2618 lines
107 KiB
Erlang
2618 lines
107 KiB
Erlang
' Chapter One
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From the moment that the trading ship, Avalonia, slipped its oribital
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berth above the plabet Lave, and began to manover for the hyperspace
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jump point, itd measureanle life span, and that of one of its two man
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crew, was exactly eighteen minutes.
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The space station gently soab away into the shadows and the small
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Ophidian class vessal shuddered as its motoes angled it eound towaeds
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the Faraway jump. The planet Lave, beloe, rotated in blue -green
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splender. There were storms mocing across the Paluberion Sea, six great
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whorls of pink and white cloud. They were approaching the contine nral
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mass that was FirstFall, and promising a bkeak and wet few says to the
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swarhes of forest and the deep, snaking valleys that cut throygh the
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rugged land. The cities of both Humankind and Lavian glitteres among the
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verdant blanket below, like bright shards if glass,
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Watching the lush world from his seat at th asteogation console, Alex
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Ryder expressed an audible sigh of regret that he had not been allowed
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to observe a rich and fabled world like Lave from orbit. He had been
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planetside once, an unforgettable experience...But the rules and
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regulationd of the Galactic Co-operative of Worlds were strict; and
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sensible. Lave, like any other planet, was not a holiday resort, not a
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curiosity. It was a living, evolving world, and there were folk down
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below to whom that world was everything that Old Earth had once been to
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the Human race. Protection. Mother. Home.
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Another time, another year, Alex thought. You earned your visit to Lave,
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and he had hardly begun his professional life. He still had so much to
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learn.
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The Ryders had been a trading family for three generations. It had begun
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with Ben Ryder, who had traded almost exclusively using shotup pirate
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ships. Ben had lived life on the edge, and one day, one night, one star
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year, he had not returned. Out in the cold between the stars his grave
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was as remote as it was private, and would probably never be found. His
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son, and his grandson, who was Jason Ryder, had followed the family
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business. Alex would soon have to make the final decision: whether to
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sacrifice his life to shuttling cargo between the worlds of the Galactic
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Co-operative, or to train for a different profession.
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Let's be clear about trading. Trading between worlds is no game for a
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youngster with ideas of getting rich quick. You can spend a lifetime
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carrying food, machinery and textiles, and at the end of that life
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you'll havr enough saved up to buy a patch of costal land on an Earth
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type world, and spend the rest of your days in quiet, isolated comfort.
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That's all.
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A lifetime of sweat and combat for an oribital shuttle, a home, and the
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clear blue of an alian sea at your doorstep. If you want more, there are
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ways of getting it: narcotics, spices, zoo animals, weapons, political
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refugees... trade in any of these things and wealth will tumble around
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you.
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And corsaries, and privateers, and pirartes...
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And the police.
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The strain of the years of honest trading was already telling on Jason
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Ryder, but he had invested wisely, and this small, cargo carrying
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pleasure yacht was his pride and joy. He could get away from the
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deadelines for a while (although he always respected the trader maxim
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that "an empty hold means an empty head", and he never travelled
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freightless; today he was carrying berry juice, an exotic flavoring. He
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could show his son what space was really like, and whet the lad's
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appetite... or let him see that a life in hard vacuum was one of the
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hardest lives of all.
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For his part, Alex Ryder would need a lot more convincing. He was a
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tall, fair haired young man, wiry amd athletic. He was atom-surfing
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chammpion on the Ryder home world, Ontiat, and very bright. Like all
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student to professional, with all that that meant in terms of settling
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with one particular girl, one job, and beginning to plan for when,
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eventually, he would buy his own land.
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He still had a year to decide, a year of surfing, free-fall baseball,
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cloud barbecues, hi-falling, partner selection, and Sim Combat.
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He was in no hurry.
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Except that he loved space. Loved the flash of sun on duralium hulls,
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the clutter and confusion of the space ports.
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Loved the idea of other worlds, of exploration, of path finding.
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The voice of SysCon, which controlled all traffic flow in Lave's orbit
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space, murmered softly. "Avalinia, make a four minute drift flight to
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Faraway jump point."
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"Understand," Alex called back, and adjusted the auto accordingly. His
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father sat back and smiled, his job done for the moment.
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SysCon said, "Enter faraway jump along channel two sevenm, at forty five
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orient."
