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Chapter Three

“So Sar-Say is a Broa?” Nadine Halstrom asked.

“Yes, Ma’am,” Mark replied.

“There isn’t any possibility of a mistake?”

“We confronted him with it. He confessed.”

“How did he take the news that he had been outed?”

Lisa laughed. “He’s a cheeky little bastard. He promised to make us his personal slaves and let us live out our lives in luxury if we returned to Klys’kra’t. We told him to go to hell.”

“If he lied about himself, he must have told other lies,” the Coordinator mused.

“I don’t think so, Ma’am,” Lisa replied. “About the Sovereignty itself, he seems to have spoken the literal truth.”

“Why would he do that?”

“Because he had no way to ascertain what we knew at first. He couldn’t afford to be caught in a lie, else we might have begun wondering if he was who he claimed. Later, it was too late to change his story. So he told us the truth about everything else to keep his identity hidden.”

“Why?”

“It was all a plot to get us to take him back to the Sovereignty. He figured that he could get a message to whatever species we contacted. As a master, they would have instantly obeyed any order he gave them. It almost worked.”

“So, to sum up,” the Coordinator said with a tone of resignation in her voice, “We are facing our worst case scenario. There really is a Broan Sovereignty and it is as big and mean as Sar-Say claims. We were lucky at New Eden. Had things gone differently, it would have been the Broa sending the expedition. We might even now have their boots on our necks. And lastly, there isn’t a goddamned thing we can do about it!”

“No, Ma’am,” Lisa replied.

“I beg your pardon?”

“There is something we can do about it.” Lisa turned to Mark. “Tell her your idea, darling!”

* * *

The wardroom aboard the Ruptured Whale was a depressing place during that long climb from Klys’kra’t. Mark Rykand had been especially dejected, for only he knew how close Sar-Say’s scheme had come to succeeding.

However, as Samuel Johnson once remarked, “The prospect of being hanged concentrates the mind wonderfully.” In response to an offhand comment from Lisa, he had been struck by an inspiration so bold that it had momentarily stunned him. Even now, a year later, he could think of no reason why his idea wouldn’t work… save that the human race lacked the fortitude to attempt it.

In the instant that Lisa turned to him, his confidence drained away, replaced with doubt. What, he thought, if I am wrong?

Living with a person for three years gives one sensitivity to their nuances. Sensing Mark’s turmoil, Lisa gave his hand a gentle squeeze and smiled. Encouraged, Mark took a deep breath, gazed around at the expectant faces, cleared his throat, and launched into the speech that he had practiced in his head for more than a year.

“Madame Coordinator. Gentlemen. The Broa are probably the biggest threat the human race has ever faced. That is why you sent us seven thousand light years to verify the tall tales of a shipwrecked alien. If even half of what Sar-Say said was true, then we just couldn’t ignore the threat.

“We are back to report that the Sovereignty is very real and even more dangerous than we had feared. We are not helpless, however. There is something we can do.”

“Then let us hear it!” Nadine Halstrom said, impatiently.

“Yes, ma’am. To make sense, I need to start at the beginning, which in this case, is a trip Lisa and I took while planning the expedition.

* * *

Planning for the Crab Nebula Expedition had taken place on Earth under stringent security, at a private resort on the North African coast. Mark and Lisa both attended for their particular working groups — Mark for Astronomy and Lisa for Alien Technologies. On the third day of the conference, they found themselves with no commitments. Lisa suggested that they visit the nearby Rock of Gibraltar, explaining that one of her ancestors commanded the British garrison there during the siege of 1782.

“An interesting tale, Mr. Rykand,” Nadine Halstrom said, “but what has that to do with our situation?”

“During the retreat from Klys’kra’t, a bunch of us were sitting around the wardroom, moaning about our troubles, when Lisa said that it was a shame we didn’t have an impregnable fortress like The Rock to defend us against the Broa.

“The comment triggered a thought. I suddenly realized that she was wrong. We do have such a fortress.”

“I’m sorry, but I don’t follow you.”

“The Broa rule a million suns and so far as we can tell, there has not been a single successful revolt against them in thousands of years.”

