Berserker - Berserker Base - BestLightNovel.com
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Nay, she thought in her seething, it does no' breathe. Launch a missile, then! But none we ha' aboard could get past the defenses we know such a berserker has, and it would respond wi' much better armament than we carry. It could simply fire an energy beam, to slice our s.h.i.+p in twain like a guillotine blade going through a neck.
Nay, no' either, she thought, aware that the was altogether abstract. 'Tis o' destroyer cla.s.s, no' big enough to hold the generator that could produce a beam strong enough. Dispersion across the distance between us- A dreadnaught could do so, o' course, though e'en its reach would be limited and the cut would be messy. To slash a real scalpel o'er this range, ye need power, coolant, and sheer physical size for the focusing-aye, ground-based projectors, like those we've built across Adam.
If a fight breaks out here, the berserker will swamp our own screens and antimissiles. As for its response, it need not e'en get a hit. A few kilotons o' explosion nearby will serve full well to kill us by radiation.
But my mind is wandering. We're no' supposed to provoke a battle. I ha' indeed grown old.
She chose to prolong matters a little, not to tease the enemy, which had no patience to lose (or else had infinite patience), but to a.s.sert her life against its unlife. "A philosopher o' ours has observed that the improbable must happen," she said. "If it ne'er did, 'twould be the impossible."
The hesitation of the machine was barely sufficient for her to notice. "We are not present to dispute definitions. How does this planet you speak of come to be inhabited? Where is it? Be quick. We have too many missions to undertake for the wasting of time."
Montgomery had long since won to resolution; but the words would not die, they stirred anew. Then one of the twelve, called Judas Iscariot, went unto the chief priests. And said unto them, What will ye give me, and I will deliver him unto you? And they covenanted with him for thirty pieces of silver.
She heard her voice, fast and flat: "Besides being in the right orbit, this Earth-sized planet has a Mars-sized companion. Therefore they are locked to each other, not to their sun. The period o' their spin is nine and a quarter Earth days, which serves to maintain atmospheric circulation. True, nights get cold, but no' too cold, when winds blow aye across the terminator; and during the long day, the oceans store mickle heat. The interplay wi' a year that is about twenty-two Earth days long is interesting-but no' to ye, I'm sure. Ye are just interested in the fact that this planet has brought forth life for ye to destroy.
"Ye ha' no' the s.h.i.+ps to spare for a search, if ye're to carry out any other operations before an armada from our inner civilizations comes out against ye. Red dwarf stars are by far the commonest kind, ye ken.
"'Make the deal. Agree that, if this world is as I've described, ye'll stay your hand at Adam, whate'er ye may do elsewhere. Let the couriers disperse wi' the attestation o' this compact between us. After that I'll gi" ye the coordinates o' the star. Send a scout to verify-a small, expendable craft. Ye'll find I spoke truth.
"Thereafter, a single capital s.h.i.+p o' yours can write an end to yon life."
Sally Jennison woke after twelve hours, rested, hungry, and more clear-headed than felt good. The room lent her had barely s.p.a.ce for a bunk and her piled-up baggage from the boat, Swearing, she wrestled forth a sweatsuit, got it on, and her way to the gymnasium of which she had been told. Men crowded the narrow corridors but, while she fell the gaze of many, none seemed to jostle her purposely, nor did any offer greetings. A sour, puritanical pack, the Adamites, she thought. Or am I letting my bitterness make my judgments for me?
A workout in the women's section, followed by a shower and change into fresh garments, took some of the edge off her mood. By then it was near noon on the clock; the rotation of the newcomers' planet was not much different from Earth's. She proceeded to the officers' mess, benched herself at the table, and ate ravenously. Not that the food was worthy of it; her field rations had been better.
A sandy-haired young woman on her right attempted friendliness. "Ye're the stranded scientist, no? My sympathies. I'm Kate Fraser, medical corps." Reluctantly, Sally shook hands. "Ye're a... xenologist, am I right? Maybe, if ye've naught else to do, ye'd consider a.s.sisting in sickbay. Ye must know first aid, at least, and we're shorthanded. 'Twill be worse if we take casualties, come the action."