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Affirmed." Alex said, and his father rolled the ship aling its central
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axis, ready for the dangerous hyperspace transit.
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Eveything looked good.
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On the rear monitor, where the planet shone brilliantly as it slowly
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moved through the heavens, a dark shadow drifted into vision: another
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ship, lining up for the Farway jump.
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It was quite normal. Alex took no notice, more concerned about the
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impending transit through hyperspace. His father scrutinised the other
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vessel for a moment, then relaxed. He had no way of knowing that he only
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had fourteen minutes left alive.
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Making a Faraway jump in a system as complex and crowded as Lave is no
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simple business. A hundred eyes are watching you for the slighest
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mistake. Make a mistake in orbit space and the next time you go to dock
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at one of the world's Coriolis space stations a big NOT WELCOME sign
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might flash in the vacuume before you.
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You slip your C-berth under the instruction of Station Space Monitor.
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Perhaps twenty ships are doing the same. You go when it's safe. You
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rotate, accelerate, decelerare and spin to the absolute second, both of
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time and arc. That way you get clear without two thousand tons of
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duralium trader rammed into your hyperspace jets.
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It isn't over.
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Now you're under supervision of HSA, Home Space Authority, and they'll
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jockey you safely about among the traders, and the yachts, and the
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ferries, and the shuttles, and the star liners, and the arrow shaped
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police patrol ships. All of these vessels slip and slide about you,
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streaks of silver in the darkness, flashing green and blue lights,
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sudden walls of grey metal that pass across your bows, winking yellow
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warning beacons.
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You move through this chaos and a new voice begins to call for
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attention. Now you're with the Faraway Orientation System Controller;
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FOSC (or SysCon as it is sometimes known), sets you up for the big jump.
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You're going to cover maybe seven light years in a few minutes, and you
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might think that's a lot of space to ger lost in, but that isn't how it
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works. Faraway is a tunnel, like any other tunnel. Inside that tunnel is
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the realm called Witch-Space, a magic place, a place where the normal
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rules of the Universe don't necessarily work. And every few thousand
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parsecs along the Witch-Space tunnel there are monitoring satellites,
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and branch lines, and stop points, and rescue stations; and passing by
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all of these are perhaps a hundred channels, a hundred 'lines' for ships
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to travel, each one protected against the two big dangers of hyperspace
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travel: atomic reorganization, and time displacement.
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Jump on your own through huperspace, across more than half a light year,
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and you'll be luckey to make the same Universe, let alone your
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destination.
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You might emerge from Witch-Space turned inside out (which is not a
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pretty sight).
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You might be streached in all the wrong angles, and although the shiip
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keeps travelling, that jelly mass of broken bone and flesh inside the
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cabin is you.
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According to legend, you might come through okay and breathe a sigh of
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relief, only to go into Earth orbit and wonder why that big lizard, with
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the teeth and the long rail and the green scales is roaring up at you,
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and warning you off of his nice Jurassic patch of prehistoric desert.
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To go Faraway is a killer, unless you obey the rules.
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So for a few minutes, in that fateful day, Alex Ryder was content to let
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the robot voices of SysCom guide his family's ship through the space
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lanes, towards the jump point for the planet Leesti. He relaxed, beside
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his father, and watched the bussle of the space port.
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The shadow behind them, the ship that was following their path towards
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Faraway, was a Cobra class cargo freighter.
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No one knew how or when the designation of space going vessels had been
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linked to the names of snakes. The Ryder's own vessel was a relatively
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harmless Ophidion, capabale of two hyperspace jumps. armed very
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basicaly, set up, really, only to destroy imminent dangers, like
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asteroids, meteoroids, or 'crazy craft' the name given to vessels that
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were out of control, or ridden by juveniles out for kicks.
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The Cobra was a bigger vessel by far.
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A common trading ship, most Cobras are buried beneath the weaponry and
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defences that their hard bitten, tough talking captains have accrued.
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And with good reason...
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To be a trader is to be two things: dangerous and at risk. Dangerous
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because to survive as a trader you have to know your weapons and how to
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use them in space combat; you need to be able to recognize a pirate, or
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an anarchist, or a Thargoid invader, or a police trap when you might be
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carrying any one of the thousands of prohibited materials.
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Amd at risk for the same reason . A juicy Cobra, weighed down with
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minerals, or rare textiles, or furs, or ore, is as tasty a target for a
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freebooter as any in the Galexy.