“I imagine that is precisely what Mikhail Vasloff will tell the public. By the way, where is Citizen Vasloff? I expected to see him here.”

“In quarantine aboard PoleStar, by your order.”

“My order?”

Dieter Pavel cleared his throat. “I sent the order, Madame Coordinator. I figured that we didn’t want him rabble rousing until you’d had a chance to hear the report of the expedition.”

“He isn’t truly ill, is he?”

“His doctor thinks he has a cold. I argued that one couldn’t be too careful with E.T. viruses.”

“You will go far in politics, my boy,” she told her assistant with a smile. “Either that or you will be hanged.” Turning back to Mark, “You said we have an impregnable fortress to defend us, Mr. Rykand. What might that be?”

“Why, our anonymity, of course. The Broa don’t know where to find us. They don’t even know we exist. That, and the stardrive. The stardrive gives us freedom of action.”

“Freedom of action to do what? Hide?”

“No, Ma’am. The one thing we cannot do is hide.”

“We have remained hidden this long.”

“We’ve been lucky. Evan, care to handle this?”

Dr. Evan Thompson, Alien Technologist, nodded and took over the narrative. “Sooner or later, the Broa are going to discover our little corner of the universe.”

“How?”

“Any number of ways. One of their ships may just blunder into one of our systems. In fact, it has already happened at New Eden. Then there is our electromagnetic footprint. We’ve been spewing radio, television, and holovision in all directions for centuries. What if some Broa picks up one of the early television programs? How long before their war fleet follows?”

“The Broan Sovereignty is 7000 light-years from here. If I understand my Einsteinian physics, that means that our radio waves will not reach them until we begin writing our dates with five digits.”

“We don’t know that,” Thompson replied with a shake of his shaggy mane. “The Crab Nebula is 7000 light-years distant. For all we know, the nebula marks the farthest reach of the Sovereignty. There could be a Broan world just beyond our expanding radio bubble right now.”

“Not a very likely scenario, that,” Anton Bartok muttered.

“Are you willing to risk the existence of the human race on that assumption?” Mark asked him, taking back control of the conversation.

“If we don’t hide, what do we do?” a perplexed Nadine Halstrom asked.

Mark looked at her, his features etched by determination. “Madam Coordinator, we can’t hide, not forever. And once they discover us, all will be lost. That leaves us a window of opportunity in which to act.”

“Act to do what?”

Mark shrugged. “Simple, really. We attack them before they can attack us!”

* * *

The subject of the conference sat in his cell aboard PoleStar and contemplated his future.

It had been five cycles since Sar-Say had fallen into the clutches of humans. Having survived the ambush on his transport, he had been shocked when his rescuers did not immediately recognize him. That shock had been compounded when he realized they were not subservients. In fact, they seemed not to know about Civilization at all. The thought that he was the captive of wild aliens frightened him more than had the attempted assassination that led him to this unknown section of space.

Worse, their ship was unlike any he had ever seen, or even heard of. It did not jump from point to point via stargates. Rather, it crossed the black gulf between stars like a water vessel sails an ocean. That alone proved that they were not of Civilization. For he could think of no other invention that would subvert the natural order quite so much as unrestricted access to the stars.

He’d had a great deal of time to think on that first voyage to the humans’ home planet. When they tried to speak with him, he pretended not to understand. For when he finally acknowledged their loud words and pantomime gestures, he would have but one chance to get his story right. There was much to consider.

Of necessity, his plan had been a simple one. It was critical that they not recognize him as a master. For if they did, they would likely kill him out of hand. Nor did the prospect of life in a cage appeal to him. He needed to find a way to get them to return him home without realizing that they were doing so. For that, he must gain their trust. He concluded that he would have to tell them the truth about nearly everything.

There was risk in his plan, of course. Not knowing human psychology, he worried that the truth might frighten them into concealment. That would doom him to a lifetime of captivity.

He need not have worried, for the humans reacted with the same primate curiosity that his own people possessed. When they identified Sky Flower, they organized an expedition to seek out Civilization.

They had taken him along on the expedition to advise them and he had been working on the humans to allow him to meet the native subservients, ostensibly to back up their own false story.

