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"Take it. please take it," coaxed K'Raoda, watching the commtorp shoot past the orbital fort. Abandoning their attack on Devastator's all but impregnable shield, the AI defense network sat and waited and watched.
"They could wipe us, of course," said Guan-Sharick. "Those beam webs can also transmit energy between the various forts. The aggregate fusion fire of all the globes surrounding Base One could then be directed against us. But that would weaken parts of the web and we could conceivably break through. Obviously, they're not going to take the chance."
"Base One?" said John. "The name sings. What is it? And what's so important about it?"
"All in good time, Harrison," said the blonde, intent on the main screen and the commtorp, now directly before the nearest fort. Suddenly a thick red beam flashed from the bottom of the fort, seized the commtorp, and retrieved it. The commtorp disappeared inside the fort.
"Curiosity," said the transmute, "can be a dangerous trait. Now we wait-it shouldn't take long." Taking the command chair, she dialed herself up a fruit drink and sipped, slouched in the chair, legs crossed, warily watching the fort.
K'Raoda motioned John and Zahava over to the nav console. "Would you be surprised to know that the planet down there's the source of the Tau energy?" he asked.
"You think our friend may have come home?" said Zahava.
K'Raoda shrugged. "Whatever brought her here, she eliminated her supposed friend R'Gal to do it. We may not know what Guan-Sharick is organically, but ethically she hasn I a scruple in her-she'll betray and kill anyone, anything, to get what she wants."
"Which she claims is the good of all," said John.
"Utilitarianism-it's the argument of every megalomaniac," said Zahava. "So what can we do about it?"
"We watch, we wait," said John.
"Not to disturb your plotting," called the transmute, "but it's working." Sitting up, she pointed at the screen.
At first they noticed nothing. Then, looking carefully, they noticed that the beam lines from the nearest fort were flickering, wavering more and more until they suddenly disappeared, then the fort itself moved off station, accelerating rapidly over the planet's northern pole and toward the system's distant sun.
"Forward, Mr. K'Raoda, before they regroup," ordered the transmute, hand slapping the chairarm. "We've got a hole."
"Care to tell us now what was in the commtorp?" asked John, walking to the command chair as the battleglobe surged forward.
"Death," said the blonde, smiling as she watched the world below fill the screen. She looked up at John. "The virus taken from that dead miner. It attacks the electronics of any system it touches. My medanalyzer's a useless lump now. But those lovelies back there" -she pointed over her shoulder-"had their analytical systems tied into their main cybernetics."
"The fort went crazy," said John. "The fort went crazy." Guan-Sharick nodded.
"Excuse me," said the voice of the battle globe's computer. "But the human known as Yarin is dead, in his quarters."
"Vidscan of Yarin's quarters," ordered the blonde as the others exchanged worried looks.
It came up on the command station's commscreen: the dead man was slumped over the room's complink, face on the unit's speaker.
"He's infected the electronics," said Guan-Sharick, standing. "K'Raoda, drop shields, then get over here. Everyone to me, now."
"But…" protested the K'Ronarin.
"Now," snapped the transmute.
With a slight shrug, K'Raoda dropped the battleglobe's shields. On the other side of the armorglass, the familiar protective blue vanished, along with the atmosphere. Space, cold and stark, and the unknown planet below filled Devastator's sky.
"The first thing to go will probably be the programming overlay R'Gal inserted to control what would otherwise have been a hostile computer," said the blonde as John and Zahava joined her. "So we're leavir.;
The blaster bolt snapped out. r. a:: missing K'Raoda as he left his station. Dashing across the bridge, he dived for the command station, blue bolts exploding around him.
"That was too close," said the blonde, a soft breeze tousling her long hair.
Fresh, unfiltered air. Sunshine, a warm breeze and green grass sporting a bed of small white flowers.
"Welcome to Base One," said Guan-Sharick.
The others looked around. They stood in the middle of a glade, ringed by woods-the dark, primeval sort of woods that Terra hadn't seen for a thousand years. "Doesn't look like a base," said John, looking at the woods. "How long…"
He stopped as Zahava touched his arm, pointing to the single rocky structure in the middle of the glade.
"Good god," said John, staring in amazement. "What is that doing here?"