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To be a trader means to shoot first and pray that you've read the
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warning signs alright, and that your victum was a pirate. Make a
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mistake and not even two shells of time stressed duralium and a belly
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full of missiles is going to save you from the vipers.
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Vipers. Police ships. Small, fast, deadly. And most particularly,
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tenacious. The pilot is a man, certainly, but kill the man and the ship
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will keep coming at you. Kill the ship and its missile will keep coming
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at you. Kill the mssile, an watch for the shadow. When a viper bites,
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it clings.
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Eleven minutes...
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'There's a sight you'll not often see...'
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His father's words broke through Alex's silent, concentrated study of
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tje planet they were leaving. To the right, running a parallel course
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towards the Faraway tunnel, was an odd shaped ship, with powerful lights
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flickering on and off. It waws catching the sun and Alex could see how
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it was slowly spinning about its ce ntral axis . F idh like fins opened
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and closed. Across its sleek hull a rapid pattern of colored lights
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rippled.
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A Moray. A subaqua vessel, designed for both space and undersea
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voyaging. The Moray ws a rare shiip indeed to see in space, especially
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about to undertake a hyperspace transit. On worlds like Regiti and Aona,
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where the only land ws the tips of volcanoes, rising above the oceans,
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the Moray was both freifhrer and public transport, a vital shiplink
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between the undersea cities that were developing in such hostile
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environmrnts.
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The Motay's frantic color signalling ceased. Alex noticed that his
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father was watching the animalistic display (the cosing had been
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developed from the signalling of a terrestrial aquatic creature, the
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squid) with a frown on his face.
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'Something up?'
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Jason shrugge. 'Not sure. Probably not.'
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Alex watched the Moray with renewed interest, then turned back to the
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rear view, where the Cobra had nudged a few kilometers closer.
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'Shall we warn him to stay back?'
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Jason shook his head. For the first time Alex realized that his father
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had been studying it cutiously for some minutes. There was tension on
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the Avalinia's btidge that was unususl, and unpleasant.
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Something wasn't right. Alex had no idea what, but he sensed it
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powerfully.
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Something was not going according to routine.
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Then the go signal for entry to the Faraway tunnel flashed on,
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accompanied by a gentle audio prompt.
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And as it did so the Avalonia's life expectancy had shrunk to just nine
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minutes.
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Around the entry point to Witch Space is always to be found the biggest
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cluster of transit vessels, most of themn moored in groups at orbital
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buoys while mechanics and repairmen crawl over them, checking and
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servicing their external systems. At such a point in anpy advanced
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system like Lave you'll see every ship of the line, every type, subtype
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and artufucually mocked up version of every snake shop ever built.
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As they approached the jump, Alex practised ship identification, a
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crucial talent in any space faring profession. The unarmed, unmanned
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orbit shuttles were easy enough to spot, as they ferrued cargo all
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around the system. He noticed two Asps, navy ships, small, manouverable
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anddeadly, well protected against attack, and with highly advanced
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military weapons systems. He also saw a single Krait, the so-called
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StarStriler, a small, one-man ship much favored by pathdinders and
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mercenaries.
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To his right, space-docked and still unloading her paddengers, was the
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immense, cylindrical mass of an Anaconda, a massive freighter that had
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been adapted to passenger tramsport. It was an ugly ship, and its
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yawning ram scoop gave it the appearance of being a squat, blind
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creature with its mouth disgustingly agape.
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The catalog was endless. Boa class cruisers; Pythond; the bountpy
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humters' favorite, the Fer-de-lance, packed out with weapons, and no
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doubt decked out inside like a palace; landing craft called worms;
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Mambas; Sidewinders...large craft and small, all winking brightly and
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reflecting sunlight in brillent blue-gray sheens.
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And of course, there was advertising Droidships, their catchpy light
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displays blining out information about ROHAN'S REAL EARTH ALE WITH
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HONEY, or KETTLE'S CLONE-YOUR-OWN FUNGAL CURES. Or even offering "The
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last real food before Witch Space," small restaurant ships designed to
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dock and supply indtant nourishment (PRIEST'S PERFECT PROTOPOLYPS,
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TUTTLE'S TASTY THERAPSABLADDERS) to space weary travelers.
