elbow on his knee and a balloon glass in the other hand, staring into the dance of shadows and lights and listening to the soft music playing in the background. He hadn’t noticed her arrive. Lunzie waited a little while, watching him. He looked pensive and rather sad.
“What are you thinking of. Admiral?” Lunzie asked in a soft voice.
“Hm? Oh, Doctor. Nothing. Nothing of importance. Just thinking of my son He’s in the service. Means to go far, too, and see if he doesn’t.”
“You miss him,” she suggested, intuitively sensing that the old man wanted to talk.
“Dammit, I do. He’s a fine young man. You’re about his age, I’d say. You . . . you don’t have any children, do you?”
“Just one; a daughter. I’m meeting her on Alpha Centauri.”
“A little girl, eh? You look so young.” Coromell coughed self-deprecatingly. “Of course, at my age, everyone looks young.”
“Admiral, I’m closer to your age than to your son’s.” Lunzie shrugged. “It’s in the ship’s records; you could find out if you wanted. I’ve been through cold sleep. My little girl will be seventy-eight on her next birthday.”
“You don’t say? Well, well, that’s why you understand all the ancient history I’ve been spouting. You’ve been there. We should talk about old times.” The Admiral shot her a look of lonely appeal which touched Lunzie’s heart. “There are so few left who remember. I’d consider it a personal favour.”
“Admiral, I’d be doing it out of blatant self-interest. I’ve only been in this century two years.”
“Hmph! I feel as though I’ve been on this ship that long. Where are we bound for?”
“Sybaris Planet. It’s a luxury spa. . . .”
“I know what it is,” Coromell interrupted her impatiently. “Another dumping ground for the useless rich. Phah! When I get to be that helpless you can arrange for my eulogy.”
Lunzie smiled. The server bowed next to her, presenting a deep balloon glass like the one the Admiral had, washed a scant half inch across the bottom with a rich, ruddy amber liquid. It was an excellent rare brandy. Delicate vapours wafted out of the glass headily as the liquid warmed in the heat from the fire. Lunzie took a very small sip and felt that heat travel down her throat. She closed her eyes.
“Like it?” Coromell rumbled.
“Very nice. I don’t usually indulge in anything this strong.”
“Hmph. Truth is, neither do I. Never drank on duty.” Coromell cupped the glass in his big hand and swirled the brandy gently under his nose before tipping it up to drink. “But today I felt a little self-indulgent.”
Lunzie became aware suddenly that the background music had changed. Under the lull of the music was a discreet jingling that could have been mistaken for a technical fault by anyone but a member of the crew. To the crew, it meant impending disaster. Lunzie set down her glass and looked around the shadows.
“Chibor!” She hailed a mate of Perkin’s staff who was passing through the immense chamber. She looked up at the sound of her voice and waved. “I was looking for you, Lunzie. Perkin told me . . .”
“Yes! The alarm. What is it? You can speak in front of the Admiral. He doesn’t scare easily.”
Coromell straightened up, and set aside his glass. “No, indeed. What’s in the wind?”
Chibor signalled for a more discreet tone and leaned toward her. “You know about the engine trouble we’ve been having. It was giving off some weird harmonics, so we had to turn it off and drop out of warp early. There’s no way to get back into warp for a while until it’s been tuned, and we jumped right into the path of an ion storm. It’s moving toward us pretty fast. The navigator accidentally let us drift into its perimeters, and it’s playing merry hell with the antimatter drives. We’re heading behind the gas giant in the system to shield us until it passes.”
“Will that work?” Lunzie asked, her eyes huge and worried. She fought down the clutch of fear in her guts.
“May do,” Coromell answered calmly, interrupting Chibor. “May not.”
“We’re preparing to go to emergency systems. Perkin said you’d want to know.” Chibor nodded and rushed away. Lunzie watched her go. No one else noticed her enter or leave the holo-room. They were involved in their own pursuits.
“I’d better go up and see what is going on,” Lunzie said. “Excuse me, Admiral.”
The gas giant of Carson’s System was as huge and as spectacular as promised. The rapidly rotating planet had a solid core deep inside an envelope of swirling gases thousands of miles thick. A few of her fellow passengers had gathered on the ship’s gallery to view it through the thick quartz port.
