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- ELITE
- The Dark Wheel
-
- Robert Holdstock
-
- CHAPTER ONE
-
-
- From the moment that the trading ship, Avalonia, slipped its orbital berth above the planet Lave, and began
- to manoeuvre for the hyperspace jump point, its measureable life-span, and that of one of its two-man crew,
- was exactly eighteen minutes.
-
- The space station gently span away into the shadows and the small Ophidian class vessel
- shuddered as its motors angled it round towards the Faraway jump. The planet Lave, below, rotated in blue-
- green splendour. There were storms moving across the Paluberion Sea, six great whorls of pink and white
- cloud. They were approaching the continental mass that was FirstFall, and promising a bleak and wet few
- days to the swathes of forest and the deep, snaking valleys that cut through the rugged land. The cities of
- both Humankind and Lavian glittered among the verdant blanket below like bright shards of glass.
-
- Watching the lush world from his seat at the astrogation console, Alex Ryder expressed an audible
- sigh of regret that he had not been allowed down to the world itself. Next to him, fingers moving expertly
- over the keys of the trader's ManOp console, his father grinned. Jason Ryder knew well enough the
- frustration of only being allowed to observe a rich and fabled world like Lave from orbit. He had been
- planetside once, an unforgettable experience . . . But the rules and regulations of the Galactic Co-operative
- of Worlds were strict and sensible. Lave, like any other planet, was not a holiday resort, not a curiosity. It
- was a living, evolving world, and there were folk down below to whom that world was everything that Old
- Earth had once been to the Human race. Protection. Mother. Home.
-
- Another time, another year, Alex thought. You earned your visit to Lave, and he had hardly begun
- his professional life. He still had so much to learn.
-
- The Ryders had been a trading family for three generations. It had begun with Ben Ryder, who had
- traded almost exclusively using shot-up pirate ships. Ben had lived life on the edge, and one day, one night,
- one star year, he had not returned. Out in the void between the stars his grave was as remote as it was
- private, and would probably never be found. His son, and his grandson–who was Jason Ryder–had
- followed the family business. Alex would soon have to make the final decision: whether to sacrifice his life
- to shuttling cargo between the worlds of the Galactic Co-operative, or to train for a different profession.
-
- Let's be clear about trading. Trading between worlds is no game for a youngster with ideas of
- getting rich quick. You can spend a lifetime carrying food, machinery and textiles, and at the end of that life
- you'll have enough saved up to buy a patch of coastal land on an Earth-type world, and spend the rest of
- your days in quiet, isolated comfort.
-
- That's all.
-
- A lifetime of sweat and combat for an orbital shuttle, a home, and the clear blue of an alien sea at
- your doorstep. If you want more, there are ways of getting it: narcotics, slaves, zoo animals, weapons,
- political refugees . . . trade in any of these things and wealth will tumble around you.
-
- And corsairs, and privateers, and pirates . . .
-
- And the police.
-
- The strain of the years of honest trading was already telling on Jason Ryder, but he had invested
- wisely, and this small, cargo-carrying pleasure yacht was his pride and joy. He could get away from the
- trade-lanes for a while (although he always respected the trader maxim that 'an empty hold means an empty
- head', and never travelled freight-less; today he was carrying thrumpberry juice, an exotic flavouring). He
- could show his son what space was really like, and whet the lad's appetite . . . or let him see that a life in
- hard vacuum was one of the hardest lives of all.
-
- For his part, Alex Ryder would need a lot more convincing. He was a tall, fair-haired young man,
- wiry and athletic. He was atmo-surfing champion on the Ryder's homeworld, Ontiat, and very bright. Like
- all young men of his age he was reluctant to switch his status from that of student to professional, with all
- that that meant in terms of settling with one particular girl, one job, and beginning to plan for when,
- eventually, he would buy his own land.
-
- He still had a year to decide, a year of surfing, free-fall baseball, cloud barbecues, hi-falling,
- partner selection and Sim-Combat.
-
- He was in no hurry.
-
- Except that he loved space. Loved the flash of sun on duralium hulls, the clutter and confusion of
- the space ports.
-
- Loved the idea of other worlds, of exploration, of path-finding.
-
- The voice of SysCon, which controlled all traffic flow in Lave's orbitspace, murmured softly,
- 'Avalonia, make a four minute drift-flight to Faraway jump point.'
-
- 'Understood,' Alex called back, and adjusted the auto accordingly. His father sat back and smiled,
- his job done for the moment.
-
- SysCon said, 'Enter Faraway jump along channel two seven, at forty-five orient.'
-
- 'Affirmed,' Alex said, and his father rolled the ship along its central axis, ready for the dangerous
- hyperspace transit.
-
- Everything looked good.
-
- On the rear monitor, where the planet shone brilliantly as it slowly moved through the heavens, a
- dark shadow drifted into vision: another ship, lining up for the Faraway jump.
-
- It was quite normal. Alex took no notice, more concerned about the impending transit through
- hyperspace. His father scrutinised the other vessel for a moment, then relaxed.
-
- He had no way of knowing that he only had fourteen minutes left alive.
-
- Making a Faraway jump in a system as complex and crowded as Lave is no simple business. A
- hundred eyes are watching you for the slightest mistake. Make a mistake in orbit-space and the next time
- you go to dock at one of the world's Coriolis space stations a big NOT WELCOME sign might flash in the
- vacuum before you.
-
- You slip your C-berth under the instruction of Station Space Monitor. Perhaps twenty ships are
- doing the same. You go when it's safe. You rotate, accelerate, decelerate and spin to the absolute second,
- both of time and arc. That way you get clear without two thousand tons of duralium trader rammed into
- your hyperspace jets.
-
- It isn't over.
-
- Now you're under the supervision of HSA, Home Space Authority, and they'll jockey you safely
- about among the traders, and the yachts, and the ferries, and the shuttles, and the star-liners, and the arrow-
- shaped police patrol ships. All of these vessels slip and slide about you, streaks of silver in the darkness,
- flashing green and blue lights, sudden walls of grey metal that pass across your bows, winking yellow
- warning beacons.
-
- You move through this chaos and a new voice begins to call for attention. Now you're with the
- Faraway Orientation Systems Controller; FOSC–or SysCon–sets you up for the big jump. You're going to
- cover maybe seven light years in a few minutes, and you might think that's a lot of space to get lost in, but
- that isn't how it works. Faraway is a tunnel, like any other tunnel. Inside that tunnel is the realm called
- Witch-Space, a magic place, a place where the normal rules of the Universe don't necessarily work. And
- every few thousand parsecs along the Witch-Space tunnel there are monitoring satellites, and branch lines,
- and stop points, and rescue stations; and passing by all of these are perhaps a hundred channels, a hundred
- 'lines' for ships to travel, each one protected against the two big dangers of hyperspace travel: atomic
- reorganisation, and time displacement.
-
- Jump on your own through hyperspace, across more than half a light year, and you'll be lucky to
- make the same Universe, let alone your destination.
-
- You might emerge from Witch-Space turned inside out (which is not a pretty sight).
-
- You might be stretched in all the wrong angles, and although the ship keeps travelling, that jelly
- mass of broken bone and flesh inside the cabin is you.
-
- According to legend, you might come through okay and breathe a sigh of relief, only to go into
- Earth orbit and wonder why that big lizard, with the teeth and the long tail and the green scales is roaring up
- at you, and warning you off of his nice Jurassic patch of prehistoric desert.
-
- To go Faraway is a killer, unless you obey the rules.
-
- So for a few minutes, on that fateful day, Alex Ryder was content to let the robot voices of SysCon
- guide his family's ship through the space lanes, towards the jump point for the planet Leesti. He relaxed,
- beside his father, and watched the bussle of the space port.
-
- The shadow behind them, the ship that was following their path towards Faraway, was a Cobra
- class cargo freighter.
-
- No-one knew how or when the designation of space-going vessels had been linked to the names of
- snakes. The Ryder's own vessel was a relatively harmless Ophidion, capable of two hyperspace jumps,
- armed very basically, set up, really, only to destroy imminent dangers, like asteroids, meteoroids, or 'crazy
- craft', the name given to vessels that were out of control, or ridden by juveniles out for kicks.
-
- The Cobra was a bigger vessel by far.
-
- A common trading ship, most Cobras are buried beneath the weaponry and defences that their
- hard-bitten, tough-talking captains have accrued. And with good reason . . .
