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Chapter Seven

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Control Deck, Keravath, Outbound from Boltston



Dim almost to the point of too dark, the board colors were close if not exact, and ter’Astin’s toss was good, and into the right-hand seat.

“I’ll sit pilot, of course, you’ll sit left seat, and since you’ll be at the board, we’ll log you in as sitting second.”

It was, Jethri knew, some kind of a sop to his honor, but he could feel his shoulders clenching. If there was one thing his mother the captain had made sure he knew was that he wasn’t any pilot and wasn’t worth teaching: on the Market he daren’t ever sit in a command seat, not even while doing stinks on port. He shuffled the largest of his bags toward the bin to the back.

“Not a seat for me, I think. There are two more and I’ll just . . .”

The Scout’s tone firmed. “If you please, do take the left seat. I appreciate your understanding of etiquette but I dislike having to talk over my shoulder. You’ll sit second and earn some keep.”

Jethri looked up, the pilot’s hand motion designating Jethri’s spot with emphasis. “Bully and fool,” he said with a touch of asperity, tucking his day pack into the indicated cubby and testing the catch web with a stronger tug than it deserved.

“Forgive me, young sir; this trip is not likely to be an easy one, and if you think the pilot’s a fool, we can cancel it and let your . . .”

Jethri snickered. “Just naming the seats the way I was taught, sir.”

“I find it hard to believe that the Gobelyns traveled on a ship where they allowed the captain and first board to be called a fool.”

Jethri turned to him, realizing that Pen Rel’s excellent teaching had the pair of them playing Balance games; the more his mood was uncertain, the more the Scout would automatically react and . . .

“Good,” ter’Astin bowed to him. “Let us not waste adrenaline in such a fashion. I am still at a loss for the words . . .”

Jethri stared into a corner—there were lots of them, and they were dim, because measuring one’s space was a good plan for anyone on a ship’s flight deck, in any case and at any time—and he didn’t have to look at the Scout.

Gathering energy he finally relented of his silence.

“There’s a saying a family saying, maybe, or a Terran one. I heard it enough though, and maybe it was just my ship . . .” He paused, considering melant’i and knowing that any time a Terran-born tried to play with that delicate balance there was a chance of error. So he looked directly at the Scout, who was by now in his seat, and testing straps for the away phase . . .

“So it was said, sometimes, that ‘When the first board’s a bully, second board’s a fool? That means I sit fool.’”

The Scout allowed a slight grunt to acknowledge his hearing of the phrase; but his hands were already talking to his ship with the same kind of surety Jethri’d seen Iza display, or Khat. Jethri’d longed for that kind of surety when his father had been at the boards, and when he’s assumed that one day he would . . .

“Your father,” said the Scout accusingly, “was a pilot. His father was a pilot, and his before. Your captain-mother Iza was a pilot. Is it odd that you are not?”

Jethri settled back, hands already reaching to the slightly wrong spots for the belts, and then, with a glance, discovering the right spots on this ship and tugging them into place, checking the lock/unlock sequence, sitting tight against it for sizing. This was also a useful way to hide his perplexity—was the Scout testing him, aware that Iza was not truly his mother? The mention of Arin’s predecessors . . . made him nervous.

The seat was a remarkably good fit to start with and he could feel it adjusting itself as he reached his hands to the board as he’d seen others do too many times to count.

He wet his lips, finding there was no retort there when he expected something, though resentment was a fringe aura to all his thoughts still.

“Dunno ’bout odd,” he said in Terran, this being a discussion he’d prefer not to have, in any language. “Just know that them on the Market made it plain that I wasn’t ready yet, and the captain, she made it plain that pilot’s not in me. The others could see it too, I’m guessing.”

The Scout didn’t reply to this intelligence, rather used his chin to gesture toward Jethri’s side of the board.

“You’ll want to push the bottommost button on the right once, and then flip the secure switch to the right, and lock it. That tells the ship what it knows: not only that someone’s in the seat, but that person is alert. More than this we won’t do on exit.”

Jethri followed the instruction, and several more, found the arming handle for the abandon ship capsule and understood those instructions, which basically said that if something went wrong and there was absolutely no way they could survive after the pilot declared an emergency and declared abandon ship, he was to pull that handle and take whatever more time the capsule gave him to breathe to transmit and record what had gone wrong so that someone else might be able to achieve Balance for the dead.