The captain of the Destiny Calls increased the ship’s velocity to match the planet’s two-hour period of rotation and followed a landmark in the gas layer, the starting point of a pair of horizontal black stripes, around to the sunward side of the planet, where they stood off, and held a position behind the planet’s protective bulk. The green-and-yellow giant was just short of being a star, lacking only a small increase in mass or primary ignition. The planet’s orbit was much closer to the system’s sun than was common with most gas giants, and the sun itself burned an actinic white on the ship’s screens. Telemetry warned of lashing arms of magnetic disturbance that kicked outward from the gaseous surface. This was the only formed planet in this system, and ships passing by were required to use it when aligning for their final jump through the sparsely starred region to Sybaris. Still the planet’s rapid rotation and the massive magnetic field it generated meant that here gases and radiation churned constantly, even on its dark side. Lunzie suspected they were closer to the planet, which filled half the viewport, than was normal, but said nothing. Other passengers, the more well-travelled looking ones, seemed concerned as well. The captain appeared a few minutes later, a forced smile belying his attempts to calm his passengers’ fears.
“Gentlebeings,” Captain Wynline said, wryly, watching the giant’s surface spin beneath them. “Due to technical considerations, we were forced to drop out of warp at this point. But as a result, we are able to offer you a fabulous view seen by only a few since it was discovered: Carson’s Giant. This gas giant should have been a second sun, making this system a binary without planets, but it never ignited, thereby leaving us with a galactic wonder, for study and speculation. Oh . . . and don’t anybody drop a match.”
The passengers watching the huge globe revolve chuckled and whispered among themselves.
The Destiny waited behind the gas giant’s rapidly spinning globe until they were sure that the particularly violent ion storm had swirled past and moved entirely out of the ecliptic. The first edges of the storm, which an unmanned monitor had warned them of the instant they had entered normal space, filled the dark sky around the giant with a dancing aurora.
“Captain!” Telemetry Officer Hord entered the gallery and stood next to the captain. “Another major solar flare on the sun’s surface! That’ll play havoc with the planet’s magnetic field,” he offered softly, and then paused, watching to see how the captain reacted. The chief officer didn’t seem overly concerned. “This will combine with the effects of the ion storm, sir,” he added, when no response was forth-coming.
“I’m aware of the ramifications, Hord,” the captain assured him and tripped his collar mike. He spoke decisively in a low voice. Lunzie noticed the change in his hearty tone and moved closer to listen. The captain observed her, but saw only another crew member, and continued with his commands. “Helm, try to manoeuvre us away from the worst of this. Use whatever drives are ready and tuned. Telemetry, tell us when the storm’s passed by enough to venture out again. I don’t like this a bit. Computer systems, get the ceramic brick hard copies of our programming out of mothballs. Just in case. Inform Engineering. What’s the period for magnetic disturbance reaching us from the sun, Hord?”
“Nine hours, sir. But the flame disturbances are coming pretty close together. I estimate that some are coming toward us already. There’s no way to tell, too much noise to get anything meaningful from the monitor.” Both officers looked worried now. The com-unit on the captain’s collar bleeped. “Engineering here. Captain. We’re getting magnetic interference in the drives. The antimatter bottle is becoming unstable. I’m bringing in portable units to step it up.” The captain wiped his forehead. “So it’s begun. We can’t depend on the containment systems. Prepare to evacuate the ship. Sound the alarms, but don’t launch. Gentlebeings!” Everyone on the gallery looked up expectantly. “There has been a development. Will you please return immediately to your quarters, and wait for an announcement. Now, please.”
As soon as the gallery cleared, the captain ordered the Communications Officer to make the announcement over shipwide comsystems. When Lunzie turned toward the gallery’s door to go back to the holochamber, everything went dark, as the ship abruptly went onto battery. The emergency lights glowed red for a brief instant in the corners and around the hatchway.
“What the hell was that?” the captain demanded as the full lights came back on.
“Overload, probably from the solar flares,” Hord snapped out, monitoring his readouts on his portable remote unit. “We’ll lose the computer memory if that happens again. Watch out, here it goes!”
Lunzie dashed back toward her cabin through flickering lights. Interstellar travel is safer than taking a bath, less accidents per million, she repeated the often-advertised claim to reassure herself. No one was ever in two incidents, not in this modern age. Every vessel, even one as old as the Destiny, was double-checked and had triple back-ups on every circuit.
“Attention please,” announced the calm voice of the Communications Officer, cutting through the incidental music and all the video and Tri-D programs. “Attention. Please leave your present locations immediately and make your way to the lifeboat stations. Please leave your present locations and make your way to the lifeboat stations. This is not a drill. Do not use the turbovators as they may not continue to function. Repeat, do not use the turbovators.” The voice was interrupted occasionally by crackling, and faded out entirely at one point.