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"Here we go... Hang onto your seat..."
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Jason Ryser always did this, and Alex always fell for it. He tensed up
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as if the ship was about to plunge over a gravity roller. In fact, the
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entry to Witch Space was accompanied by an almost negligible
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accelerarive surge, a moment's dizzinedd, and then the spectacular sight
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of the stars brughtenung, spreading out and suddenly streaking in
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multi-colored circular patterns, so that the ship seemed to be passing
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down a spinning tube. Almost as soon as the surge of acceleration had
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come it had gone. The ship drifted in "Witch Light," in the non place in
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space and time. It was crossing the void between stars in seconds, but
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for those seconds it was in a twilight world whose existence was beyond
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imagination.
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They say that witch space is haunted. Maybe that's why they call it
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'witch." Time turns around all around, and atoms turn inside out, and
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gravitywaves billow up, and things move there, lifeforms, or shadows, or
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atoms, or galaxies, who knows? Noone has ever stopped and gone outside
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to find out, Only robot remotes exist there, switching stations,
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monitors, rescue Droids and the like. Whatwver lines in Witch Space, in
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the faraway timmels, will remain a mystery always.
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But there are ghosts there. The ghosts of the early ships that went in
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to Faraway, and didn't come out again.
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Ghosts...
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And shadows.
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The shadow of a snake. A Cobra... Rising over them...
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"What in God's name...?
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Jason Ryder had gone whiter than white light.
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Trapped in Witch Space, there was nothing he could do to outmanouver the
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other vessel. Alex said, "He doesn't know the rules. Perhaps it's a
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rookie pilot."
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"Perhaps," his father said. Jason Ryder's eyes never left the scanners.
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His face had beaded with sweat. Alex watched the shadow of the Cobra...
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Well equipped, a fuel-scoop, missile silos, extra cargo jolds, the squat
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dome of an energy bomb housing; a rich ship indeed, and a deadly one.
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"They can't be intending to attack us."
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"The hell they can't!"
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Three minutes...
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And they came out of Witch Space!
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Immediately Jason's hands began to fly over the key console. The
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Acalonia surged forward, rotating on its long axis. The planet Leesti
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was a small, greenish disc in the far distance. Alex saw his father arm
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the two missiles that the Avalonia carries, then reached to rest his
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hand on the multiple laser trigger,
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It was a pirate, then. And as Alex came to accept the inevitability of
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combnat, his mouth ermt dry and his mind sharpened. He had never been in
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combat before, not for real, only in the SimTrainer. He had heard hid
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father ralk about t, of course, And combat did not sound glorious.
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A Pirate ship, disguised as a trader, pursuing its victim into Witch
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Space itself, for their cargo of... Thrumpberry flavoring?
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An uneasy voice whispered in Alex's mind. This was untypical behaviour
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for a freebooter. They normally waited ar rhe edge of planerary systems,
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watching for their prey eith long distance scanners, picking and
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choosing carefully. Pirates could be found everywhere, of course,
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though rarely in space around Corporate State worlds, or Democracies
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*the police were too efficient). Planets run by anarchistic or feudal
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governments were a pirate's favorite haunt.
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This behaviour was wrong...
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Not a pirate.
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Alex looked from the slowly rotating planer to the grim, gray features
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of his father. They were a long way from safety. "What the hell are we
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up against?"
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"Put on a RemLok and get to the escape pod," Jason Ryder murmered. "Do
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it!"
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I'll stay and fight."
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"The hell you will. do as I say." As he spoke, Jason thrust a small,
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black face mask, the remote space locater, at his son. The first
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missles struck the Avalonia's shields, and Jason punched the launch
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buttons on his own defenses. The small ship veered and strained as he
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looped it in an escape run, activating its ECM as the Cobra launched a
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second wave of missiles.
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The rear screen exploaded with light...
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But through the btightness the somber gray shape of the killer came
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on...
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It happened so fast, then, that afterwards Alex was uncertain as to what
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exactly had happened. The duelling ships spun and circled in towards the
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planet. Space around them blazed silently as their weapons struck and
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were deflected.
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then the whole universe rocked. Air screeched into the void. The lights
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in the Avalonia blinked and dimmed, Warning lights shot on across the
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console: Laser temperature in the red, screens fown, energy low, cargo
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jettisoned, canin temperature dropping...