He wore the earpiece for comm, listening in; he activated, on order, enough of the board to be able to see that the front and rear hatches were secure, that the docking strut was engaged but not locked, that—well, he’d had been listening to these kinds of things since he was born, and though more than half of the traffic was in Liaden there really wasn’t that much difference from a run out from a trade stop on Gobelyn’s Market. Nor was the board much different, and that was likely not Liaden difference but the difference between a family freight ship and a Scout’s light duty.

Jethri listened now: voices from Elthoria’s flight deck reached out to the pilot, ignoring him, assigning, agreeing, confirming. Gaenor’s voice now: this would be the official—but no, it must not be, for ter’Astin was talking, naming Jethri Gobelyn ven’Deelin Clan Ixin as second board on Keravath, while in his ear Gaenor was saying, “Communications check in process, on comm Elthoria, Gaenor tel’Dorbit, checking Keravath Second Board Jethri Gobelyn ven’Deelin.”

Ship habit more than thought: “Second Board, signal caught,” he said, “open line.”

“Jethri, I’m sending secure relink now, please test.”

He looked over the controls, close enough to Terran after all, found the symbols needed, punched the button as around him Keravath’s familiar-enough preparations went on.

The two central screens were live, one with technical scan showing radar and a radio-source overlay, and one with a forward video. He guessed when the Market came out of rehab she might have setups only one or two generations behind these, but there, he’d been reading up on the Scouts and knew they often were ahead of commercial installations by a dozen Standards.

The link showed live; Jethri spoke.

Keravath Second, testing secure link, Keravath Second testing link . . .”

“Shield ratio?” Gaenor’s voice had changed—maybe it was the secure line’s special harmonics, or maybe it was her playing on a sudden sense of privacy, but—ah, darn!

Jethri was stonkered: he’d never tested a secure link beyond touching a button—and that just once, with Iza off-ship.

Apparently it was a secure link: the Scout was carrying on so rapid a conversation in jargon-laden Liaden that it took Jethri’s frantic hand-signal to gain his eyes.

“Shield ratio?” he asked doubtfully of the serious face, fearing that he’d interrupted . . .

Ter’Astin gave a sharp bow that was almost a nod, pointed to one of the small sub-screens down on Jethri’s right side, hand underlying the duplicate on the Scout’s board.

There: a clear-reading color bar, with the red side showing a reading of three digits, the blue . . .

Elthoria, that would be, 937 over 063.”

Almost without pause came the rejoinder, in a quiet purr of a voice . . .

“Jethri, that is very fine,” she said in Terran, which words he’d heard next to his ear not all that long ago, and which reminder was distracting at best and . . . “and so, since you shall miss the Festival here and I gather also Festivals where you travel, I am to relay to you Vil Tor’s hope that we three may, as he says in his best Terran, be ‘festive as all get-out’ on your return . . . and that you return soon. In the meantime, he points out that we shall party in your honor, shall we not?”

Jethri wanted to frame a good reply in Liaden, but the modes crashed his thoughts for a moment, and then the ship around him shook with the preliminary cast-offs, going to internal power entirely, and the gravity shifting oddly, a reminder that Elthoria was easily a hundred times more massive than Keravath.

“Gaenor,” he managed finally, “yes, I would very much like that, but you must tell him I am unpracticed . . .”

She laughed gently in his ear.

“Jethri, believe me, you’ll find him just as pleased as I to help rectify that situation.”

“Second,” came ter’Astin’s voice, amused, “we’ll be needing some concentration here in sixty seconds, if you please . . .”

“I—” he began, but Gaenor’s voice in his ear came quickly.

“I heard the pilot’s voice, my friend. Quickly then, Vil Tor and I offer a commission to Jethri the trader, to acquire for all of us, if you can, such scarves or scarf clothes to make our festives better. You have a measure of the cloth and the wavelengths; if necessary Vil Tor can tailor from base cloth. We shall make it worth your while, indeed . . . Elthoria secure out.”

That was said just as Keravath shifted slightly, announced by the shifting center of gravity . . . and Jethri heard the Scout say, “Control jets test good, we’re set now,” this unlikely sentence in Terran as the Scout looked at him meaningfully from little more that an arm’s length.