“What was that?” A passenger noticed Lunzie’s uniform and grabbed her arm. “I saw the lights go down. There’s something wrong, isn’t there?”
“Please, sir. Go to the lifeboat stations right now. Do you remember your team number?”
“Five B. Yes, it was Five B.” The man’s eyes went huge. “Do you mean there’s a real emergency?”
Lunzie shuddered. “I hope not, sir. Please, go. They’ll tell you what’s going on when you’re in your place. Hurry!” She turned around and ran with him to the dining hall level.
The message continued to repeat over the loud-speakers.
The corridor filled instantly with hundreds of humanoids, hurrying in all directions. Some seemed to have forgotten not only which stations they were assigned to, but where the dining hall was. Emergency chase lights were intermittent, but they provided a directional beacon for the terrified passengers to follow. There were cries and groans as the passengers tried to speculate on what was happening.
The crowd huddled in the gigantic holo-room near the metal double doors to the dining room, milling about, directionless, babbling among themselves in fear. The holo-room was the largest open space on the level, and could be used for illusions to entertain thousands of people. At one end of the room, several dozen humans, unaware that anything was going on around them, were fending off holographic bandits with realistic-looking swords. In a cave just next to the doors in the dining room, a knot of costumed cavedwellers huddled together over a stick fire. At that moment, the illusion projectors in the alcoves shut off, eliciting loud protests from viewers as their varied fantasies disappeared, leaving the room a bare, ghost-gray shell with a few pieces of real furniture here and there. The costumed figures stood up, looking around for ship personnel to fix the problem, and saw the crowds bearing down on them into the newly opened space. They panicked and broke for the exits. More passengers appeared, trying to shove past them into the dining hall, yelling. Fights began among them. Into the midst of this came the child-caretakers with their charges. The head of child care, a thin Human male, spoke through a portable loudspeaker, paging each parent one at a time to come and retrieve its offspring.
“Listen up!” Coromell appeared from his alcove with Don behind him. “Listen!” His deep voice cut across the screaming and the mechanical whine of overtaxed life support systems. “Now listen! Everyone calm down. Calm down, I say! You all ignored the emergency procedures in the dining hall. Those of you who know what to do, proceed to your stations, NOW! Those of you who don’t know what to do, pipe down so you can hear instructions over the loudspeakers. Move it! That is all!”
“The doors are shut! We can’t get through!” a large Human woman wailed.
“Just hold your water! Look! They’re opening right now.”
The engineers appeared in a widening gap between the huge double metal blast doors between the holo-room and the oxygen-breathers’ dining hall. The crowd, considerably quieter, rushed through, grabbing oxygen equipment from crew lined up on either side of the doors. Stewards directed them to the irised-open hatchways of the escape capsules and ordered them to sit down.
Coromell, with Don’s help, continued to direct the flow of traffic, pushing water-breathers in bubble-suits and frantically shapechanging Weft passengers toward the access stairway to the water environment.
“Attention, please, this is the captain,” the chief officer’s voice boomed over the public address system. “Please proceed calmly to your assigned evacuation pod. This will be a temporary measure. Please follow the instructions of the crew. Thank you.”
In the midst of the screaming and shouting, Lunzie heard frantic cries for help. She forced her way through the press of beings to a little girl who had tripped and fallen, and was unable to get up again. She had nearly been trampled. Her face was bruised and she was crying. Shouting words of comfort, Lunzie picked her up high and handed her over the heads of the crowd to her shrieking mother. Don escorted the woman and child into the dining room and saw them onto a capsule. As the escape vehicles filled, the hatches irised closed, and the pods were sealed. It was an abrupt change from the leisurely pace of the luxury liner, and most people were not making the transition well. Lunzie hurried back and forth throughout the huge chamber with an emergency medical kit from a hatch hidden behind an ornate tapestry. She splinted the limbs of trampled victims long enough to get them through the door and slapped bandages on cuts and scrapes suffered by passengers who had had to climb out of the turbovators through accessways in the ceiling. She dispensed mild sedatives for passengers who were clearly on the edge of hysteria.
“Just enough to calm you,” she explained, keeping a placid smile on her face though she too was terrified. “Everything is going to be all right. This is standard procedure.” Space accident! This could not be happening to her again.
“My jewelry!” a blue-haired Human woman screamed as she was dragged toward the dining hall by a young man in formal clothing. “All of it is still in my cabin. We must go back!” She pulled her hand out of the young man’s grip and made to dash back toward the cabins. “Stop her!” the man shouted. “Lady Cholder, no!”