"That's no' to speak o' here, Lieutenant Fraser," warned 'a skinny redheaded man sitting opposite, "Besides, I do no' believe she'd fit into a naval organization." He cleared his throat. "Wi" due respect, Dr.
Jennison. See ye,' every hale adult on Adam is a reservist in the armed forces until old age. Thus we're better coordinated in our units than any co-opted civilian could possibly be." Pridefully: "The berserkers will no' get nigh enough again to Adam to bombard it."
Anguish and anger kindled anew in Sally. "Why did you want to interfere on Ilya, then?"
"Forward strategy," said Fraser. The redhead frowned at her and made a shus.h.i.+ng motion.
It went unseen by a very young officer whose plumpness, unusual in this a.s.semblage, suggested a well-to-do home. "'Tis no' sufficient to throw back the d.a.m.ned berserkers," he declared. "They'll still be aprowl. Travel and outlying industries will still be endangered, insurance rates stay excruciating."
Sally knew little about Adam, but a memory stirred in her. After the last a.s.sault impoverished them and their planet, many of the people went into new endeavors requiring less in the way of natural resources than the original agriculture-based society had done. A stiff work ethic and, yes, a general respect for learning gave advantages that increased through the generations. Adamite s.h.i.+pping and banking interests were of some importance nowadays, in their stellar sector. Prim race of moneygrubbers, she thought.
"The basic problem to cope wi'," the boy went on, "is that the berserkers are von Neumann machines-"
"That will do. Ensign Stewart!" interrupted the redhead. "Report to my office at fifteen hundred hours."
Scarlet and white went across the youthful cheeks. Sally guessed Stewart was in for a severe reprimand.
"Sorry, Dr. Jennison," said the redhead. His tone was not quite level, "Military security. Ah, my name is Craig, Commander Robert Craig."'
"Are you afraid I'll ran off and spill your secrets to the enemy?" Sally jeered.
He bit his lip. "Surely no'. But wha' ye do no' know, the berserkers can so' torture out o' ye. They could, understand. They've robots among them o' the right size, shape, mobility-like soulless caricatures o'
humans."
"What about you?"
"The men, and such officers as ha' no need to know, simply follow orders. The key officers are sworn to ne'er be taken alive." Craig's glance dropped to his sidearm. Stewart seemed to regain pride.'
"Can we no' talk more cheerful?" asked Fraser.
The effort failed. Conversation spattered out.
Ian Dunbar's place had been too far up the table for him to speak with Sally. He intercepted her at the mess-hall door. "Good day," he said in his odd fas.h.i.+on, half harsh, half diffident. "Ha' ye any plans for the next several hours?"
She glared at the angular countenance.. "Have you a library? I've nothing to read. Our books, our tapes-the station's, my own, like all our personal property-are gone."
He winced. "'Aye, o' course, we've ample culture, along in the data banks, text...video, music. I'll show ye to the screening room if ye wish. But-um-m, I thought ye might liefer ha' some private speech, now that ye're rested. Ye could ask me whate'er ye; like, and within the limits o' security I'd try to gi" honest answers."
Is this a leadup to a pa.s.s at me? she wondered. No, I don't suppose so. Not that it matters a lot. I'm certain I could curb him. But I suspect he curbs himself tighter than that. "Very well. Where?"
"My room is the only place. That is, we could go topside again, but there are things ye should perhaps see and-Naturally, the door will stand open."
A smile flitted of itself across Sally's lips.
Accompanying him through the pa.s.sageways, she asked why men and machines continued busy. He explained that, while the basic installations were complete, plenty more could be done in whatever time remained, especially toward hardening the site. Let her remember that the berserker would come equipped to incinerate a world.
She almost exclaimed: You're not doing a thing to protect the Ilyans! but blocked the impulse. Later, maybe. First she needed to learn a great deal, and that required coolness: for her refreshed brain realized how little sense everything she had heard thus far made.
"You told me you're an engineer, Captain Dunbar," she angled instead. "What specialty?"