“You don’t understand—the connection is broken . . .”

Jethri hoped he wasn’t blushing bright enough to light the ship; ter’Astin laughed very lightly, and went on in a gentle voice, and a mode of comrade.

“Acquit me of such, Second. I have been flying solo courier long enough to understand very well the sigh of departure and the problems of connections being broken. And for you, so early in your career, and so badly used by my timing, I owe another Balance yet.

“Now, then, practical piloting lessons—pay attention! I shall expect you to retain much of what I tell you.”

* * *

There was a phrase known among Liadens and Terrans alike, and Jethri began to appreciate its nuance quickly under ter’Astin’s tutelage. That phrase was “to fly like a scout . . .” and it meant to move a ship faster, more accurately, with less fuss, and with more elegance than most ships moved—and the Scout had begun it before Elthoria’s call of “well-away” was fully voiced.

The little ship was nothing so gaumy as a shuttle nor as laggard as a trader’s family freighter; spinning on axis as neatly and carefree as Jethri might have in a stinks-run zero-G leap; the press of correction jets exact and efficient, with none of the overburn Khat deplored in Iza, nor none yet of the prissiness that Iza accused Cris of when he filled the chair.

Jethri croggled at the front video as the Scout skimmed Elthoria’s main pod-deck as if he were lifting from a planetary airport, the pressure growing as the little ship accelerated toward the line superimposed on the radar screen, a line reaching well out from Elthoria toward a Jump point that looked far too close to the world they were leaving for a safe system exit. The image almost brought on the kind of open-space fear he’d felt on planets—and that, of course, was absurd. He held on, saying nothing . . .

“We of the Scouts are like pilots everywhere,” came the nonchalant voice as Jethri maintained his grip on the armrests, “we offer and expect assistance of other pilots. There, we have taken a look at several pods from a less static location, giving images available to Elthoria without the launch of a remote—and in turn Elthoria’s eyes can be sure that in my haste I’ve not forgotten to uncap a jet nor left a cable dangling.”

“Left a cable dangling?” Jethri managed.

The Scout looked across at him, serious.

“Oh, indeed, Second. Couriers and small ships are prone to such, since we often don’t fit the usual attachment points and must use secondary points or transient attachments. I have myself, once only—and I tell you in strictest confidence—while I repeat once only!—managed to part from a station with technician’s cleaning cart still attached by umbilical, station to cart to ship. It was not this ship, I assure you, and in the end the fault was multiples of faults, for things were powered down that ought not have been, and others powered up that ought not, and . . . in the end there were mutual fines, and I’m sorry to say I lost five good days of personal leave to the fixing of things. Ugly, very ugly indeed, I was for a relumma or more . . .”

Here he paused in recounting the story, making sure Jethri was looking at him as well as the screen where the ship was nearing the long dotted line to the Jump point . . .

“Yes, ugly I was, for I therefore missed a Festival rendezvous with a favorite. I will expect you to be careful indeed, Second, that we not fall into such a situation on this trip!”

Before Jethri could reply other than shake his head at the unlikely need for his aid in such things, the pilot did something complex on his board and visibly relaxed—

“There. The course is set. And so, the course we have set is for Balfour, and I would like you to check my course, if you would, check my math—”

Jethri stared across at his companion starkly. Balfour was on a route Gobelyn’s Market had run several time within his memory, with barely even a sub-crew. Balfour shouldn’t be named by itself, of course, that was silly. There was another place that ought to be part of that run . . .

But there was so much he didn’t know, and he had no training at all, just—sense came to the fore.

“I am not a pilot! I don’t even know where to find the course—”

The flight deck had darkened as they traveled, but Jethri could see the pilot’s eyes tighten, and heard the slow duff of someone not fully reining in frustration.

“This is true, Jethri Gobelyn, and not merely the handy excuse given for security reasons? It is true that you have not learned to pilot, nor to navigate, nor to plot courses?”

Jethri froze in his seat, feeling the eyes pin him where he was, reviewing his life to be sure that in none of these days had he accidentally done those things and forgotten, that he—

“None of it, Pilot,’’ he managed. “I was last on the list for flight deck training. If I would have stayed on the Market, I suppose they would have broken down soon and got me my time on the lifeboat boards, but not even . . .”

