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“Hi, Sal,” she said. “Welcome aboard the Starveling invasion fleet.”

The weird guy with the bad eyes turned, put out his gloved, jewelled hand, and helped her stand by the bed. “Well, then. It would appear this is indeed a great prize you have delivered to us, young woman,” he said. His voice was weird too; very heavily accented, and deep but somehow abrasive at the same time. “You have our gratitude.”

Liss smiled thinly, drawing herself upright and running a hand through her hair, shaking it out. “Entirely my pleasure.”

Saluus felt his mouth hanging open. He swallowed, closing it briefly. “Liss ?” he heard his own voice say, sounding small and boylike.

She looked at him. “Sorry,” she said. She shrugged. “Well, sort of.”

* * *

“And these gamma-ray lasers go up really high! Look!”

“Still just another beam-weapon. The mag-convolver’s more intrinsically impressive.”

Fassin was only half-listening to Quercer Janath as they investigated the Voehn ship’s sensors, instruments and controls. They’d just discovered the weapons.

“Pa! Defensive! Look: Z-P surf-shear missiles! Full AM! Damn, this takes me back!”

“Never mind that, check the snarl-armour. It’s only warping over about a centimetre out from the hull, but look at that roll-down; easily ten klicks deep, absorbing all the way. Even regenerates to the main pulse batteries. That’s class.”

They were in the Voehn ship’s command space, an elongated bubble in the centre of the ship. The ten spine-seats were arranged in a V. Quercer Janath sat in the commander’s chair in front, exposed to a giant wall wrap-screen showing the view of space around them, with the drifting, very slowly spinning Velpin dead centre. Fassin and Y’sul floated within the two seats a row back from the travelcaptain. The seats were too small for Fassin and far too small for Y’sul and Quercer Janath. They opened up like a double splay of fingers and were supposed to close on the Voehn inside like a protective fist. A Dweller only just fitted inside when the seats were in their fully open position. The whole command space felt tight and constraining, but Quercer Janath didn’t appear to care even one hoot. The chairs seemed more like cages to Fassin. It felt as though he was floating inside the ribcage of some giant dinosaur skeleton.

“Can we use a weapon on something?”

Y’sul was humming to himself and tending to his own fractured carapace, using his main hub-arms to abrade-pinch sections of his discus edges closed, then smoothing them over with an improvised file.

“Always blast the Velpin, I suppose.”

“It’s full of people!”

He had thought that he might find something. He had thought there might be something left to find.

“It’s full of Voehn special-forces warriors.”

“In what sense not people? And besides, it’s our old ship.”

Something other than a dead, coward Dweller, ashamed enough of being weak and of having looked inside the safekeep box — and of the possible consequences of this action — to kill himself; vain enough to record a message commemorating his idiot narcissism.

Outside, the Velpin spun slowly, somersaulting adrift. Their travelcaptain — Dweller, AI, whatever it was or they were — had persuaded most of the Voehn crew to abandon their own ship by the simple expedient of restarting the Protreptics self-destruct function and leaving it on until the last moment. Most of the Voehn crew, believing that their own ship was about to blow itself up, had decamped to the Velpin. Those that hadn’t, Quercer Janath had killed.

It had killed about a dozen, it\they said.

“Sentimentalist.”

Well, eleven, to be exact.

“I know! Let’s ask the Ythyn if they can let us have a few of their hulks. They must have thousands littering the outside of that Sepulcraft. They’d never miss a couple. Heck, these beams attenuate right down; we could probably pick one or two off even without their permission, maybe even without them knowing.”

Eleven Voehn. Just like that. Eleven heavily armed and armoured special-forces warriors. With no injury to itself.

“No time. Mr Y’sul and Mr Taak wish to return to Ulubis.”

He heard his own name mentioned. Ah, that would be Fassin Taak the complete and utter failure, sent on a mission, engaged on a great quest, only to find it all just trickles away into the dust in the end, leaving him with nothing.

“And besides, maybe the Voehn will work out how to work the Velpin after all and ram us or something. I agree. Let’s go.”

Back to Ulubis? But why? He’d failed. He’d been adding up the days and months since his mission had started. The invasion had probably already happened by now, or was just about to happen. By the time he got back, empty-handed, after another few dozen days spent getting back to the wormhole in the Direaliete system, there was every chance it would all be over. He was an orphan in a damaged gascraft, with nothing to contribute, no treasure to gift.

Why not just stay here with the Ythyn, why not just die and be pinned up on the wall next to the other fool? Or why not get dropped off somewhere, anywhere else? Disappear, float away, get lost between the stars in the middle of nowhere or the middle of somewhere utterly different, perfectly far away, never to be heard of again by anyone who ever knew him… why not?

“That all right with you two?”

“Hmm?” Y’sul said, sticking some sort of bandage over the injuries to his left discus. “Oh, yes.”

Fassin logged the damage: one working arm, his visual senses degraded to about sixty per cent due to the whateverness of weird shit that Quercer Janath had unleashed in the chamber when it had killed the first three Voehn, and a variety of subtle but seemingly self-irreparable damage caused by the combination of pulse weapon and stun-flechette that the Voehn had used on them in the Velpin.

Of course, he told himself, he had to remember he was not the gascraft. He could relinquish it, be an ordinary walking-around human being again. There was always that. It seemed a slightly disturbing thought. He remembered the great waves, crashing.

“Fassin Taak, you wish to return to Ulubis too?” Quercer Janath asked.

“So who knows that you’re an AI?” Fassin said, ignoring the question. “Or two AIs?”

“Or mad?” Y’sul suggested.

The travelcaptain did a shrug-bob. “Not everybody”

“GC stuff. Hurrah!” the other half said, fiddling with some holo controls rayed out from a control stub shaped like a giant mushroom.

“Just munitions, or whole?”

“Whole.”

“How wholly splendid.”

“Absolutely.”

“I don’t understand,” Fassin said. “Was there a real Dweller called Quercer Janath and you replaced them, or—”

“One moment, Seer Taak,” the travelcaptain said. Then, in a slightly different and lower voice, said, “You got the ship?”

“I got the ship,” the other half said. “Talking to its infinitely confused little computer brain now. Thinks it’s dead. Believes the auto-destruct’s been and gone.”

“A common delusion.”

“Indeed.”

“I shall leave you to negotiate a return course with our ship shade.”

“Too kind.”

“Now then, Seer Taak,” one half of the travelcaptain said. “To answer your question: I’m not telling you.”

Y’sul made a snorting noise.

Fassin stared at the back of the AI\Dweller. “That’s not an answer.”

“Oh, it is an answer. It may not be an answer to your taste, but it is an answer.”

Fassin looked at Y’sul, who was using a screen turned to mirror to inspect his bandages. “Y’sul, do you believe Quercer Janath is an AI? Or two?”

“Always smelled a bit funny,” the Dweller said. “Put it down to eccentric personal hygiene, or the effects of truetwinning.” Y’sul made it obvious he was looking hard at the travelcaptain in the seat in front of them. “Frankly, madness is more likely, don’t you think? Usually is.”