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In the same moment of the Avalonia's death, Alex Ryder found himself
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being struck by his father, the remlok mask forced into place about his
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eyes, nose and mouth. Then his whole body was physically manhandled into
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the escape pod.
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The ship shuddered and screamed, Fuel spilles into the void.
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Father and son faced each other for a last moment, each watching the
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other through a mist of tears and confusion. "I don't understand..."
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Alex screamed above the noise of the dying ship, meaning: Who's trying
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to kill us?
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"Raxxla!" Jason said. "Remember Raxxala!" then as he pushed Alex back
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into the cramped escape pod, he shluted. "Remember me, Alex! I wouldn't
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have wished this on you. Raxxala!"
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The escape pod was jettisioned. Alex tumbled, Tje sleek shape of the
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Avalonia was above him, and then just whit light.
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White heat.
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Cold space!
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In a second it had gone, the ship, his father, a part of his life;
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obliterated by a single burst of fire from the hovering shape of the
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pirate.
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And as Alex watched, so a yellow tongue of fire licked towards the
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tunbling escape pod. He felt heat, then pain, then cold...
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The tiny survival vehicle was blasted apart, sparkling fragments falling
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towards the green world of Leesri.
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Alex hit space, arms flailing, mouth opened, consciousness and life
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draining from him eith every second.
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Chapter Two
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In space, everyone can hear you scream...
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As long, that is, as you're equipped with a RemLok survival mask.
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An instant after Alex Ryder hit the hard vacuum, a sKin of plasFibre had
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been shot across his body from nozzles on the face piece, keeping him
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warm against the cold, tightening and protecting him, securing him
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against the void. The oxygen flow in his body was cut off to all but his
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heart and brain. Needle doses of adrenalin and somnokie were held ready,
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just within the skin area of his mouth, ready to alert or depress his
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body functions according to circumstances.
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And the RemLok screamed through space for help.
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It was a standard survival device, an instantly recognisable distress
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call indicating that it was being sent out from a small, remotely
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located, dying body. The alarm screeched out in forty channels shifting
|
||
wavelength within each channel four times a second. One hundred and
|
||
twenty chances to catch attention.
|
||
|
||
A cumbersome Boa class cruiser, loaded down with industrial machinery,
|
||
slowed its departhre run from Leesti and turned to scan space for the
|
||
source of the signal.
|
||
|
||
Two police vipers came streaking from their patrol sector, near the sun,
|
||
scanning for the body in trouble.
|
||
|
||
An adapted Moray Starboat, a vast glowing yellow star on its hull, the
|
||
sign of a hospital ship, came chugging out of the darkness.
|
||
|
||
Messages from ships to both the planet and its ring of Coriolis stations
|
||
were abruptly broken as the split second message came screaming through.
|
||
TV programs were interrupted, the screen dissolving into a permanently
|
||
recorded display of the space grid location of the RemLock. Every
|
||
advertising space module changed its garish display to flash, in
|
||
brilliant green, the same information.
|
||
|
||
In the orbit space around Leesti, a million heads turned starwards. That
|
||
split second of panic, that moments cry of distress, was a sound they
|
||
kenw too well to ignore, and were too frightemed of to take for
|
||
granted.
|
||
|
||
Within twenty seconds, two autoremotes, tiny vessels just big enough to
|
||
carry an hour's oxygen, one dose each of forty drugs, and a variety of
|
||
other stimulants, were hovering around Alex Ryder's spinning body. One
|
||
of them shot out a stabilizing cable and dragged itself to his corpse.
|
||
Blinking through its solitary monitor, it hovered over his face like a
|
||
squat, legless dachsund hound and pumped adrenalin, oxygen and glucose
|
||
into his bloodstream. Alex opend his ryrs and panicked slightly. The
|
||
autoremote calmed him down with a quick pumpsurge of tetval.
|
||
|
||
The robot's voice whispered in his ears, "Brandy? Scotch? Vodka? I am
|
||
equipped with a full range of miniature stumulants to make the waiting
|
||
easier."
|
||
|
||
"What ...happened...ship?...Avalonia..." he gasped through the tight
|
||
face mask.
|
||
|
||
Teh autoremote blinked at him sympathetically, "Brandy, then," and hit
|
||
Alex with two shots of Qutirian SynCognac.