The woman was borne back toward him on the wave of panicked passengers, but still struggled to move upstream. “I can’t leave my jewelry!”
Lunzie seized her arm as soon as it was within reach and pressed the hypo to it. The woman moved her lips, trying to speak, but she collapsed between Lunzie and the young man. He looked quizzically from Lady Cholder to Lunzie.
“She’ll sleep for about an hour. The sedative has no permanent effects. By then, you’ll be well into space. The distress beacon is already broadcasting,” Lunzie explained. “Just try to keep calm.”
“Thanks,” the young man said, sincerely, picking up Lady Cholder in his arms and hurrying toward an escape capsule.
Lunzie heard rumbling and tearing behind her. She spun.
“There it goes again!” Two ship’s engineers leaped toward the double doors, which were sliding closed on the hysterical crowd. The lights went out again. Along the ceiling the lines of red emergency lights came on, bathing them all in shadow.
“Cut off that switch!” Perkin shouted at one of his assistants, pointing to the open control box next to the doorway. “It’s only supposed to do that when the hull is breached.”
“All the programming’s messed up, Perkin!” The other engineer pushed and pulled at the levers on the control panel, trying to read the screen in the reduced light. “We’ll have to try and keep it open manually.”
“We’ve only got minutes. Get between ‘em!” Perkin leaped between the heavy metal doors, now rolling closed, and tried to force one of them back. His men started to force their way through the crowd to help him, but they couldn’t reach him before he screamed. “I’m being crushed! Help!” The doors had closed with him between them.
Lunzie was galvanised by his cries. Mustering the strength of Discipline, she shoved her way through the crowd. Perkin’s face was screwed up with pain as he tried to get out from between the doors which were threatening to cut him in half lengthwise. The adrenaline rush hit her just as she reached the front of the line. She and the other engineers took hold of the doors and pulled.
Slowly, grudgingly, the metal blast doors rolled back along their tracks. The crowd, now more frantic than before, rushed into the dining hall around Perkin, who was nearly collapsing. As soon as the doors had been braced open with chocks blocking the tracks, Lunzie rushed to catch Perkin and help him out of the way. He was almost unable to walk, and out-weighed her by fifty percent, but in her Discipline trance, Lunzie could carry him easily.
She pulled open his tunic and examined his chest, hissing sympathetically at what she saw. Her fingers confirmed what her heightened perception detected: his left rib cage was crushed, endangering the lung. If she worked quickly, she could free the ribs before that lung collapsed.
“Lunzie! Where are you going?” the voice of Coromell demanded as she hurried to the access stairway leading to the upper decks.
“I’ve got to get some quick-cast from my office. Perkin will die if I don’t brace those ribs.”
“Admiral! We’d better go, too,” Don shouted, urging him toward the doors.
Coromell pushed his aide’s hands away. “Not a chance! I won’t be shoved into one of those tiny life preservers with a hundred hysterical grand dames wailing for their money! They need all hands to keep this hulk from spinning into that planet. We can save lives. I may be old, but I can still do my part. The captain hasn’t given the evacuation order yet.” Suddenly he felt at his chest, and took a deep, painful breath. The colour rushed out of his face. “Dammit, not now! Where’s my medication?” With shaking fingers, he undid his collar.
Don led him to a couch at the side of the room. “Sit here, sir. I’ll find the doctor.”
“Don’t plague her, Don,” Coromell snapped, as Don pushed him down into the seat. “She’s busy. There’s nothing wrong with me. I’m only old.”
Lunzie flew up the steps. As she rounded the first landing, she found herself in the way of another crowd of frantic passengers running down, heading to the dining hall from their cabins. She tried to catch the stair rail, but was knocked off her feet and shoved underfoot. Lunzie grabbed at the legs of the passing humans, trying to pull herself to her feet, but they shook her off. Still possessed of her Discipline strength she forced her way to the wall and walked her hands upward until she was standing up. Keeping to the wall, Lunzie focused on staying balanced and pushed through the mob, paying no attention to the protests of the people in her way. Another herd of humans barrelled past her, trying to climb over one another in their panic to get to safety. She knew she was as terrified as they were, but between Discipline and duty, she didn’t - wouldn’t - feel it.
The next level was practically deserted. The emergency hatch to the methane environment, normally sealed, had drifted open, dissipating the nauseating atmosphere through the rest of the ship. The rescue capsules on that level were gone. Gagging and choking on the stench, Lunzie ran to her office.
The power in this section had gone on and off several times. Hatchways held in place by magnetic seals had lost their cohesiveness and fallen to the ground, denting walls and floors. Lunzie dodged past them and physically pushed open the door to the infirmary.
