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Colin sagged in his couch, soaked in sweat, as Dahak Two broke into his battered globe. The display came back up, and he bit his lip at the molten craters blown deep into Jiltanith’s command. Then her holo-image appeared before him, eyes fiery with battle in a strained face.
“Idiot! How could you take a chance like that?!”
” ’Twas my decision, not thine!”
“When I get my hands on you—!
“Then will I yield unto thee, sin thou hast hands to seize me!” she shot back, her strained expression easing as the fact of his survival penetrated.
“Thanks to you, you lunatic,” Colin said more softly, swallowing a lump.
“Nay, my love, thanks to us all. ’Tis victory, Colin! They flee before our fire, and they die. Thou’st broken them, my Colin! Some few thousand may escape—no more!”
“I know, ’Ta
Chapter Twenty-Five
“Give us four months, and we will have restored your Enchanach Drive, Dahak.” Vlad Chernikov’s stupendous repair ship nuzzled alongside Dahak, and the ancient warship’s hull flickered under constellations of robotic welders while his holo-image sat in Command One with Colin and Jiltanith’s image.
“Your engineers are highly efficient, sir,” Dahak’s mellow voice said.
Colin’s eyes drifted to the glaring crimson swatches carved deep into the ten-meter spherical holo schematic of his ship and he shivered. Blast doors sealed those jagged rents, but some extended inward for over five hundred kilometers. At that, the schematic looked better than an actual external view. Dahak was torn and tattered. Half his proud dragon had been seared away, and the radiation count in the outer four hundred kilometers of his hull was fit to burn out an Imperial detector. Half his transit shafts ended in shredded wreckage, and half of those which remained were without power.
It was a miracle he’d survived at all, but he would have to be almost completely rebuilt. His sublight drive was down to sixty percent efficiency, and two wrecked Enchanach node generators made supralight movement impossible. Seventy percent of his weapons were rubble, and even his core tap had been damaged beyond safe operation. Colin knew Dahak could not feel pain, and he was glad; he’d felt agony enough for them both when he’d seen his wounds.
Nor were those wounds all they’d suffered. Ashar, Trelma, and Thrym were gone, and eighteen thousand people with them. Crag Cat was almost as badly damaged as Dahak, with another two thousand dead. Hector and Sevrid had lost another six hundred boarding wrecked Achuultani starships, and of their fifty-three unma
But brooding on their own losses did no good, and the fact remained: they’d won. Barely two thousand Achuultani ships had escaped, and Hector had secured over seven thousand prisoners from the wreckage of their fleet.
“Dahak’s right, Vlad,” he said. “You people are working miracles. Just get him supralight-capable, and we’ll go home, by God!”
“I point out once more,” Dahak said, “that you need not await completion of my repairs for that. There will be more than enough for you to do on Earth without wasting time out here.”
“’Wasting’ hell! We couldn’t’ve done it without you, and we’re not going anywhere until you can come with us.”
“Aye,” Jiltanith said. “’Tis thy victory more even than ours. No celebration can be without that thou’rt there to share.”
“You are most kind, and I must confess that I am grateful. I have learned what ‘loneliness’ is … and it is not a pleasant thing.”
“Worry not, my Dahak,” Jiltanith said softly. “Never shalt thou know loneliness again. Whilst humans live, they’ll not forget thy deeds nor cease to love thee.”
Dahak fell uncharacteristically silent, and Colin smiled at his wife, wishing she were physically present so he could hug her.
“Well! That’s settled. How about the rest of us, Vlad?”
“Crag Cat is hyper-capable,” Chernikov said, “but her core tap governors are too badly damaged for Enchanach Drive. I would like to dispatch her, Moir, Sigam, and Hly direct to Birhat for repairs. The remainder of the Flotilla is damaged to greater or lesser extent—aside from Heka, that is—but those four are by far the most severely injured.”
“Okay. Captain Singleterry can take them out to Bia. I’m sure Mother and Marshal Tsien will be ready to take care of them by now, and our ‘colonists’ will want to talk firsthand to someone who was here. I think we’ll send Hector and Sevrid back to Sol with our prisoners, too.”
“Aye, and ’twould be well to send Coha
“Good idea,” Colin agreed, “and one that takes care of the most immediate chores. Vlad, are you to a point where you can turn over to Baltan?”
“I am,” Chernikov replied, holographic eyes abruptly glowing.
“Thought you might be,” Colin murmured. “You and Dahak can get started exploring then.” He gri
“I will attempt to, although, were I human, I would not permit my teeth to require reconstructive attention,” Dahak agreed primly.
Vladimir Chernikov reclined in the pilot’s couch of his cutter, propped his heels on his console, and hummed. It had been nice of Tamman to let him hitch a ride deeper into the battle zone aboard Royal Birhat, saving him hours of sublight flight time. Especially since Tamman regarded his technique for wreck-hunting as unscientific, to say the least.
Which it was; but Chernikov didn’t exactly regard his present duty as work, and he always had been a hunt-and-peck tourist.
At the moment, he was well into what had been the Achuultani rear before Jiltanith’s attack. Chernikov was convinced anything worth finding would be in this area. That was his official reasoning. Privately, he knew, he wanted to look here because he would be the first. All of Hector’s prisoners had come from ships which had been crippled by gravitonic warheads; the irradiation of anti-matter explosions and the Empire’s energy weapons left few survivors, and this had been the site of pointblank combat. Few of these ships had been killed by missiles, much less gravitonic warheads, which meant that the area hadn’t had much priority for Sevrid’s attention.
He stopped humming and lowered his feet, looking more closely at the display. There was something odd about that wreck. Its forward half had been smashed away—by energy fire, judging from what was left—but why did it … ?
He stiffened. No wonder it seemed odd! The wreck’s lines were identical to the others he had seen, but the broken stump that remained was barely half a ship—and half again bigger than the others had been to begin with!
He urged the cutter closer. There had to be a reason this thing was so big, and he dared not believe the most logical one. He ghosted still closer, floodlights sweeping the slowly tumbling hull, and jagged, runic characters showed themselves. Dahak had tutored Chernikov carefully in the Achuultani alphabet and language in preparation for explorations exactly like this, and now his lips moved as he pronounced the throat-straining phonetics. They sounded like the prelude to a dog fight, and the translation was no more soothing.