|
||
|
||
An hour later he was aboard the Moray hospital cessel, in parked orbit
|
||
above the green-grey face of the world of Leesti. Burns to his hands and
|
||
face had been taken care of. Minor blood vessels theat had ruptured in
|
||
his skin had been knitted back together, He was bruised, stunned, but
|
||
essentiall fit physically.
|
||
|
||
The image of the ship exploding had begun to haunt him, however. He
|
||
stood by the wide, sloping window of his hospital room, staring out
|
||
across the bright of space to the slowly rotating world below , watching
|
||
the flash and tumble of shuttles and small frrighters as they either
|
||
glided up from worldDown, or struck the atmosphere on their descent,
|
||
leaving brief, btilliant flares of red in the thin planerary
|
||
atmosphere.
|
||
|
||
Wherever he looked he could see the shadow of the Cobra, rising up in
|
||
the Witchlight, a great, killer beast, closing in on its prey.
|
||
|
||
And his father's face... The sudden alarm, the sudden anger, and yet...
|
||
and yet Hason Ryder had known.
|
||
|
||
His greiving, mind stunned son just kenw that his father had been more
|
||
aware of the danger than he had let on. It had been in his face, in the
|
||
tension in the cabin, in the slow, dwliverate words that he had spoken
|
||
during the approach run to hyperspace.
|
||
|
||
Jason had known that his lige was in danger. He had been ready for it,
|
||
readu to save his son in the event of an attack.
|
||
|
||
It made no sense. But for the moment Alex felt only loss, the loss of a
|
||
mon he had loved. Both his parents were gone, now. His homeworld would
|
||
seem an empty, ininviting place.
|
||
|
||
Behind him, the door opened softly and the grey suited figure of a nurse
|
||
appeared. She reproved him mildly for being out of bed, but seemed
|
||
pleased by his apparently calm mental state.
|
||
|
||
There followed what seemed like a constant stream of visitors. First the
|
||
doctor, scanning him for tension and psychic repression. The medic was
|
||
not pleased. He more or less said, " Young man, your father is dead and
|
||
it would do tou no harm to shed a few tears. It's all there, all the
|
||
frief, all the sadness. It'll do youno good to deny it."
|
||
|
||
"I'll greive for my father," Alex said back angrily, coldly. "I'll
|
||
grieve among the ashes of the pirate that killed him, And not until."
|
||
|
||
"Will you indeed."
|
||
|
||
"Yes," Alex stated defiantly. "I will. Indeed."
|
||
|
||
After the doctor had gone, the man from the Galactic Medical
|
||
Co-operative came, fussily checking up on Alex's medical insurance,
|
||
making sure that he was covered for all aspects of the treatment,
|
||
including his Garaway transit home.
|
||
|
||
Then the police, two lwean-faced men, wearing the grey cloaks and silver
|
||
waistcoats of the Narcotics Investigatiom Department. What cargo had the
|
||
Avalonia been carrying? Why would a pirate be so interested in him as to
|
||
follow him to a corporate State world? had his gather evef transported
|
||
drugs? Firearms? Slaves? What about alien substances: <anjooza, fear
|
||
glands, Marswurt? What was said in the moments before destruction? Wouls
|
||
he recognisw the ship again? What were its markings?
|
||
|
||
Alex told them everything he could remember. Everything he;d seen.
|
||
Everything he'd heard... Except for the fact that his father had
|
||
clearly known the danger. And except for the word Raxxla.
|
||
|
||
The police left. They were not satisfied, Alex had hust received his
|
||
solo pilot's license, so he could make his own way bqci to his home
|
||
system, but he should notify them of what route he was taking. -
|
||
Raxxla...
|
||
|
||
Alex watched them go , their Viper a slim, evil looking ship as it
|
||
rolled and sped away from the hospital vessel. His mood matched the dim
|
||
lit room, matched the floom frey of the storms that were biolding up on
|
||
th world below. Leesti's oceans looked wild and cold, now, its clouds
|
||
great charcoal colored swirls of anger above the ragged, mountainous
|
||
land.
|
||
|
||
-Raxxla. What could it be? What could it mean?