“That’s criminal! Surely you must know your homeworld’s coords at least . . .”

Jethri heard the Scout’s error and shook his head, several times, suppressing the urge to raise his voice. The Scout’s choice of words became “birth home” in Terran.

“My birth home’s a ship,” the trader said blandly. “Now and always. The only coords I know is what I played with on the toy board my father gave me, and what I learned from playing Trade N Traipse, on the off-line spare board. You probably don’t know the game . . .

The pilot lifted hand to face, eyes closed. Finally, he removed his hand and glanced forthrightly at his supposed student.

“Coords from a game and a child’s toy? Well then, your father was a pilot, so I assume you at least got an accurate toy. You do know, then, where the controls are and what they are supposed to do?”

Jethri lifted his hands and held his face as steady as he might. The truth was that he’d heard Khat say something like it, and Paitor, and Cris. Seeli once or twice had even hinted that some rules “needed to be modified or the boy allowed to follow them . . .”

“Observation only, and from the ’prentice board my father . . .”

“Hold! Less and less I esteem your former captain. And you?”

Words didn’t come: what was there to say? Iza’s long plans had never included him—never!

“Tell me then, as we have some time, what would you do if I were stricken with some accident or poison, paralyzed here in my chair. How would you get on, how would you save us both?”

Jethri shook his head. “I couldn’t!” he blurted, feeling the flush of frustration. “I told you I’m not a pilot, and I told you I’ve been pushed away from the true board my whole life! Pilots do secret stuff!”

“Halt!”

The word was said so quietly it barely reached between them, but with such anger and loathing that Jethri froze again.

There was silence but for the proper sound of a ship prepping for transit, some blowers, some slight buzzing, a hum . . . perhaps even the creak of leather seats as the two men stared at each other.

Then, unexpectedly, a bow, surprisingly low from one already seated, and the words in Liaden, and then following in Trade equivalent, and then following again in more than passable Terran.

“Forgive me, forgive me, forgive me. I still feel that there has been something criminal in your education, and I see that my assumption has colored my approach in this. I am a Scout, and therefore, I assume too much in this case, from having only partial knowledge. I know of your father, and more now than when first you and I met; I know of your uncle, and more now than when first you and I met, and what I did not know until now was the depth of your captain’s error.

“If you will permit, let me speak with Jethri Gobelyn, with Jethri Gobelyn ven’Deelin’s permission, and we will work with this in Terran, where you may correct my language if need be. You see, I understand these things: Jethri Gobelyn is not a fool, nor is Jethri Gobelyn a coward, nor is Jethri Gobelyn a child.”

Again a pause, this time as a small two-tone signal disturbed the room, and then another. The Scout’s knowing eyes sought something on the boards, his finger touched a control, and he leaned back, staring straight ahead.

“Let us play a game of sorts, Jethri. I will rephrase my question and will offer replies—and there are no wrong answers. The fact that you do not know does not mean you wish not to know—I can see that from your learning since I saw you first all out of breath and taking on a space station if you must. No fool, and no coward, that I know. This game, we shall both learn from it.”

* * *

The game was survival; the questions started over, without rage this time: what would and what should he do were he left in the ship, this ship, alone in space?

“I need to explore and understand the escape pod—one that will take me to safety if the ship is damaged. I know there’s an abandon ship control, but I don’t know what it does other than bring down an emergency suit.”

“With myself suffering from a stroke, how would you start?”

“That would depend on where. In Jump, I’d have to try to help you, and otherwise wait until Jump is over. That’s automatic. Then I’d call for help.”

“And if we arrived and suffered an instant debris strike, disabling the vessel?”

“I know the symbols, but this ship doesn’t show the Guild signs I know. There should be a fast passage from here to a hatch or a release.”

“And so if we were on port, or in an inhabited planetary orbit, already you know enough to survive: call abandon ship and the suit comes when you push, unfolds from the overhead; in abandon ship the luggage bins fold out and the hatch behind on either side can be used.”

Jethri looked at him bleakly.

“There’s luck and there’s luck—how many accidents happen in . . .”