-
- To be a trader is to be two things: dangerous, and at risk. Dangerous because to survive as a trader
- you have to know your weapons and how to use them in space combat; you need to be able to recognise a
- pirate, or an anarchist, or a Thargoid invader, or a police trap when you might be carrying any one of the
- thousands of prohibited materials.
-
- And at risk for the same reason. A juicy Cobra, weighed down with minerals, or rare textiles, or
- furs, or ore, is as tasty a target for a freebooter as any in the Galaxy.
-
- To be a trader means to shoot first and pray that you've read the warning signs alright, and that
- your victim was a pirate.
-
- Make a mistake and not even two shells of time-stressed duralium and a belly full of missiles is
- going to save you from the vipers.
-
- Vipers. Police ships. Small, fast, deadly. And most particularly, tenacious. The pilot is a man,
- certainly, but kill the man and the ship will keep coming at you. Kill the ship and its missile will keep
- coming at you. Kill the missile, and watch for the shadow.
-
- When a viper bites, it clings.
-
- Eleven minutes . . .
-
- 'There's a sight you'll not often see . . .'
-
- His father's words broke through Alex's silent, concentrated study of the planet they were leaving.
- To the right, running a parallel course towards the Faraway tunnel, was an odd-shaped ship, with poweful
- lights flickering on and off. It was catching the sun and Alex could see how it was slowly spinning about its
- central axis. Fish-like fins opened and closed. Across its sleek hull a rapid pattern of coloured lights rippled.
-
- A Moray. A subaqua vessel, designed for both space and undersea voyaging. The Moray was a
- rare ship indeed to see in space, especially about to undertake a hyperspace transit. On worlds like Regiti
- and Aona, where the only land was the tips of volcanoes, rising al oceans, the Moray was both freighter and
- public transport, a vital ship-link between the undersea cities that were developing in such hostile
- environments . The Moray's frantic colour signalling ceased. Alex noticed that his father was watching
- the animalistic display (the coding had been developed from the signalling of a terrestrial aquatic creature,
- the squid) with a frown on his face.'Something up?'Jason shrugged. 'Not sure. Probably not.' Alex
- watched the Moray with renewed interest, then turned back to the rear view, where the Cobra had nudged a
- few kilometres closer.
-
- 'Shall we warn him to stay back?' Jason shook his head. For the first time Alex realised that his father had
- been as aware of the trader as he, and had been studying it curiously for some minutes. There was a tension
- on the Avalonia's bridge that was unusual, and unpleasant. Something wasn't right. Alex had no idea
- what, but he sensed it powerfully.
-
- Something was not going according to routine.
-
- Then the go-signal for entry to the Faraway tunnel flashed on, accompanied by a gentle audio
- prompt.
-
- And as it did so, the Avalonia's life expectancy had shrunk to just nine minutes.
-
- Around the entry point to Witch-Space is always to be found the biggest cluster of transit vessels,
- most of them moored in groups at orbital buoys while mechanics and repairmen crawl over them, checking
- and servicing their external systems. At such a point in any advanced system like Lave you'll see every ship
- of the line, every type, subtype and artificially mocked-up version of every snake-ship ever built. As they
- approached the jump, Alex practised ship identification, a crucial talent in any space-faring profession. The
- unarmed, unmanned orbit shuttles were easy enough to spot, as they ferried cargo all around the system. He
- noticed two Asps, Navy ships, small, manouevrable and deadly, well protected against attack, and with
- highly advanced military weapons systems. He also saw a single Krait, the so-called StarStriker, a small,
- one-man ship much favoured by pathfinders and mercenaries. To his right, space-docked and still
- unloading her passengers, was the immense, cylindrical mass of an Anaconda, a massive freighter that had
- been adapted to passenger transport. It was an ugly ship, and its yawning ram-scoop gave it the appearance
- of being a squat, blind creature with its mouth disgustingly agape.
-
- The catalogue was endless. Boa class cruisers; Pythons; the bounty hunters' favourite, the Fer-de-
- lance, packed out with weapons, and no doubt decked out inside like a palace; landing craft called Worms;
- Mambas; Sidewinders . . . large craft and small, all winking brightly and reflecting sunlight in brilliant blue-
- grey sheens. And of course, there were advertising Droidships, their catchy light displays blinking out
- information about ROHAN'S REAL EARTH ALE WITH HONEY, or KETTLE'S CLONE-YOUR-OWN
- FUNGAL CURES. Or even offering the 'last real food before Witch-Space', small restaurant ships designed
- to dock and supply instant nourishment (PRIEST'S PERFECT PROTOPOLYPS, TUTTLE'S TASTY
- THERAPSABLADDERS) to space-weary travelers.'Here we go . . . Hang on to your seat . . .' Jason
- Ryder always said this, and Alex always fell for it. He tensed up as if the ship was about to plunge over a
- gravity-roller. In fact, the entry to Witch-Space was accompanied by an almost negligible accelerative
- surge, a moment's dizziness, and then the spectacular sight of the stars brightening, spreading out and
- suddenly streaking in multi-coloured circular patterns, so that the ship seemed to be passing down a
- spinning tube. Almost as soon as the surge of acceleration had come it had gone. The ship drifted in 'Witch
- Light', in the non-place in space and time. It was crossing the void between stars in seconds, but for those
- seconds it was in a twilight world whose existence was beyond imagination.
-
- They say that Witch-Space is haunted. Maybe that's why they call it 'witch'. Time turns all around,
- and atoms turn inside out, and gravity waves billow up, and things move there, lifeforms, or shadows, or
- atoms, or galaxies, who knows? No-one has ever stopped and gone outside to find out. Only robot remotes
- exist there, switching stations, monitors, rescue Droids and the like. Whatever lives in Witch-Space, in the
- Faraway tunnels, will remain a mystery always.
-
- But there are ghosts there. The ghosts of the early ships that went in to Faraway, and didn't come
- out again.
-
- Ghosts . . .
-
- And shadows.
-
- The shadow of a snake. A Cobra . . . Rising over them . . .
-
- 'What in God's name . . .?'
- Jason Ryder had gone whiter than white light.
-
- Trapped in Witch-Space, there was nothing he could do to outmanoeuvre the other vessel. Alex
- said, 'He doesn't know the rules. Perhaps it's a rookie pilot–'
-
- 'Perhaps,' his father said. Jason Ryder's eyes never left the scanners. His face had beaded with
- sweat. Alex watched the shadow of the Cobra . . .
-
- Well-equipped . . . a fuel-scoop, missile silos, extra cargo holds, the squat dome of an energy
- bomb housing . . . a rich ship indeed and a deadly one . . .
-
- 'They can't be intending to attack us.'
-
- 'The hell they can't!'
-
- Three minutes . . .
-
- And they came out of Witch-Space!
-
- Immediately, Jason's hands began to fly over the key console. The Avalonia surged forward,
- rotating on its long axis. The planet Leesti was a small, greenish disc in the far distance. Alex saw his father
- arm the two missiles that the Avalonia carried, then reached to rest his hand on the multiple laser-trigger.
- It was a pirate, then. And as Alex came to accept the inevitability of combat, his mouth went dry
- and his mind sharpened. He had never been in combat before, not for real, only in the SimTrainer. He had
- heard his father talk about it, of course. And combat did not sound glorious . . .
-
- A pirate ship, disguised as a trader, pursuing its victim into Witch-Space itself . . . for their cargo
- of . . .
-
- Thrumpberry flavouring?
-
- An uneasy voice whispered in Alex's mind. This was untypical behaviour for a freebooter. They
- normally waited at the edge of planetary systems, watching for their prey with long-distance scanners,
- picking and choosing carefully. Pirates could be found everywhere, of course, though rarely in space around
- Corporate State worlds, or Democracies (the police were too efficient). Planets run by anarchistic or feudal
- governments were a pirate's favourite haunt.
-
- This behaviour was wrong . . .
-
- Not a pirate.
-
- Alex looked from the slowly rotating planet to the grim, grey features of his father. They were a
- long way from safety. 'What the hell are we up against?'
- 'Put on a RemLok and get to the escape pod,' Jason Ryder murmured. 'Do it!'
-
- 'I'll stay and fight '
-
- 'The hell you will. Do as I say.' As he spoke, Jason thrust a small, black face-mask–the remote-
- space locator–at his son.
-
- The first missiles struck the Avalonia's shields, and Jason punched the launch buttons on his own defences.