"Heavy, high-energy devices, for the most part," he replied. "In civilian life I've been on projects throughout scores o' lightyears. My employers are... contractors supplying technical talent, ye might say.
'Tis one o' the items Adam has for export."
"How interesting. Could you tell me something I've been wondering about? I heard a reference to it when I didn't have a chance to inquire what it meant or go look it up."
His mouth creased with the pleasure of any normal man consulted by an attractive woman. "Aye, if I know mysel'."
"What's a von Neumann machine?"
He broke stride. "Eh? Where'd ye hear that?"
"I don't think it's among your secrets," she said blandly. "I could doubtless find it in the base's reference library, which you just invited me to use."
"Ah-well-" He recovered and went onward, moving and talking fast, "'Tis no' a specific machine, but a general concept, going back to the earliest days o' cybernetics. John von Neumann proposed it; he was among, the pioneers. Basically, 'tis a machine which does something, but also fro' time to time makes more like itsel', including copies o' the instructions for its main task."
"I see. Like the berserkers."
"Nay!" he denied, more emphatically than needful. "A wars.h.i.+p does no' manufacture other wars.h.i.+ps."
"True. However, the-system as a whole-the entire berserker complex, which includes units for mining, refining, production-yes, it functions as a von Neumann machine, doesn't it? With the basic program, that it copies, being the program for eradicating life. Additionally, the program modifies itself in the light of experience. It learns; or it evolves."
"Aye," he conceded, his unwillingness plain upon him, "ye can use that metaphor if ye insist."
For' a moment, she wished she hadn't asked. What had it gained her? A figure of speech, scarcely anything else. And what a chilling image it was. Not alone the fact of berserker auxiliaries ripping minerals out of planets and asteroids, digesting them, to fineness, fuming them into new machines which carried the same code as the old, the same drive to kill. No, what made her s.h.i.+ver was the sadden thought of the whole hollow universe as a womb engendering the agents of death, which later came back and impregnated their mother anew.
Dunbar's words brought deliverance. His mood had lightened, unless for some reason he wanted to divert her from her idea. "Ye're a sharp one indeed," he said almost cordially. "I look forward to better acquaintance. Here we are. Welcome."
Officers' quarters were individual chambers, four meters square. That sufficed for a bed, desk, shelves, dresser, closet, a couple of chairs, floor s.p.a.ce for pacing if you grew excited or simply needed to ease tension. The desk held a computer terminal, eidophone, writing equipment, papers; the occupant must often work as well as sleep on the spot.
Sally looked around, curious. Fluorescent lighting fell chill on plastered walls and issue carpeting.
Personal items were on hand, though-pictures, a few souvenir objects, a pipe rack and ashtaker, a tea set and hotplate, a small tool kit, a half-finished model of a sailing s.h.i.+p on ancient Earth. "Sit ye down,"
Dunbar urged. "Can I brew us a pot? I've ooloong, jasmine, green, lapsang soochong, as ye prefer."
She accepted, chose, granted him permission to smoke. "And why not shut the door, Captain?" she proposed. "It's so noisy outside. I'm sure you're trustworthy."
"Thank ye." Did an actual blush pa.s.s beneath that leathery tan? He busied himself.
The largest picture was a landscape, valley walled by heights, lake agleam in the foreground. It did not otherwise resemble Geyserdale. Ground cover was spa.r.s.e Earth gra.s.s and heather. Cedars sheltered a low house from winds that had twisted them into troll shapes. A gla.s.sy-bottomed crater marred a mountainside; stone had run molten thence, before congealing into lamps and jumbles. Clouds brooded rain over, the ridges. Above them, daylight picked out the pale crescents of two moons.
"Is that scene from Adam?" she inquired.
"Aye," he said. "Loch Aytoun, where I was born and raised."
"It seems to have... suffered."
He nodded. "A berserker warhead struck Ben Creran. The area was slow to recover, and has ne'er been fertile again as 'twas formerly." He sighed. "Though 'twas lucky compared to many, We've deserts fushed solid like yon pit. Other places, air turned momentarily to plasma and soil vaporized down to bedrock. And yet other places-but let's no' discuss that, pray."