The Scout held up his hand and began pulling up info screens, dropping them one after another onto Jethri’s backup screen.

“How many accidents happen in an inhabited system? Why, most of them.” The Scout, moving quite expansively for someone strapped into an acceleration couch, pointed to the top screen where there were several lists of incidents.

“At least the ones we know of . . . most of those happen in crowded space, orbital space, gravity circuits. This is where ships hit ships, where satellites hit ships, where basic valve failures from overpressure and sloppy loading are exposed, where ‘loose objects’ like lost hatches and mislaid tools and parts of ancient space probes manage to find a way past low-grade shields or sleepy watch crew.

“Stupidity happens more often in crowds: runaway pods, ejected crew members, accidental weapons tests, I can’t tell you how many such things I’ve attended myself—But yes, that’s wrong. I can tell you even if I can’t recall them all instantly to mind. I should not so misspeak, since my records are available to us. You will, of course, regard anything I may show you from such files as confidential between pilots—and in particular you shall not discuss the cables I unleashed, but there, a pilot will not . . .”

“But I am not a pilot!”

The Scout laughed lightly.

“You must be a pilot, my friend, at least a basic pilot, and by the end of our trip you shall at least be able to find your way home—or to a safe port since you claim no home, which statement would pain dear Ixin no end, I’m sure. Even if in a most basic manner, you must. I am not looking to make you a Scout nor a liner captain, but your education as a trader will not be complete—no matter what our good Pen Rel might say—until you can from the inside understand something of the desperations pilots go through on behalf of trade, and on the behalf of uninformed traders.”

* * *

The lesson went on as the ship moved toward the Jump point, with Jethri wringing what patience he could from his already fraught psyche.

“Yes,” he admitted, “I can see that you trap the previous Jump coordinates, but I thought they vary considerably for going to instead of from, that—”

“Ah, well. Yes, coordinates are not perfectly static, and the likelihood that a ship needing to Jump precipitously would find exactly the same orbital slot to fall into that it left is . . . unlikely. So, we will assume certain things to start, and then while we are in Jump we will discuss more problematical situations. But first, some basic maneuvers.

“I am bringing your board live, in training mode. This means that it will function entirely as it should . . .”

Here Jethri felt his stomach drop for all that they were flying a perfectly normal course. Surely his face showed concern, for the Scout showed a patient and calming palm.

“Good, and thank you. I shall now finish the sentence! The board will function entirely as it should in principle, but each step will need confirmation from my board before the ship hears. This method of instruction may be one step up from the method wherein one leaps from the edge of a gravity-bound station section into zero-G, trusting . . .”

Jethri sighed, staring across at the Scout. Yes, in some places he was known as Jethri the Leaper, and there were drinks named for him, and on one station, at least, several medical terms: leaper’s lag, transit bruise, and gravity burn among them. It was not so long ago that he’d escaped from hounding Liadens from a low-class ship by doing that very thing—and, in its way then, it was part of his melant’i as a trader and . . .

“Is that more than sufficient reminder of past error, do you think,” he muttered, “for a trader you wish to bring under your tutelage? One presumes that it is necessary that I learn this task not only for my sake, but also for yours, as well as ven’Deelin and indeed, for Ixin. If that is the case, then I shall do my best. Is it true that I am not to be remade in your image, Scout, but to be made secure in mine?”

The question was asked in mode of equal to equal, which, of course, was only outside the bounds of reality if one considered their respective ages, their respective experience within their specialties, their actual rank within their particular professions, their—but no, he, Jethri, was here as one owed a debt. It might be sufficient.

The scout was very quiet for a long moment, and then his hands fluttered one of those nearly too quick motions, and his mouth hinted at the smile that hovered behind the eyes.

“And so you have a point, my trainee. I will admit you to be the least avid, the very least eager piloting student I have ever offered my tutelage. I am a pilot of some renown—which is of small moment to one who would rather be perusing opportunity lists, I suppose. I am, you must understand, properly placed!”

Jethri failed to be flattered, or even satisfied, but he did feel the tension go out of the deck.

A burst of noise on the audio, a quick counted warn-away from light-hours away as a ship Jumped in-system on the far side of the system and well up the ecliptic. Likely wasn’t another ship within a light-hour of it, but the warn-aways, the warn-aways had to be observed, Khat had said when she’d told him of her basic training . . .