His plan had come close to working, but something had gone wrong. The contact group had hurriedly returned to the ship and they had departed Klys’kra’t. Later, they confronted him with the fact that they knew his true identity.

If imprisonment taught him anything, it was patience. He’d made good use of the entertainment screen they provided him. As he became more familiar with humans, he came to believe that despite their wildness, Earth might one day make a prime colony, especially with him as its master.

So, despite bitter disappointment, Sar-Say began plotting once more toward the day he would be awarded the Mastership of Earth. So long as they kept him penned in this cell aboard their orbital habitat, he could do nothing. However, should his situation change, he must be ready to take advantage of any opportunities that came his way…

* * *

Lisa Arden stood on the balcony of the resort hotel on Lake Constance and watched as a full moon lifted its gibbous form over the distant tree-studded horizon. Down below, the surface of the lake reflected back the multicolored lights of the far shore, while in the middle distance, an entertainment ship ablaze with lights made its way toward Friedrichshafen, the soft strains of a string quartet wafting softly to her across the dark waters.

Lisa inhaled deeply, held it for a moment, then exhaled with gusto. It was good to be back on Earth! At least for tonight, all was right with her world. The night breeze was just cool enough to be refreshing. Her man lay sprawled inside on the spacious bed, snoring softly, as men were wont to do following lovemaking. The moon was rising, turning the lights reflected by the lake into a kaleidoscope of colors.

In the sky above, Jupiter was a brilliant white spark and Mars a duller red one, while the stars twinkled as they had for millions of years. On a night like this, it would have been easy to pretend that those stars were the same as they had been for millennia, sparkling diamonds put in the night sky for lovers rather than the home of a comic-looking race of megalomaniacal monkeys.

Her contemplation was interrupted by the sound of a door opening, then by a strong pair of arms enveloping her and warm hands slipping through the opening of her robe to fondle the warm flesh beneath. She leaned back into a bare muscular chest and sighed, content with the world.

“Good evening,” a soft voice whispered in her ear as lips nuzzled her disheveled hair.

She twisted her head back to plant a kiss. “Welcome back to the living, darling. I didn’t wear you out, did I?”

The soft breath emitted by the ensuing chuckle wafted into her ear as lips nibbled an earlobe. “Want to find out?”

“Not just yet,” she replied. “Maybe later. Now I just want to enjoy the night.”

“It is beautiful, isn’t it?”

“More beautiful than just about anything I have ever seen. It’s easy to forget how gorgeous the Earth is when you are in space.”

“Yes, it is. So, my love, what brings you outside? Did my snoring wake you?”

“No, I am just enjoying the night air… and wondering, I guess, if we did any good today.”

“They listened,” Mark replied, nuzzling her hair. “That is about the best we could expect.”

“But did they believe?”

“I think the Coordinator understood our arguments and probably sympathized with them, not that that will do us any good if the political opposition decides to side with Vasloff.”

She sighed. “I suppose they can’t keep him locked up forever.”

“It wouldn’t do any good. Lots of people will see the temporary safety of hunkering down and prefer it to the real danger of fighting back. That is the way it has always been, and the way it shall always be.”

“But we have to fight, Mark. It’s what we do and who we are.”

“You and I have had a chance to think it through,” he replied, suddenly serious as he pulled her tighter against him. “Earth’s teeming billions are going to take time to sort through the risks. Who knows? Maybe there is a middle ground between digging a hole and pulling it in after us and going out to conquer the Broan horde.”

“You don’t believe that.”

“No, I don’t. Many will.”

They fell silent and stared out over the darkened waters for long minutes, enjoying each other’s presence and the night. Finally, Lisa said, “We’re going to be fighting the Broa for the rest of our lives, aren’t we, Mark?”

He nodded into her hair. “You knew that when I first laid out my vision of Gibraltar Earth.”

“I guess I did,” she replied. “It’s just scary to think about all the troubles that lie in front of us.”

He laughed. “Name a time when that hasn’t been so. At least the Broa don’t yet know that we exist. With luck, when they find out, it will be too late.”


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