Keith fumed for a few moments longer, then nodded curtly. But when he did nothing further, Thor spoke into the air. “PHANTOM,” he said. “Cancel house arrest on Jag.”
“Cancellation requires authorization from Director Lansing.”
Keith exhaled noisily. “Do it—but, PHANTOM, monitor every command he issues. If any of them seem unrelated to determining our location, notify me at once.”
“Acknowledged. House arrest ended.”
Keith looked at Thor. “What’s our current heading?”
Thor consulted his instruments. “We’re still on a modified version of the parabolic course we used to slingshot around the green star. Obviously, the path changed when we ceased to be under that star’s gravitational influence, so—”
“Magnor,” said Jag, interrupting. “I need you to rotate the ship in a Gaf Wayfarer pattern; we are missing one hyperscope array, but I need a parallactic full-sky hyperspace scan.”
Thor tapped some keys. The holographic bubble around the bridge began a complex series of rotations, but because the bubble was empty save for a few indistinct smudges of white, the tilting and turning didn’t cause vertigo. The pilot looked at Keith again. “As for getting home, the shortcut exit behind us shows in hyperspace just like every other one I’ve ever seen, complete with zero meridian. Assuming the damned things still work the same way over millions of light-years, once Lianne gets our full electrical system back on-line, I should be able to put us back at any active shortcut you specify.”
“Good” said Keith. “Lianne, how badly damaged were we in the battle?”
“Decks fifty-four through seventy are flooded,” she said, into a hologram of Keith’s head, “and everything from deck forty-one down has some water damage. Also, all decks below the central disk took a heavy hit of radiation as we careened around the green star; I advise declaring the entire lower half uninhabitable.” She paused. “The
“What about our shields?”
“Our forcefield emitters were all overloaded, but I’ve already got my engineers working on repairs; we should have minimal screens within an hour. In a way, it’s good we came out in intergalactic space. The chances of running into a micrometeoroid out here are slim.”
“What about the damage done when Gawst carved out our number-two generator?”
“My teams have put temporary bulkheads in place around the hole where it was removed,” said Lianne. “That should hold until we get back to a spacedock.”
“And the other generators?”
“Number three has had all its electrical connections severed. I’ve got a crew working on hooking it back up again, but I don’t know if we’ve got enough wide-gauge fiber-optic cable in stock to do the job; we may have to manufacture some. Anyway, until we get it back on-line, we won’t be able to use the main engines. One of the other Waldahud ships had started carving out the number-one generator, as well. That’s the one that quit, causing the power failure. We should be able to repair that damage, though.”
“And what about the docking bays?”
“Bay sixteen is filled with frozen water,” said Lianne. “Also, three of the five probeships that were involved in the battle are in need of repairs.”
“But we’re still spaceworthy?” asked Keith.
“I want to schedule about three weeks in dock for repairs, but, yes, we’re in no immediate danger.”
Keith nodded. “In that case, Thor, as soon as Lianne says we’re ready for powered flight, I’ll want you to plot a course through the shortcut that will pop us out where we started, back near the green star.”
Thor’s orange eyebrows lifted. “I know you want to rescue the
“Probably so, but that’s not why I want to go back.” He looked over at Rhombus. “You were right a few minutes ago, my rolling friend. I’ve got to keep my priorities straight. Contact with other life is why
“They tried to kill us,” said Thor.
Keith raised a hand. “I’m not feel enough to give them a second chance to toss us into the green star. Can you plot a course that will bring us out of the shortcut, whip us around that star, then bring us back to the shortcut, diving through on a vector that will take us out at the Flatland 368A exit?”
Thor considered for a moment. “I can do that, yes. But F368A? Not New Beijing?”
“For all we know, the attack on
Thor shook his head. “Not at the speed we’ll be going, unless they’re all lying in wait for us just outside the exit.”