They’d already acquired a substantial velocity towards the Station on their way from the
‘Do you have a tuneable coherer in your toolbox?’ he asked Tarquinia.
‘Of course. Why?’
‘I think we’ll need to burn the proximity sensors, before we get too close.’ For long-range navigation the gnats relied on beacons, but to dock they picked up the reflections of their surroundings in infrared. The rogue had no hope of seeing them coming from afar, but once they tried to sidle up to it, it would know that it had company.
Tarquinia said, ‘It won’t have a lot of freedom for evasive action; if it delays its arrival too much, the Station will have moved around in its orbit. And it can’t make up lost time later; the engines are running at full power as it is.’
‘It could still shift sideways with the manoeuvring engines,’ Ramiro suggested. ‘There’d be nothing to stop it recovering from that – and it would be enough to make our job impossible.’ Once they were beside the rogue any sudden change in the main engines’ thrust would see it plummet out of sight, but it would only take the tiniest swerve to snap a boarding rope slung between the vehicles.
‘True enough,’ Tarquinia conceded. ‘But we’ll need to combine the coherer with some kind of sighting scope.’
She unplugged the photonic cable from her corset, then clambered down into the hold. As she rummaged around for the parts she needed, Ramiro contemplated her empty couch and unattended console.
He’d happily imagined the
‘How about this?’ Tarquinia handed him a scope, three clamps and a coherer. ‘The range of the sensors would be about a saunter. Through this, you should be able to see them at twice that distance.’
Ramiro said, ‘We’ll need to calibrate the alignment.’
‘Of course. Put it together, then I’ll get the optics workbench.’
‘You have an
‘A small one.’
The bench was half the size of Ramiro’s torso, but it let them measure the angle between the scope’s axis and the coherer’s beam. By the time he had the crude weapon aligned, he looked out through the dome to see that the gnat had rotated again without him even noticing. The engines were dragging them backwards now, giving them a trajectory much like the parabola of a ball thrown under gravity – albeit in some very strange game where the skill lay more in controlling the direction of the ongoing force than in the initial toss.
‘Do you have children?’ he asked Tarquinia.
‘No.’
‘So what did your brother say, when you told him about this?’
‘He wished me a safe journey,’ Tarquinia replied.
Ramiro said, ‘If I’d told my uncle, I probably wouldn’t be here at all.’
‘Hmm.’ Tarquinia sounded sympathetic, but reluctant to take sides. ‘So let’s neither of us do anything reckless,’ she said. ‘If we play this right, your family need never even know that you were out here.’
The gnat reached the top of its parabola and started falling back towards the Station. Ramiro glanced up from the navigation console, unable to dismiss a stubborn intuition that the event ought to be visible somehow, but nothing in the view through the dome had changed.
The
‘We need to eat now,’ Tarquinia declared, tugging at the lid on the store beside her couch.
‘I don’t have much appetite,’ Ramiro protested.
‘That’s not the point,’ Tarquinia said flatly. ‘You’ve only had half a night’s sleep, and you’re going to need to be alert for this. It’ll take a bell for the loaves to be digested, so this is mealtime.’
Ramiro buzzed at her presumptuousness. ‘Yes, Uncle.’
‘I’m your pilot, that’s worse. Can your uncle toss you out into the void?’