- The small ship veered and strained as he looped it in an escape run, activating its ECM as the Cobra
- launched a second wave of missiles.The rear screen exploded with light . . .
-
- But through the brightness the sombre grey shape of the killer came on . . .
-
- It happened so fast, then, that afterwards Alex was uncertain as to what exactly had happened. The
- duelling ships span and circled in towards the planet. Space around them blazed silently as their weapons
- struck and were deflected.
-
- Then the whole Universe rocked. Air screeched into the void. The lights in the Avalonia blinked
- and dimmed. Warning lights shot on across the console: lazer temperature in the red, screens down, energy
- low, cargo jettisoned, cabin temperature dropping . . .
-
- In the same moment of the Avalonia's death, Alex Ryder found himself being struck by his father,
- the remlok mask forced into place about his eyes, nose and mouth. Then his whole body was physically
- manhandled into the escape pod.
-
- The ship shuddered and screamed. Fuel spilled into the void.
-
- Father and son faced each other for a last moment, each watching the other through a mist of tears
- and confusion–
-
- 'I don't understand . . .' Alex screamed above the noise of the dying ship, meaning: Who's trying to
- kill us?
-
- 'Raxxla!' Jason said. 'Remember: Raxxla!' Then, as he pushed Alex back into the cramped escape
- pod, he shouted, 'Remember me, Alex! I wouldn't have wished this on you. Raxxla!'
-
- The escape pod was jettisoned. Alex tumbled. The sleek shape of the Avalonia was above him, and
- then just white light–
-
- White heat.
-
- Cold space!
-
- In a second it had gone, the ship, his father, a part of his life–obliterated by a single burst of fire
- from the hovering shape of the pirate.
-
- And as Alex watched, so a yellow tongue of fire licked towards the tumbling escape pod. He felt
- heat, then pain, then cold . . .
-
- The tiny survival vehicle was blasted apart, sparkling fragments falling towards the green world of
- Leesti.
-
- Alex hit space, arms flailing, mouth opened, consciousness and life draining from him with every
- second . . .
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TWO
-
-
- In space, everyone can hear you scream . . .
-
- As long, that is, as you're equipped with a RemLok survival mask.
-
- An instant after Alex Ryder hit the hard vacuum, a skin of plasFibre had been shot across his body
- from nozzles on the face piece, keeping him warm against the cold, tightening and protecting him, securing
- him against the void. The oxygen flow in his body was cut off to all but his heart and brain. Needle-doses of
- adrenalin and somnokie were held ready, just within the skin area of his mouth, ready to alert or depress his
- body functions according to circumstances.
-
- And the RemLok screamed through space for help.
-
- It was a standard survival device, an instantly recognisable distress call indicating that it was being
- sent out from a small, remotely located, dying body. The alarm screeched out on forty channels, shifting
- wavelength within each channel four times a second. One hundred and twenty chances to catch attention . . .
-
- A cumbersome Boa class cruiser, loaded down with industrial machinery, slowed its departure run
- from Leesti and turned to scan space for the source of the signal . . .
-
- Two police vipers came streaking from their patrol sector, near the sun, scanning for the body in
- trouble . . .
-
- An adapted Moray Starboat, a vast glowing yellow star on its hull–the sign of a hospital ship–
- came chugging out of the darkness . . .
-
- Messages from ships to both the planet and its ring of Coriolis stations were abruptly broken as the
- split second message came screaming through. TV programmes were interrupted, the screen dissolving into
- a permanently recorded display of the space-grid location of the RemLok. Every advertising space module
- changed its garish display to flash, in brilliant green, the same information.
-
- In the orbit-space around Leesti, a million heads turned starwards. That split second of panic, that
- moment's cry of distress, was a sound they knew too well to ignore, and were too frightened of to take for
- granted.
-
- Within twenty seconds, two autoremotes, tiny vessels just big enough to carry an hour's oxygen,
- one dose each of forty drugs, and a variety of other stimulants, were hovering around Alex Ryder's spinning
- body. one of them shot out a stabilising cable and dragged itself to his corpse. Blinking through its solitary
- monitor, it hovered over his face like a squat, legless dachsund hound and pumped adrenalin, oxygen and
- glucose into his bloodstream. Alex opened his eyes and panicked slightly. The autoremote calmed him
- down with a quick pumpsurge of tetval.
-
- The robot's voice whispered in his ears, 'Brandy? Scotch? Vodka? I am equipped with a full range
- of miniature stimulants to make the waiting easier.'
-
- 'What . . . happened . . . ship? . . . Avalonia . . .' he gasped through the tight face mask.
-
- The autoremote blinked at him sympathetically, 'Brandy, then,' and hit Alex with two shots of
- Qutirian SynCognac.
-
- An hour later he was aboard the Moray hospital vessel, in parked orbit above the green-grey face of the
- world of Leesti. Burns to his hands and face had been taken care of. Minor blood vessels that had ruptured
- in his skin had been knitted back together. He was bruised, stunned, but essentially fit physically.
-
- The image of the ship exploding had begun to haunt him, however. He stood by the wide, sloping
- window of his hospital room, staring out across the bright of space to the slowly rotating world below,
- watching the flash and tumble of shuttles and small freighters as they either glided up from worldDown, or
- struck the atmosphere on their descent, leaving brief, brilliant flares of red in the thin planetary atmosphere.
-
- Wherever he looked he could see the shadow of the Cobra, rising up in the Witchlight, a great,
- killer beast, closing on its prey.
-
- And his father's face . . .
-
- The sudden alarm, the sudden anger, and yet . . . and yet Jason Ryder had known.
-
- His grieving, mind-stunned son just knew that his father had been more aware of the danger than he
- had let on. It had been in his face, in the tension in the cabin, in the slow, deliberate words that he had
- spoken during the approach run to hyperspace.
-
- Jason had known that his life was in danger. He had been ready for it, ready to save his son in the
- event of attack . . .
-
- It made no sense. But for the moment Alex felt only loss, the loss of a man he had loved. Both his
- parents were gone, now. His homeworld would seem an empty, uninviting place.
-
- Behind him, the door opened softly and the grey-suited figure of a nurse appeared. She reproved
- him mildly for being out of bed, but seemed pleased by his apparently calm mental state.
-
- There followed what seemed like a constant stream of visitors. First the doctor, scanning him for
- tension and psychic repression. The medic was not pleased. He more or less said, 'Young man, your father
- is dead and it would do you no harm to shed a few tears. It's all there, all the grief, all the sadness. It'll do
- you no good to deny it.'
-
- 'I'll grieve for my father,' Alex said back angrily, coldly. 'I'll grieve among the ashes of the pirate
- that killed him. And not until.'
-
- 'Will you indeed.'
-
- 'Yes,' Alex stated defiantly. 'I will. Indeed.'
-
- After the doctor had gone, the man from the Galactic Medical Co-operative came, fussily checking
- up on Alex's medical insurance, making sure that he was covered for all aspects of the treatment, including
- his Faraway transit home.
-
- Then the police, two lean-faced men, wearing the grey cloaks and silver waistcoats of the
- Narcotics Investigation Department. What cargo had the Avalonia been carrying? Why would a pirate be so
- interested in him as to follow him to a Corporate State world? Had his father ever transported drugs?
- Firearms? Slaves? What about alien substances: Manjooza, fear glands, Marswurt? What was said in the
- moments before destruction? Would he recognise the ship again? What were its markings?
-
- Alex told them everything he could remember. Everything he'd seen. Everything he'd heard . . .
-
- Except for the fact that his father had clearly known the danger.
-
- And except for the word Raxxla.
-
- The police left. They were not satisfied. Alex had just received his solo pilot's licence, so he could
- make his own way back to his homesystem, but he should notify them of what route he was taking.
-
- Raxxla . . .
-
- Alex watched them go, their Viper a slim, evil-looking ship as it rolled and sped away from the
- hospital vessel. His mood matched the dim-lit room, matched the gloom-grey of the storms that were
- building up on the world below. Leesti's oceans looked wild and cold, now, its clouds great charcoal
- coloured swirls of anger above the ragged, mountainous land.
-
- Raxxla.
-
- What could it be? What could it mean?
-
- At midnight, still resting and recouperating (care of the Leesti Medical Authority), a small green
- light winked on in his room. Alex, still awake, frowned then realised that he was being monitored.