She 'studied his lean form. "So your family isn't rich," she deduced.
"Och, nay." He barked a laugh. "The financiers and s.h.i.+pping barons are no' as common among us as folklore has it. My parents were landholders, on land that yielded little. They wrung a wee bit extra out o'
the waters." Proudly: "But they were bound and determined their children would ha' it better."
"How did you yourself achieve that?"
"Scholars.h.i.+ps through engineering school. Later, well-paid jobs, especially beyond our own planetary system."
You'd have to have considerable talent to do that, she thought. Her gaze wandered to another picture near the desk: a teenage boy and girl. "Are those youngsters yours?"
"Aye," His tone roughened. "My wife and I were divorced. She took custody. 'Twas best, I being seldom home. That was the root reason why Ellen left. I see them whene'er I can."
"You couldn't have taken a sedentary position?" she asked low.
"I do no' seem to be the type. I mentioned to ye before that I wanted to be a planetologist, but saw no openings,"
''Like my father," she blurted.
"He is a planetologist?"
"Yes. Professor at a college in western Oregon, if that means anything to you. He doesn't do much fieldwork anymore, but it used to take him away for long stretches. Mother endured his absences, however."
"A remarkable lady."
"She loves him." Of course she does. It was ever worth the wait, when Dad at last returned.
"Tea's ready," Dunbar said, as if relieved to escape personal matters. He served it, sat down facing her with shank crossed over knee, filled and ignited his pipe.
The brew was hot and comforting on her palate. "Good," she praised. "Earth-grown, I'd judge.
Expensive, this far out. You must be a connoisseur."
He grinned, it made his visage briefly endearing. "Faute de mieux. I'd liefer ha' offered ye wine or ale, but we're perforce austere. I daresay ye noticed the Spartan sauce on our food. Well, as that fine old racist Chesterton wrote, " 'Tea, although an Oriental, " 'Is a gentleman at leas!-' "
Startled, she splashed some of hers into the saucer. "Why, you sound like my father now!"
"I do?" He seemed honestly surprised.
"A scholar."
Again he grinned. "Och, nay. 'Tis but that on lengthy voyages and in lonely encampments, a fellow must needs read."
A chance to probe him. "Have you developed any particular interests?"
"Well, I like the nineteenth-century English-language writers, and history's a bit o' a hobby for me, especially medieval European." He leaned forward. "But enough about me. Let's talk about ye. What do ye enjoy?"
"As a matter of fact," she admitted, "I share your literary taste. And I play tennis, sketch, make noises on a flute, am a pretty good cook, play hardnose poker and slapdash chess."
"Let's get up a game," he suggested happily. "Chess, that is. I'm more the cautious sort. We should be well matched."
d.a.m.n, but he does have charm when he cares to use it! she thought.
She tried putting down any further notions. The men who attracted her had always been older ones, with intelligence, who led active lives. (A touch of father fixation, presumably, but what the h.e.l.l.) Dunbar, though-she would not, repeat not, call him "Ian" in her mind-he was...
Was what? The opposition? The outright enemy?
How to lure the truth out of him? Well, Dad used to say, "When all else fails, try frankness."
She set her teacup on the shelf beside her chair: a hint, perhaps too subtle, that she was declining continued hospitality. "That might be fun, Captain," she declared, "after you've set me at ease about several things."
For an instant he looked dashed, before firmness and... resignation?... deepened the lines in his countenance. "Aye," he murmured, " 'twas clear ye'd raise the same questions your colleagues did. And belike more, sin' ye've a keen wit and are not being rushed as they were."
"Also, I have a special concern, " Sally told him. "Not that the rest don't share it, but it was bound to affect me harder than most of them. You see, my study hasn't been the structure of the planet or the chemistry of life on it or anything like that. It's been the natives themselves. I deal directly with them, in several cases intimately. They-certain individuals-they've become my friends, as dear to me as any human."
Dunbar nodded. "And today ye see them threatened wi' extermination, like' rats," he said, his tone gentler than she would have expected. "Well, that's why we came, to protect them."