|
||
|
||
At midnight, still resting and recouperating (care lf the Leesti Medical
|
||
Authority), a smallgreen light winked on in his room. Aowx, still awake,
|
||
frowned the realized that he was being monitored. "What is it?" he asked
|
||
the empty room, and a nyrse's voice whispered, "There's a holoFac
|
||
message coming through for you. They've requested a tight beam. Will you
|
||
receive?" Alex sat up in bed. No one knew he was here. Did they? He
|
||
frowned and said, "Sure." "Will you accept the charge against your CR?"
|
||
Curiouser and curiouser. Since he was broke, and without credit until he
|
||
sorted out his GMC insurance, it was easy for him to say. "Yes." In the
|
||
middle of the room the air suddenly shimmered white, small bright
|
||
particles flying off in all directions aroucd the gradually defined
|
||
shape of a man. He was tall, but slightly stooped. As the whiteness of
|
||
the resolved into colot, the whiteness of the man stayed, His hair was
|
||
long and snowy, his bead ragged. His face has a touch of color, His eyes
|
||
were small, gleaming points among the wrinkles, Hewas smiling. He wore a
|
||
tattered trader;s uniform, and ome arm hung limmp by jis side, Even his
|
||
boots were worn down, and the toes were split. The hand laser at his
|
||
side had seen the same better days as the rest of his equipment.
|
||
|
||
"You the Ryder Boy?" this apparition of rum dowm age asled. Yhe chvoice
|
||
creaked, a gruff, battered tome, the voice of a man who had breathed
|
||
hard vacuum. "Thats me. Alex Ryder, And you?" Alex climbed out of bed
|
||
and went ti stand before the life sized holoFac. The old man watched
|
||
him, and chewed, Then he spat. The gibber if staubed soittle srrmed to
|
||
fly straight towards Alex's shoulder and he winced and herked slightly
|
||
to one side, before realizing that nothing could travel into real space
|
||
form the holo. "You don't remember me," the old man said. "Thats clear
|
||
enough, But I remember you." "Give me a name." "Rafe Zetter, trader of
|
||
old, Trraded with your father for many years, till we parted companu on
|
||
accoumt of a certain issue which, you maight say... caused a diffefence
|
||
of opinion between is." "Slaves," Alex said quickly. He remembered Tafe,
|
||
now. But what had happened to the man? He was old before his time. He
|
||
was the same age as Jason Ryder would have been, but looked twenty years
|
||
more. "Slaves is right," Rafe said. "I ran my life on the edge of a
|
||
Viper's sting..." trader parlance for "one jump ahead of the law". "But
|
||
by the time I indulged that little whim, ny ass was hars as iron. I
|
||
somehow made it tohell 'n back. Thats where I am now." "In Hell?"
|
||
"Broke."
|
||
|
||
Alex nodded, picking up slowlr on the trader slang. An :iron ass" was a
|
||
ship that was well enough defended - shields, missiles and lasers - to
|
||
make a skim tun through any system at all, even an anarchist's paradise
|
||
like Sotiqu. All hell and then some would come at you if you tried to
|
||
trade in such a chaotic system. "Hell 'n back" meant that Rafe had
|
||
tasted the good life, bought with the profits of his illegal trading,
|
||
but that it had all gone wrong. It always went wrong. Rafe said, "I
|
||
was damn sorry to hear about Jason. A good man, A good friend of old,
|
||
and a man I still respect." "It didn't happen but eight hours ago," Alex
|
||
said coldly. " How the hell do you get to hear about it?" Rafe Zetter
|
||
chuckled. then spat again, and again Alex couldn't help ducking. The
|
||
spittle vanished at the holoFac's edge, and Alex felt a chill of
|
||
irritation. "yu got your father's temper, young Alex. Maybe you've even
|
||
got some of his skills." "Answer my question, old man. How do you manage
|
||
to know about my father? How did you find me?" Watching him from the
|
||
holo, Rafe chewed, smiled and considered. Alex tensed, waiting for the
|
||
next high velocity spit transmission. and what he was doing." "He was a
|
||
good man," Alex said. "And an honest trader." "He was a damn sight more
|
||
than that," Rafe said loudly, and spat. Alex dodged. The ghostly holoFac
|
||
image shimmered and blurred slightly. "What does that mean?" Rafe
|
||
Zetter leaned forward so that his grizzled features seemed almost able
|
||
to kiss the younger man. "He was a combateer, Alex. One of the best. No
|
||
way should he have died like he did." "My father was a trader, not a
|
||
combateer," Alex said, startled and disturbed by what Rafe was
|
||
implying. "Guess again, sonny." "But it sickened him to fire shots in
|
||
anger." "Maybe," Rafe said drily. "But it didn't stop him. How else do
|
||
you think he made it as a trader all those years? Dammit, Alex, even if
|
||
your cargo is sur cream and piclles there's someone going to try and
|
||
take it from you, Your father was a combateer of the highest
|
||
caliber...?" Alex swallowed heavily, staring at the quizzical features
|
||
of old Rafe Zetter. "The highest caliber...?" Rafe nodded. "That's
|
||
right, Alex," he said softly. "You can be deadlu, you can be dangerous,
|
||
and you can end up as pet food in orbit around a dog's ass of a world
|
||
like Isveve. But if your Elite, and you die, them there's a reason for
|
||
your death.