-
- 'What is it?' he asked the empty room, and a nurse's voice whispered, 'There's a holoFac message
- coming through for you. They've requested a tightbeam. Will you receive?'
-
- Alex sat up in bed. No-one knew he was here. Did they? He frowned, and said, 'Sure.'
-
- 'Will you accept the charge against your CR?'
-
- Curiouser and curiouser. Since he was broke, and without credit until he sorted out his GMC
- insurance, it was easy for him to say, 'Yes.'
-
- In the middle of the room the air suddenly shimmered white, small bright particles flying off in all
- directions around the gradually defined shape of a man. He was tall, but slightly stooped. As the whiteness
- of the image resolved into colour, the whiteness of the man stayed. His hair was long and snowy, his beard
- ragged. His face had a touch of colour. His eyes were small, gleaming points among the wrinkles. He was
- smiling. He wore a tattered trader's uniform, and one arm hung limp by his side. Even his boots were worn
- down, and the toes were split. The handlaser at his side had seen the same better days as the rest of his
- equipment.
-
- 'You the Ryder Boy?' this apparition of run-down age asked. The voice creaked, a gruff, battered
- tone, the voice of a man who had breathed hard vacuum.
-
- 'That's me. Alex Ryder. And you?'
-
- Alex climbed out of bed and went to stand before the life-sized holoFac. The old man watched
- him, and chewed. Then he spat. The gobbet of stained spittle seemed to fly straight towards Alex's shoulder
- and he winced and jerked slightly to one side, before realising that nothing could travel into real space from
- the holo.
-
- 'You don't remember me,' the old man said. 'That's clear enough. But I remember you.'
-
- 'Give me a name.'
-
- 'Rafe Zetter. Trader of old. Traded with your father for many years, till we parted company on
- account of a certain issue which, you might say . . . caused a difference of opinion between us.'
-
- 'Slaves,' Alex said quickly. He remembered Rafe, now. But what had happened to the man? He was
- old before his time. He was the same age as Jason Ryder would have been, but looked twenty years more.
-
- 'Slaves is right,' Rafe said. 'I ran my life on the edge of a Viper's sting . . .' trader parlance for 'one
- jump ahead of the law'. 'But by the time I indulged that little whim, my ass was hard iron. I somehow made
- it to hell 'n back. That's where I am now.'
-
- 'In hell?'
-
- 'Broke. '
-
- Alex nodded, picking up slowly on the trader slang. An 'iron ass' was a ship that was well enough
- defended–shields, missiles and lasers–to make a skim run through any system at all, even an anarchist's
- paradise like Sotiqu. All hell and then some would come at you if you tried to trade in such a chaotic
- system. 'Hell 'n back' meant that Rafe had tasted the good life, bought with the profits of his illegal trading,
- but that it had all gone wrong.
-
- It always went wrong.
-
- Rafe said, 'I was damn sorry to hear about Jason. A good man. A good friend of old, and a man I
- still respect.'
-
- 'It didn't happen but eight hours ago,' Alex said coldly. 'How the hell do you get to hear about it.'
-
- Rafe Zetter chuckled, then spat again, and again Alex couldn't help ducking. The spittle vanished
- at the holoFac's edge, and Alex felt a chill of irritation. 'You got your father's temper, young Alex. Maybe
- you've even got some of his skills.'
-
- 'Answer my question, old man. How do you manage to know about my father? How did you find me?'
-
- Watching him from the holo, Rafe chewed, smiled and considered. Alex tensed, waiting for the
- next high velocity spit-transmission.
-
- Rafe said, 'I repeat, Alex. I had great respect for Jason Ryder. For what he was, and what he was
- doing.'
-
- 'He was a good man,' Alex said. 'And an honest trader.'
-
- 'He was a damn sight more than that,' Rafe said loudly, and spat. Alex dodged. The ghostly
- holoFac image shimmered and blurred slightly.
-
- 'What does that mean?'
-
- Rafe Zetter leaned forward so that his grizzled features seemed almost able to kiss the younger
- man. 'He was a combateer, Alex. One of the best. No way should he have died like he did . . .'
-
- 'My father was a trader, not a combateer,' Alex said, startled and disturbed by what Rafe was
- implying.
-
- 'Guess again, sonny.'
-
- 'But it sickened him to fire shots in anger.'
-
- 'Maybe,' Rafe said drily. 'But it didn't stop him. How else do you think he made it as a trader all
- those years? Dammit, Alex, even if your cargo is sour-cream and pickles there's someone's going to try and
- take it from you. Your father was a combateer of the highest calibre . . .?'
-
- Alex swallowed heavily, staring at the quizzical features of old Rafe Zetter. 'The highest calibre . .
- .?'
-
- Rafe nodded. 'That's right, Alex,' he said softly. 'You can be deadly, you can be dangerous, and you
- can end up as pet food in orbit around a dog's ass-of-a-world like Isveve. But if you're élite, and you die,
- then there's a reason for your death . . .'
-
- What was this old man saying? Elite? An élite combateer? Alex's head span. He knew all about the
- space pilots who'd earned that title, of course. Few of them did. To be élite in combat was to be . . . well, as
- near invincible as made no odds. A great many pilots were 'dangerous'; you didn't last long as a trader if you
- weren't. Many more had earned the classification 'deadly'. So had a lot of mercenaries. So had a lot of
- pirates.
-
- But élites. Few and far between.
-
- And his father, Jason Ryder, had been élite, and none of his family had known!
-
- 'Jason was one of the very best. You probably never saw his ship, but it was like a fortress. He
- traded places that most of us would have had nightmares about.' Rafe shook his head admiringly. 'One of the
- best. A man of the highest calibre...' His gaze hardened on Alex. 'The question is . . . Can you be the same?'
-
- 'What makes you doubt it?'
-
- 'Jason never said anything about you. I guess he was trying to protect you. The trouble is that it
- gives me nothing to go on: you're going to avenge your father's death–I can tell that from the look of you,
- and your tone, and your anger–but for all I know, that'll just mean one more Ryder will be stardust before
- he even manages to target a missile.'
- Not liking Rafe Zetter's tone, Alex said bitterly, 'I've done hours of SimCombat. I score highly . . .'
-
- Rafe laughed and spat voluminously, then became serious.
-
- 'Alex, there's something I've got to know. Maybe you're going to end up–'
-
- 'Pet food in orbit around Isveve!'
-
- 'Yeah. Maybe that. The only person who knew your talents was your father. Tell me, Alex, and tell
- me true, now . . . Did he say anything to you . . . you know . . . in the moments before he died? Did he
- indicate anything, or say anything?'
-
- 'He said a lot,' Alex murmured, and felt a strong pang of grief as he remembered the look in his
- father's eyes, the greyness of his cheeks, and his desperate words, remember me, Alex . . . 'I think he knew
- he was going to die. The last thing he said was the word Raxxla. I don't know what that is. An alien, I guess
- . . .'
-
- Rafe smiled, shaking his head. Suddenly there was a brilliant sparkle in his eyes: 'Raxxla's no alien,
- Alex. It's a ghost world. A planet. A legend . . .' He hesitated, staring quizzically at the younger man through
- the distant link between them, 'Jason really said that to you?'
-
- Alex nodded. 'Moments before . . . It was the last thing he said.'
-
- 'Then he knew,' Rafe said with a nod. 'And that's good enough for me. Alex, get your frail shell to
- Tionisla and take a visitor's shuttle to the orbital cemetery there. Say you've come to see the grave of
- Starpilot Fleischer. And take a good look around. You do that, boy. Tomorrow. I'll be waiting for you.'
-
- 'Waiting to do what?'
-
- Rafe chuckled. 'How're you going to hunt a Cobra? You going to hitch-hike? Or use a big stick?
- You'll need a ship. Hunt like with like. Get to the wreckplace at Tionisla. I know just the vehicle you need.
- Don't speak to anyone. Just get to Tionisla.'
-
- 'But–'
-
- 'Au'voir, Alex!'
-
- And Rafe Zetter spat for the last time before the holoFac faded.
-
- Alex didn't flinch. Something whistled past his ear and struck the wall behind him.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER THREE
-
- The best way to see the wreckplace at Tionisla is to approach it from the Sun (a reasonably safe thing to do
- since Tionisla, being a Democracy has few pirates in its system). Tionisla itself is a bright yellow world,
- and the cemetery is always between the planet and its star. As you fly close, the whole strange graveyard
- seems to be expanding from the circle of the world behind.