Jethri stared down at his board. His board. Gingerly he brought visuals on screen four live, and selected a feed from the ship’s computer. He’d seen this happen from time to time on the Market, despite Iza’s lazy enmity; he’d seen it as a child back when his father had thought to bring him fully into the command line back when he’d had his own Jatze Junior board to play with. He’d set a course for Balfour as a child; it was one of the destinations his father had been to several times as commissioner. Now though . . .

“Balfour,” he said, “is a Terran planet orbiting a star of the same name. The general coordinates are on my screen now, backdated but marked as acceptable.” Here he swallowed, seeing a date close to a dozen Standards old. “How do I proceed without going first to Waymart?”

“Waymart? And why should we first go to Waymart, Second?”

Jethri flushed.

“Are we north of center, then? In most directions Waymart comes first, just from north . . . Ah, Terran trade routes, these you remember?”

Jethri shrugged noncommittally. It was one of the things he did know—he’d remembered that, since he’d won games going first to Waymart, then to Balfour. There’d been a reason, if he could remember it. That’s right, it was one of the downall routes he’d taught himself.

“My ship, that’s how it usually went to Balfour—first to Waymart. I mean Gobelyn’s Market when I say that—Elthoria’s never been to either of them, I think.”

The Scout waved a hand for attention. “Our business is not ordinary trade, and it takes us to Balfour. Please observe.”

The Scout moved on his acceleration couch, and the coordinates changed color. “You begin by telling the ship to update and project the coords to a time approximating our reaching a safe Jump distance—you’ll see what I have set—and then use the ship’s computer to project time in transit assuming a neutral, spinless, and massless shift. Once you have that, you’ll add the ship’s mass into the basic equation—for our purposes now and for emergency purposes on a vessel like ours, you can usually trust the ship’s understandings, but do check the most recent arrival mass against known major additions or subtractions—and then do add the corrections using our acceleration against our current reference frame.”

Jethri shivered with concentration, finding the reference frame numbers changing, the variations in acceleration flashing red notes at him, the—

“Also make sure you’re adding in the ambient and gradient energy fields, which will help take into account the drifts caused by the local stellar winds, coronal outflows, and magnetic bubbles, as well as the effects of outer rim planetoids or comet clouds.”

Jethri closed his eyes, pulling a deep breath into his chest as the additional information meant more screens needed to be added, more—

“We have hours until basic Jump point, so do not thrill yourself with an unnecessary rush. Scouts and pilots prize efficiency and misuse of adrenaline is not efficient. Here, here the triple green line you see on this screen is the boundary. I know Terrans use a single blue line, but learn with ours—and see that as you change these little things the triple line changes. We have a very precise system. Under no account are you to attempt a Jump inside these lines—such Jumps are fatal!”

“But I’ve heard that if you’ve got a—”

The Scout laughed, very softly.

“You’ve heard that sometimes one can do wishful things with the spaceship, and all is well. Understand that this ship is not as . . . as approximate, let us say, as certain other ships are. Ships that must carry bulky freight and such, driven by Terran engines, such ships are very powerful but are not as finely scaled as this.”

Jethri was still adding numbers in, trying to backup calculate in his head what the computers did so effortlessly. He nodded, saw numbers stabilize, knew there was something else he had to do—oh!

“But what’s the energy density of the coils and—”

“Ah, so you have been on a flight deck before? It is not as though you know nothing . . .”

The numbers had slowed their change even more . . ..

“I know that energy density is one of the things pilots talk about; they make jokes about it, and what it means to forget about it . . . but I was never allowed to study it! It was in the game, and in the toy—but I couldn’t reach the files. Just the toy board, and what I could read and see in the game editions, that’s what I knew.”

Silence for a moment, and then interruptions as another burst of radiation, Jump glare from an outgoing ship, hit the audio.

“Not even permitted to study on your own? Locked out? Yes, criminal. But for the moment, we will not be concerned with energy density of coils: there may be a time just before Jump when that information is important. But consider it a last moment correction: the basics of the Jump may be calculated without that, it is like knowing wind speed or ambient air pressure on a planetary landing . . . but again, that comes later.”




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