|
||
|
||
what was this old man saying? Elite? An elite combateer? Alex's head
|
||
spun. He knew all about the space pilots who'd earned that title, og
|
||
course. Few of them did, To be elite in combat was to be... well, as
|
||
near invincible as made no odds. A great many polots were "dangereous";
|
||
you didn't last long as a traded if you weren't. Many more had earned
|
||
the classification "deadly." So had a lot of mercenaries. So had a lot
|
||
of pirates. But elites. Few and far between. and his father, Jason
|
||
Ryder, had been elite, and none of his family had known!
|
||
|
||
"Jason was one of the very best. You probably never saw his ship, but it
|
||
was like a fortress. He traded places that most of us would have had
|
||
nighymates about." Rafe shook his head admiringly. "One of the best. A
|
||
man of the highest caliber..." His gaze hardened on Alex. "The question
|
||
is, can you be the same?" "What makes you doubt it?" "Jason never sais
|
||
anything about you. I guess he was trying to prorhtct you. The trouble
|
||
is that it gives me nothing to go on: you're going to avenge your
|
||
father's death - I can tell form the look of you, and your tone, and
|
||
your anger - but for all I know, that'll just mean one more Ryder will
|
||
be stardust before he even manages to target a missile." Not liking Rafe
|
||
Zetters tone, Alex said bitterly, ""I've done houre of SimCombat, I
|
||
score highly..." Rafe laughed and spt voluminouslu, then he became
|
||
serious. "Alex, there's something I've got to know. Maybe you're going
|
||
to end up-" "Pet food in orbit around Isveve!" "Yeah, maybe that. The
|
||
only person who knew your talents was your father. Tell me, Alex , and
|
||
tell me true, now... Did he say anything to you... you know... in the
|
||
momnents before he died? Did he indicate anything, or say anything?
|
||
|
||
"He said a lot," Alex murmered, and felt a strong pang of grief as he
|
||
remembered the look in his father's eyes, the freyness of his cheeks,
|
||
and his desperate words, remember me, Alex... "I think he knew he was
|
||
going todie, The last thing he said was the word Raxxla. I don't know
|
||
what that is. An alien I guess..."
|
||
|
||
Rafe smiled, haking his head. Suddingly there was a brilliant sparkle in
|
||
his eyes: "Raxxla'a no alien, Alex, It's a ghost world. A planet. A
|
||
legend..." He hesitated, staring quizzically at the younger man throgh
|
||
the distant link between them, "Jason relly said that to you?"
|
||
|
||
Alex nodded, "Moments before...It was the last thing he said."
|
||
|
||
"Then he knew," Rafe said with a nod. "And that's good enough for me,
|
||
Akex, get your frail shell to Tionisla and take a cisitor's shuttle to
|
||
oribital cemetery there. Say you've come the grave of the Starpilot
|
||
Fleischer. And takkhe a good look around. You do that, boy. Tomorrow.
|
||
I'll be waiting for you."
|
||
|
||
"Waiting to do what?"
|
||
|
||
Rafe chuckled. "How're you going to hunt a Cobra? You going to hitch
|
||
hike? Or use a big stick? You'll need a ship. Hunt like with like. Get
|
||
to the wreckplace at Tionisla. I know just the vehicle you need. Don't
|
||
speak to anyone. Just get to Tionisla."
|
||
|
||
"But -" 'Au'vor, Alex!" And Rafe Zetter spat for the last time before
|
||
the holoFac faded. Alex didn't flinch. Something whistled past his ear
|
||
and struck the wall behind him. |