-
- The first thing you see is a shimmering, silver disc, a double spiral of tiny bright points. It slowly
- turns: it's a galaxy in miniature, with the same intense blur of light at its centre, because here is where the
- biggest tombs are to be found.
-
- Come closer and soon you can see that the stars in this galaxy are markers, great lumps of metal,
- heavily inscribed with the words and symbols of a thousand religions. The cemetery is a bizarre and moving
- sight. The markers are rarely less than a thousand feet across. There are chrome-alloy crosses, titanium
- Stars of David, duralium henges, and all the strange symbolic shapes of the worlds, and the minds and the
- faiths that have come to die in this Star traveller's special place.
-
- Tethered below this vast, rotating mausoleum is the dodecahedral shape of a 'Dodo' class space
- station, the home of the Cemetery Authorites. Here you go through security checks and get your visitor's
- visa. And as you stand in the queue, staring up through the translucent ceiling of the Customs Hall, you can
- see the battered, broken ships of many of the dead, still attached to the silent tomb that contains the body.
-
- It's a good enough reason to come to Tionisla. There are pickings aplenty among the wrecks. The
- treasures of centuries might be revealed by pressing the right panel on the right cube of black, alien metal as
- it floats silently by.
-
- Or maybe not treasure, just the tomb's defences . . .
-
- A pit with a laser.
-
- A robot guardian with knives where its hands should be.
-
- A hyperspace vacuum that sucks you in and throws you out into another time.
-
- You tread carefully among the wrecks in orbit about Tionisla. The creatures buried here–human
- and alien–had money enough to buy these prized resting places, and more than enough wealth to protect
- their property after death from the mercenary fingers of bounty hunters.
-
- Formalities completed, his newly issued pilot's licence checked, Alex Ryder was given a small
- tour-ship, an oddly shaped and cumbersome vessel. He drifted quickly among the tombs, seeking the resting
- place of Starpilot Fleischer, following co-ordinates on the ship's cemetery plan.
-
- He soon found what he was looking for. Whoever Fleischer had been, he was monstrously egocentric: his
- tomb was a great crystalline structure, a puff-ball of diamond-bright needles, literally hundreds of feet
- across. His body, dressed in the red uniform of an elite combateer, hovered in stasis at the centre of this
- great construct, illuminated by focused light from the sun.
-
- Tethered to the simple monument of the grave next to this was the battered, blistered shape of a
- Cobra class ship, its insignia still proudly displayed, but all its vital equipment, its fuel-scoop, its extra
- cargo bays, its aft missile and laser banks removed.
-
- Alex stared at it. It looked nothing like the Cobra that had destroyed his father's ship. That vessel
- had been bristling with all the extra things that good money could buy, to defend and to attack, and to make
- the trading game an easier prospect for the elite trader.
-
- A light on the Cobra winked at him.
-
- Alex blinked, then looked again. Sure enough, a small, red light was flashing on and off, a brief
- sequence of code.
-
- LAND ON DOR PL
-
- 'Land on the dorsal plate'–That was clear enough.
-
- Alex manoeuvred his tiny craft above the arrow shape of the Cobra, and touched it gently onto the
- heat-blistered hull. He looked around guiltily. Touching monuments wasn't permitted and the cemetery was
- patrolled by Kraits, small and deadly security craft, with instructions to blast away any man, woman or child
- seen tampering with a mausoleum . . .
-
- But the graveyard was huge, and the shadows of the great tombs transferred this miniature world of
- the dead into a place of hide-outs, and shifting, occasional safety.
-
- An entry port opened, and a green light quickly blinked the message 'Come aboard'. Alex flew the
- tour-ship into the hull space and when he got the 'pressure green' signal stepped out and walked cautiously
- towards the main control area. He opened the sliding door and blinked for a moment at the bright control
- displays and scanners. Ahead of him, the main screen was wide, and filled with a view of Fleischer's crystal
- tomb.
-
- Silhouetted against the gleaming brightness of the crystal was the shape of a man, wearing full
- space suit. One hand rested on the navigation console, the other hovered above the laser button.
-
- 'I'm aboard,' Alex said, and walked up behind the silent pilot. The man made no movement, said
- nothing.
-
- For a moment Alex stood beside him, staring out into the wreckplace, at the slowly shifting
- monuments, at the stars glimpsed in the background.
-
- Then he turned to greet his host.
-
- And nearly died of shock, taking a quick, horrified step backwards!
-
- It was the drawn, mummified face of a corpse that half looked up at him from behind its visor, the rictus
- smile of death stretching wide across its lips.
- 'Do you think we should take him with us?' a voice asked from across the cabin. Alex started again
- with surprise and watched the figure which emerged from the shadows. 'As a sort of totem. A lucky charm.'
-
- Alex tried to smile, but neither relief nor the new arrival's charming grin could relax him enough.
- Too much had happened too fast, and he stood rooted to the spot, watching as the woman came over to him.
-
- She was quite small. Her skin was olive, her eyes dark. She wore her hair in a fashionable series of
- spikes, like a porcupine. Dressed in the light green coveralls that most traders sported, she seemed swamped
- by clothes. Her hand-touch was cool and confident, and she kept the contact as she looked up at Alex
- Ryder, still smiling disarmingly.
-
- 'So you're the man that Rafe has chosen. Well, Alex. So far it seems that star-riding with you is at
- least going to be quiet. You do . . . er . . .' she frowned. 'You do have a speech function?' She turned him
- slightly and felt up his back for the switch. 'Or are you one of the early 'semaphore and gormless grin'
- models?'
-
- 'Sorry,' Alex said. 'You took me by surprise.'
-
- 'Oh God,' the woman said. 'Where's the off-switch? I think I prefer you silent . . .'
-
- 'Who are you?' Alex asked, irritated by her levity and keen to find out why Rafe Zetter had
- summoned him here? Where was the old man?
-
- 'Trader Fields', she said, and touched the heel of her right hand to her left shoulder by way of
- salute. 'My given name is Elyssia. Elyssia Fields.' She smiled again. 'My brood mother's little joke. She
- discovered Greek mythology at age 9 when she was incubating her first cluster.'
-
- Brood mother? Greek? Incubating clusters? That meant that Elyssia Fields was from Teorge, the
- so-called 'clone-world'. Alex struggled to remember what he'd been taught about Teorge . . . an inhabited
- world. . . settled by two colony ships that had proceeded to clone a select few of the crew and colonists,
- killing the others. For centuries Teorge had been a world apart, cut off from the normal flow of trade and
- commerce, and banned from sending representatives into space.
-
- Elyssia Fields was clearly a fugitive.
-
- 'I'm Alex Ryder,' Alex said.
-
- 'I know,' the woman said back, breaking the gaze with which she'd been fixing him. She patted the
- corpse on the shoulder, an oddly affectionate gesture. 'This is–or rather was–Space Trader Henry Bell.
- We're going to purloin Mister Bell's coffin. Of all the people who are going to object, he's going to be the
- most objectionable. This rust bucket is set up with holo-projections of our man here, warning of dire
- consequences for invading his sanctity. I've turned most of them off, but I expect I've missed a few.'
-
- 'We're going to steal this ship?' Alex said quietly, checking the flickering control display panel. Witchlight
- fuel registered enough for a 0.1 light-year jump, hardly sufficient to clear the Tionisla system.
-
- Elyssia stared at him, a half smile on her lips. 'We could pass the time chatting if you'd prefer.
- Plant some flowers, clean the tomb up . . .'
-
- 'I meant,' Alex said drily, 'How the hell are we going to get away with it?' He found himself staring
- at the pert features of the humanoid female. The shadow of gloom and grief that had haunted him for the
- last few hours seemed to fade a little. The girl interested him. He added, 'And just why are you helping me,
- anyway? Where's Rafe?'
-
- With a quick laugh, Elyssia said, 'Funny thing about Rafe. Wherever you go in the galaxy, he's
- always there, a shimmering white holoFac . . . but where he really is . . . that's something you're about to
- find out.' she glanced up at Alex. 'Why am I helping you? Who says I am. We'll be helping each other, in
- fact. You have a father to avenge. I have some things to avenge too. Maybe I'll tell you about them one day.
- But without you I cannot fly this ship.'
-
- Surprised, Alex said, 'Cobras were made to be flown by a single pilot.'