With the corridors clearing, she could see that there were other victims of the tragedy. With Perkin’s ribs correctly strapped and braced, he was out of danger. She left him on the soft couch to rest. Tirelessly, she sought out other injured members of the crew.
“Here, Lunzie!” Don waved her over to the dark corner where the Admiral lay unconscious. “It’s his heart.”
As soon as she saw the old man’s pinched face, Lunzie gasped. Even in the red light she could tell his skin was going from pasty to blue-tinged white. She dropped to her knees and dug through the medical bag for a hypospray, which she pressed against Coromell’s arm. She and Don waited anxiously as she peered at her scanner for his vital signs to improve. The Admiral suddenly stirred and groaned, waving them away with an impatient hand.
“I’m going to give him a vitamin shot with iron,” Lunzie said, reaching for a different vial. “He must rest!”
“Can’t rest when people are in danger,” muttered Coromell.
“You’re retired, sir,” Don said patiently. “I’ll help you walk.”
“You’d better get to the capsules,” First Mate Sharu called to them.
“Not going in the capsules,” Coromell wheezed.
“I’ll stay and help, Sharu,” Lunzie shouted back.
Sharu nodded gratefully, and signalled for the remaining capsules to close their doors. “Captain,” she told her wrist communicator, “you may give the order.”
“What can we do?” Don asked, as they helped the Admiral toward the stairs. “This situation will only worsen his condition. He’ll want to help!”
“Let’s get him to one of the cryogenic chambers. I’ll give him a sedative, and he and the other critically injured crew can cold-sleep it until we’re rescued.” Lunzie half carried the old man toward the infirmary ward, worrying whether he would survive long enough to be given the cryogenic drug.
There was another tremor in the ship’s hull, and all the lights went off. This time they stayed off for several seconds. Only the corner emergency beacons came on in the great holo-room.
“That’s it, then,” Chibor groaned. “No more drives. Those lights are on batteries.”
A crewman battered at the side of the control screen next to the doors. “The function computers are wiped. The programs’ll all have to be loaded again from ceramic. It’ll take months, years to get the whole ship running again. We could lose everything, power, life support. ...”
“Concentrate on one section at a time, Nais, so we have partial environment to live in,” Sharu ordered. “I suggest the hydroponics sections. For now there’s plenty of fresh air for the few of us left. Set up mechanical circulation fans to keep it moving. Rig a mayday beacon.”
“Telemetry said that we’re too close to the planet. No one will be able to see us,” Nais argued pugnaciously. His nerves were obviously frayed. “We’re not supposed to be here anyway. The giant is only our landmark in this system. We’re millions of kiloms from our proper jump mark.”
“Don’t you want to be found?” Sharu shot back, grabbing his shoulder and shaking him. “Check with Captain Wynline, see what he wants to do. He’s up on the bridge.”
“Yes, Sharu,” Nais gasped and dashed toward the accessway.
“It’ll be dangerous here until we regain systems stabilisation,” Sharu said to Lunzie, who had just returned to the holo-room. “Can I help in any way?”
“Get me a battery-powered light down here, and I can keep going.” Lunzie was grateful that she hadn’t become totally dependent on all the toys of modern medical technology. What would those fellow physicians of hers from Astris Alexandria do now without their electronic scalpels?
She was still working on the burst of adrenaline evoked from her Discipline training. When it wore on, she’d be almost helpless. Until then, she intended to help the wounded.
There was a sound like a muffled explosion behind her. Lunzie stood up to see what it was in the dimness. Only half visible in the gloom, the metal blast doors rolled slowly, inexorably closed on the empty dining hall.
“There go the chucks! The doors are closing!” Chibor cried. “Look out!”
A sharp-cornered weight hit Lunzie full in the chest, knocking her backwards. She slammed against the wall and slid down it to the floor, unconscious, over the body of her patient. Chibor ran to her, mopping the blood from Lunzie’s cut lip, and felt for a pulse.
Sharu appeared a few minutes later, sweeping the beam of a powerful hand-held searchlight before her. “Lunzie, will this do? Lunzie?”
“Over here, Sharu,” Chibor called, a formless shape in the red spotlights.
The First Mate ran toward the voice. “Krim!” She sighed. “Dammit. Put her in the cold-sleep chamber with Admiral Coromell. We’ll get medical attention for her as soon as somebody rescues us. Meantime, she’ll be safe in cold sleep. Then let’s get back to work.”
BOOK THREE