-
- 'But I'm a single Teorgeon. I'm not supposed to be here. I can fly this bucket with my eyes closed,
- but your face fits. Listen, Alex, this craft wouldn't survive the first attack by a pirate with a peashooter, no
- matter how good we are behind the laser button. We need shields, missiles, defences and cargo space. How
- d'you think we're going to get them? They don't grow on silvery moons, you know.'
-
- 'Trade for them,' Alex said gloomily, and the vista of his family's long life trading through the stars
- swept before his eyes.
-
- Elyssia was right. He couldn't go hunting a Cobra without the proper equipment, and it would take
- too long to sort out his inheritance, bearing in mind the circumstances of his father's death.
-
- He felt utterly overwhelmed with frustration. A part of him wanted to kill right now. A part of him
- wanted to rip out onto the space-lanes, and hunt his father's killer. But the best part of him knew that would
- be a recipe for disaster, that patience was called for, that a tactical appraisal of how he would set about the
- hunt was essential . . . and that a protected ship was the barest necessity!
-
- 'I've got a hundred credits in all the world,' Alex said, referring to the Galactic Emergency Services
- loan that he had been given to get him home.
-
- 'It's a start,' Elyssia said. 'It's a start in the trading business. As Rafe would say, we'll give this old
- lass an iron ass.' Her face darkened though the flickering lights from the console were bright in her eyes.
- 'Then we'll go to a place that I suspect only Rafe Zetter knows, and we'll watch a lot of heartache burn up
- courtesy of some fine shooting by the both of us. 'We'll get the ship that put an end to your father. It's a ship
- that has a lot to answer for . . .'
-
- But she would say no more than that.
-
- For anyone reckoning on beginning a space trading career from scratch the hardest task is finding a
- ship. Each planetary system has its floating junk yards, its second-hand craft, its impounded vessels,
- eventually auctioned by the police. Most places advertise for co-pilots, to work without pay for four years
- with the guarantee of a ship at the end of it–if they're still alive.
-
- But ships are expensive, even if they're from the scrap heap.
-
- Alex was impressed and startled by the audacity of the theft that was being proposed. In response
- to Rafe's plan, the fugitive, who had been hiding out in the dead craft for nearly a year, had managed to
- accumulate the fuel, food and power to make the brief hyperspace jump to the interstellar junk yard. All that
- had been missing was the right co-pilot, someone who could actually do the trading without arousing
- suspicion.
-
- They hauled the mummified body of Henry Bell to the small tour-ship and set the craft adrift.
-
- 'Whatever happens now,' Elyssia said as they took positions at the bridge consoles, 'You're going to
- get an "offender" status tag. But Rafe thinks if you respect the body they'll just post it at Tionisla itself.
- Destroy the body and they'll probably notify most worlds in the vicinity, and we can't afford that. Here goes
- . . .'
-
- On the screen, the small tour-ship drifted away, and the crowded monuments of the cemetery
- swung past in a dizzying array of bright and shadowy surfaces. Alex studied the scanners and monitors
- carefully. They had only tiny energy supply to fore and aft screens. A blast or two of laser power. No
- missiles, of course. The craft was still locked on to the Dodo space station, whose position was shown by
- the darting bright point in the tri-axial grid map.
-
- Slowly the Cobra turned, and began to move gently, silently towards the edge of the spiral grave-
- field.
-
- The scanner scanned, and Alex watched it hard, alert and apprehensive for the tell-tale wink of its
- moving green light. The duller-colours of the tombs and stationary craft crowded the scanning screen,
- moving slowly past.
-
- 'There's something I ought to tell you about uncontrolled WitchSpace jumps . . .' Elyssia said, and
- Alex felt a moment's irritation.
-
- 'I already know. Thanks. Besides, wherever we're going we're only going a tenth of an LY. And
- that's reasonably safe.'
-
- Elyssia sniggered. 'What god or goddess do you believe in?'
-
- 'Randomius Factoria . . .' Alex muttered.
-
- 'Me too . . .'
-
- They looked at each other.
-
- Alex laughed and said, 'Repeat after me: Lady of Fate, we adore you . . . '
-
- 'Get us to Rafe's, we implore you . . .'
-
- The monuments and monoliths drifted by. The star field widened ahead of them.
- 'Nearly there,' Elyssia breathed. 'Get ready for the jump . . .'
-
- Alex watched the scanner.
-
- And two bright points of light appeared, moving rapidly towards them.
-
- 'Company!' he said, and Elyssia swore loudly.
-
- 'We've not got much laser power,' Alex said.
-
- 'Use our laser, and any chance of trading goes. Those are police. They may not be Vipers, but
- they're police nevertheless. Damn!'
-
- Ahead of them the starfield was almost clear. The two security craft veered apart, to close in from
- the sides. Elyssia began to count down, finger resting on the simple trigger that would dispatch them
- Faraway. 'Ten seconds . . .'
-
- The Cobra vibrated and whined, unused to activity after many years in stasis.
-
- 'They're closing–fire coming in!'
-
- 'Five seconds.'
-
- The Cobra screeched as a laser shot glanced off its hull. The shield energy, low as it was,
- vanished! The attacking craft overshot. It's colleague fired and missed, manoeuvring with difficulty around
- a large, henge monument that slowly revolved at the edge of the cemetery.
-
- 'Three . . . '
-
- 'Lining up . . . fire coming in!'
-
- The two craft were together again. Their laser fire played in the void around the Cobra.
-
- 'Two . . . '
-
- There was a strike, a scream of pain, the vessel almost rocked out of control. And then–
-
- Star tunnel!
-
- Elyssia flopped back in her chair. Alex cheered. When he looked at the woman he saw that she was
- drenched with sweat. When he reached a hand towards her, his fingers were shaking uncontrollably.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FOUR
-
- 'You've got a ship,' said Rafe, 'You've got money. You've got a co-pilot who's a better shot than you, but not
- for long I hope. Now it's up to you, young Alex. And one thing more. If Jason were here he'd have this to
- say. In time of trouble, forget common sense, forget the force. Do what you goddam feel like. If it don't
- work, one thing's for sure. You ain't going to be around to regret it.'
- Seated at the astrogation console of the Cobra, Alex watched Rafe's home on the forward screen. It
- was a much modified, and quite bizarre-looking, Anaconda cruiser, its cargo bay dented, its fuel-scoop
- ripped open, its hull lights blinking not so much with meaning as with disrepair.
-
- Rafe had not invited him aboard. At 0.1 Iight years from Tionisla he was safe from detection, and
- here he stayed in the cold and silence of interstellar space, collecting ships, fuel, food and weapons. Three
- Mambas–small fighters–were tethered to the service bay on the Anaconda's hull, robots crawling all over
- them as they patched-up the shot up vessels. Unlike humans, robots could work without arc-lights.
-
- When the graveyard ship had arrived at Rafe Zetter's private system, Rafe's holoFac had appeared
- in the cabin.
-
- 'It takes a lot of effort and a lot of wile to get supplies for the sort of mission you're about to go on.
- I'll fuel your ship enough to get you to Isinor. But from then on you're on your own. You're going to need
- missiles, operational lasers, an energy bomb, a fuel scoop . . . a whole bunch of other things.'
-
- 'An iron ass,' Alex muttered with a smile.
-
- 'That's right. And I don't want to hear from you again until you've scalped that Cobra that killed
- Jason.'
-
- 'Why are you doing this for me?'
-
- 'I'm doing it for Jason,' Rafe said. 'And for others besides. And listen Alex. Don't you go worrying
- about Raxxla. Not yet. That comes in time . . .'
-
- 'But why did he say it?'
-
- 'To let me know he trusted you. Your father reckoned you have it in you to become one of the
- Elite. That's good enough for me.'
-
- Alex's head span. What was this old man saying now? Not just that Jason Ryder had been an élite
- combateer, but that he'd seen the same potential in his son?
-
- In SimCombat Alex had often built up a success and survival score that had awarded him the
- simulator's highest accolade: a victory roll over the mock-up of the old Earth city of London. But he had
- never thought that in real life he would ever achieve a combat status higher than 'dangerous'.
-
- To be élite . . .
-
- A dizzying prospect. And a nerve-racking one, with all that it implied of not just fighting off free-
- booters, but of spending time as a bounty hunter, deliberately hyperspacing into dangerous planetary
- systems and waiting for pirates to come to you; looking for trouble, in other words, boosting your combat
- status to the maximum by advertising yourself to killers, and outgunning them.
-
- 'One thing's for sure,' Rafe went on drily. 'Unless you get there, unless you become élite, you'll
- never get to Raxxla. And you'll never know exactly what your father was searching for.'
-
- 'I don't understand.'
-
- 'Were you aware of his involvement in The Dark Wheel?'
-
- Shock after shock! The Dark Wheel was a semi-legendary space unit, star-riders who made it their
- business to seek the truth behind the plethora of myths and romantic stories that filtered back from all
- corners of the Universe: fabulous cities, parallel worlds, time travellers, even planets that appeared to be the
- old 'heaven' of Earth legend. The Dark Wheel was as mysterious and as mythical to the traders of the
- Galaxy as King Arthur might have been to the first spacemen.
-
- 'It's not possible,' Alex breathed. 'He would have told us . . .'
-
- 'The hell he would,' Rafe said, staring at the younger man from the shimmering holoFac on the
- bridge. 'The ship that killed Jason was no pirate. He was killed because he'd found something. Something
- that certain parties were deeply unhappy that he'd found.'
-
- 'What exactly?'
-
- Rafe laughed. 'Listen to the boy! Look at me, Alex. Do I look whole? I do? Well I ain't. One leg,
- some of my liver, a few brain cells–all that's left of the real me. The rest is just bionic. Trying to do what
- your father did, I got shot to hell'n' back. I was élite once. Now it takes me ten seconds to decide to spit. He
- didn't tell me because I'm not part of it anymore. Not to that degree. But I watch and I listen, and I do what
- I'm told. And as sure as there's gold-flake on the skin of a Geretean, Jason Ryder told me to get you ready to
- follow in his footsteps.'
-
- Coming so soon after his father's death, with the memory of Jason's murder so vivid in his mind, it
- was almost too much for Alex. He didn't know whether to glow with pride, or shake with apprehension. He
- slowly sat down at the astrogation console and played his fingers over the controls of the Cobra.
-
- After a while he smiled, and shrugged away the confusion and the sadness he was feeling.
-
- 'Right. If that's what my father wanted, then I shan't disappoint him . . .'
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FIVE
-
- Out of Witch-Space: the dizziness, the slight shudder, the brief disorientation. Ahead of them, the distant,
- red-blue disc of the planet Xezaor was only slightly brighter than the gleaming field of stars around. The
- planet's sun was dim and very close by. It glowed red. A dying star, as the world ahead of them was a dying
- world, a cooling world, a world whose wealth and industrial development could not hold back the process
- of Galactic ageing. Xezaor was a world where luxuries and warmth meant everything, now, and Shanaskilk
- fur, with the multiple heads still intact, would fetch a high price.
-
- Routine. A routine trade run. Elyssia dozed, Alex punched co-ordinates into the auto-pilot and
- prepared to pass the time of the long run-in to the world.
-
- Routine, a routine which Alex was by now well used to.
-
- Out of Witch-Space and then the slow approach until the Coriolis station came on target–
-
- Nothing to do . . .
-
- Nothing to see . . .
-
- The Cobra rocked and a sound like the screech of metal being bent apart echoed through the
- bridge!
-
- 'Company!' Alex said loudly, and Elyssia blinked awake. She must have assessed the situation in
- an instant. She remained where she was. Alex was at the console and there were only seconds available for
- thought.
-
- Alex had been taken by surprise, not because he hadn't been paying attention, but because the
- attack ships had been so close to the egress point from hyperspace. With their tiny hulls between him and
- the glowing sun, they had not been visible for an instant, and they had been performing a 'tumbling' routine,
- mimicking slow-moving asteroids.
-
- Alex had half noticed them and half ignored them. They had got the first shot in, then overflown
- the Cobra.
-
- Now, they grouped behind as Alex punched up maximum speed, and scanned space for them.
-
- 'Here they come . . .'
-
- The shields screamed as laser fire played off them. Beam lasers! Those ships were well equipped.
- But then, so, now was the Nemesis, the dramatic name that he and Elyssia had given to their ship. Alex
- checked the rear monitor and lined up the firing window. He stabbed out two bursts of fire from the newly
- installed aft-laser. The pirate ships veered apart, one of them struck.
-
- As he had them on the screen, he targeted a missile. A missile from one of the attacking craft
- began to weave towards them, and his screen flashed with warning. Alex operated the Nemesis's ECM, and
- after an agonisingly long few seconds the incoming missile vanished in a burst of heat and light.
- The hull screeched and Alex dived. He noticed that the shields had begun to put a drain on the first
- energy unit.
-
- Elyssia sat calm and quiet while Alex handled the situation. Ahead of them, the planet edged
- closer, rising and falling and spinning in a dizzying way as Alex fought for a better combat position.
-
- Then, instinct took over. He looped the Cobra a full 180 degrees and raced head-on at the pirate
- vessel that had been behind him. Now he could see that it was a Fer-de-lance, a sleek, fast ship that was
- probably loaded down with sophisticated navigational and defence equipment that had been installed by the
- original owner. Or maybe not . . . such equipment took cash to maintain, and this ship had seen battle
- service aplenty.
-
- As pirate and Alex closed, Alex took a chance. They had only four missiles and one was targetted.
- He punched for fire and the Cobra jolted as the deadly sting shot across space.
-
- It reached its target and the Fer-de-lance literally disappeared.
-
- Had it hyperspaced? No.
-
- When Alex activated the rear screen, he saw the spreading ash cloud, a silvery glimmer against the
- stars . . .
-
- 'Good shooting!' Elyssia said enthusiastically.
-
- Through the cloud of metal and ash came the other ship.
-
- Alex looped again. A laser strike depleted the aft shield even more. But now that the enemy knew
- that its prey had an anti-missile system, it was going to try and dogfight Alex to destruction.
-
- The ship was a Cobra too. It's fuel-scoop gaped, ready to suck up the cannisters of precious
- Shanaskilk fur from the wreckage of the shattered trader.
-
- Alex had other ideas.
-
- Again, Xezaor was ahead of them. Rear-shooting, Alex ducked and darted towards safety, and the
- pirate weaved a snaking pattern against the star-field behind. Alex targeted a missile-
-
- 'Save it if you can . . .' Elyssia breathed.
-
- 'I know,' Alex said. 'But we can afford a replacement . . .'
-
- 'We won't afford the fuel-scoop then,' Elyssia reminded him, and they both laughed. At a time like
- this, worried about their shopping list!
-
- The space station, and the safety it afforded with its own fighter defences, was too far away. Alex
- veered sharply sunwards, and dropped his forward velocity dramatically. The pursuing ship copied the first
- movement precisely, but took a few seconds to orientate to the second. It overshot. Before it knew what was
- happening it was no longer the hunter but the hunted.
-
- 'Go, Alex, go!' Elyssia shouted, as Alex shot off pulse after pulse of laser fire. The Cobra on the screen
- ducked and weaved, but Alex was equal to it, hardly thinking, just reacting. The temperature of his forward
- laser began to rise dangerously. The Cobra ahead of them launched a missile at them and Alex shot it, not
- even bothering to program the ECM.
-
- Elyssia gasped at the cheek of that, and glanced at the young man in whose hands her life was
- being so capably held.
-
- A moment later it was all over. The pirate exploded, his screen energy finally exhausted. Alex saw
- the wink and flash of a jettisoned escape pod and for a second–
-
- Remembering the beam of fire that had destroyed his own escape craft, remembering the savage
- destruction of the Avalonia . . .
-
- –he was tempted to go in pursuit. His better judgement prevailed. Around them, cargo cannisters
- tumbled like sycamore seeds.
-
- 'And us with no scoop to pick them up!' Elyssia muttered.
-
- Alex grinned. 'We claim two. That's quite a bounty.'
-
- Elyssia looked down at him as he sat and guided the ship towards Xezaor. 'Alex, you're a natural.
- It's an honour to ride the stars with you.'
-
- No-one had said a word, neither of them commented on it: the fact that this had been Alex's first
- solo combat'
-
-
- CHAPTER SIX
-
- They had been trading now for three standard months, and their Cobra craft, the Nemesis, was scarcely
- recognisable as the battered tomb-place of Trader Henry Bell. With new insignia, new welding, new colour
- and the pods and swellings of the armaments housings, it began to look like a fighter.
-
- Three months a trader. And not for one hour of one day of those months had Alex forgotten the
- reason behind this way of life. Something–someone–disguised as a trader had killed his father, and done
- its best to kill him. His father had led a double life, and accordingly to the oldest relic in the Galaxy, had
- deputised his son to follow in his star path.
-
- Alex Ryder was not about to fail his father in that wish.
-
- There were so many questions, so much grief, so much anger. And for Elyssia too, although the
- Teorgian woman rarely showed the emotion that Alex sensed was bubbling just below the surface of her
- cool, wisecracking exterior.
-
- They were facing a task together, a task of growing, of becoming strong. There would have to be a time of
- waiting, and both were accepting that time with as much silent patience as they could muster.
- But it was not easy, not easy for either of them.
-
- And for Alex, with blood on his hands at last . . . not easy at all . . .
-
- The skirmish with the two pirate ships had scraped the paint a little, and loosened several hull
- plates, necessitating a trip to a service satellite where, because of their bounty hunting, the work would
- almost certainly be performed free of charge. Though this had been Alex's first solo combat, it had not been
- their first battle. Elyssia would have qualified for 'dangerous' status had she been eligible for a rating. As it
- was, her rating–on the evidence of the Nemesis's skirmishing–had been assigned to Alex. Now, for the
- first time, Alex felt he had taken a substantial step towards proving that he genuinely deserved that
- particular classification.
-
- Still at the astrogation console, he guided the ship to within a thousand kilometres of the surface of
- the dying world, so close that the planet filled everything in the forward vision screen. At dead slow
- approach speed he finally looped around and there, slowly spinning before them–a glittering metal cube–
- was the space station, its access bay a wide, rotating mouth.
-
- 'Oh for a docking computer . . .' Alex murmured as he began to match rotation and slowly
- approached.
-
- 'Waste of money . . .' Elyssia chided. 'If you can't dock without losing your paintwork, you
- shouldn't be in space.'
-
- Alex was a great flier. But snaking neatly into the reception bay of a Coriolis station was his
- greatest weakness.
-
- He made it, though, and once inside the vast hanger space, magnetic traction drew the Nemesis
- slowly to a vacant berth. AutoCom links snaked out and clamped to its hull. Alex watched the bustle in the
- great, brightly-lit void, the customs ships, the police Vipers, the advertising modules, the repair modules, all
- moving slowly in the cube-space, touting for business. Elyssia hid in the escape pod as usual. Alex declared
- his cargo, and received confirmation of his bounty killings, and notification of his bonus: thirty credits!
-
- That exactly covered the cost of a new missile.
-
- When all the check-ins, log-ins and identity verifications had been run, Elyssia emerged from
- hiding. The escape capsule had been their first priority, and they had bought one second-hand for four
- hundred credits. They didn't intend to use it anyway, except to screen off Elyssia's unfortunate and
- unwelcome origins.
-
- Now began the routine of business. Selling, then deciding where to trade next, and what to buy to
- take with them.
-
- Trading is very much a hit and miss profession. With certain high demand, high turnover products,
- a small profit can usually be guaranteed–foodstuffs, textiles, simple machinery, simple luxuries.
-
- But the ship's running costs, and an occasional space skirmish, can soon eat up such profits, making the
- whole exercise essentially worthless. There is no way of knowing trade prices at other systems. Each
- planetary state jealously guards its stock-market information, and there are heavy penalties for Faxing the
- market prices of any item beyond orbit-space.
-
- Prices change, too. Speculators lurk in every system, no matter how poor. That tonne of frozen
- bladderlash that would have fetched eight credits a month ago at Ceinzala, against a buying price of three
- from its homeworld Reorte, will suddenly be worth only two. The demand for bladderlash had not lessened.
- The speculators have made a secret killing, and fixed up the market.
-
- Hit and miss.
-
- Alex and Elyssia had been lucky so far. They had carried Vargorn mind-silk between Rexebe and
- Inera and doubled their intitial hundred credits. They had ferried the gold-flake scales of Geretean reptiles
- and only just covered their costs. They had supplied twenty tonnes of sunflower seeds to the grotesque
- amphibioid inhabitants of Bierle, to whom sunflower seeds were a particular delicacy, only to find that a
- mass, mind-induced mutation had occurred throughout the entire planetary population, changing their taste
- buds . . . The search was now on for the new delicacy to delight the palates of the Bierleans. Lubrication oil
- had come close, and lavender scented tissue paper. But somewhere there was a real profit to be made. One
- day. One year.
-
- Moving machinery from high-tech worlds to middle-tech worlds was also unexpectedly profitable,
- and demand for luxuries was always high on evolving industrial worlds. But on Xezaor the Shanaskilk furs
- (bought at thirty galactic credits the tonne) were likely to be their best bet yet. Alex nervously called up the
- buying price at Xezaor.
-
- He whooped with triumph as he saw that he and Elyssia had tripled their money.
-
- This time, in the hit and miss game, they had hit lucky.
-
- They sold the furs without trouble. Then Alex called up the price list at Xezaor of ship and
- armaments equipment. The new missile was the standard thirty credits. He ordered one and a small robot
- scuttled off to fetch the permitted weaponry. Beam lasers were one thousand credits, and the temptation to
- invest in one was strong. The price of the fuel and cargo scoop which the Nemesis so badly needed was
- extortionately high, at five hundred and twenty-five credits. But an energy bomb cost nearly twice as much!
-
- Of course a fuel scoop could be used for salvage, as well as topping up their fuel banks by sun-
- skimming, so it was a good investment, even at one hundred credits over the odds.
-
- Alex ordered one. Delivery and fitting would take twenty hours, a standard day. Alex fuelled the
- ship, next, and stocked up with Xezaorian delicacies.
- They had three hundred and twenty galactic credits left with which to buy trade stock, an
- uncomfortably low sum. On the other hand, their ship now had extra defensive shields, four-
- directional targeting of lasers and missiles, an anti-missile system and a fuel scoop.
-
- They were more than half way to becoming a battle cruiser.
-
- Elyssia scanned the planet's market list with Alex. For all that Xezaorians liked exotic things, they
- had precious little to offer. Two narcotics were available–arcturan burstweed and, strangely, tobacco-–
- and Alex thought hard about them.
-
- 'Surely we could get away with tobacco . . .'
-
- 'Uh-huh.' Elyssia murmured. 'No way. Nicotine is deadly, even in low doses, to many races.'
-
- 'If we carried it to a human world?'
-
- 'Still too risky.'
-
- Minerals were on offer, but were pricy. Durassion–one of the ores that could be refined and 'time-
- stressed' to give duralium for ship's hulls–was available at eight credits the tonne, and that would sell
- exceptionally well at Lave . . . but Lave was many light years away, now, and any dura-ore could bottom-
- out on a standard day when a richer ore was found.
-
- Too risky.
-
- Gemstones? There were maroon and silver spectonals for sale, and red-green emeronds. A pirate
- convoy would smell such booty from two light years away.
-
- As for the curiosity market there were two hundred fossilised Dironothaxaurian life-bones on offer,
- at forty credits each.
-
- 'Ever heard of them?' Elyssia asked.
-
- Alex said, 'I've seen one. And heard one. In a museum on my homeworld. They sing. They're over
- forty million years old, and still they sing; waiting for something, a hatching, or a change of climate. They're
- bones from the pelvic region, so they could be incubation pods. Nobody knows . . .'
-
- 'Are they valuable?'
-
- 'Very. Exactly by how much I don't know.'
-
- 'Check it for restrictions . . .'
-
- Alex did so. There were no known import restrictions, or potential legal violations involved in
- trading in these fossilised animal bones.
-
- 'Better than food–' Alex said.
-
- 'Any day,' Elyssia agreed.
-
- 'So we go for it . . .'
-
- 'I suppose so.'
-
- But as Alex began to key into the trade-centre to purchase the goods, the console flashed the
- words, 'Incoming message . . .'
-
- 'Rafe!' Alex said. And Elyssia too seemed excited at the prospect of seeing and talking with Rafe Zetter
- again.
-
- But it was not the wizened, crusty old space trader who appeared on the screen as Alex accepted
- the call.
-
- Nothing like.
-
- It was a human being, and not a humanoid alien that faced them. But what had happened to its face
- was beyond description. There were many ways to change ordinary human looks to nightmarish caricatures
- of the same: flying too close to certain stars, being exposed to the interstellar vacuum too often, working in
- certain ore and mineral mines . . . But Alex, as he stared at the lumpy, grey swellings that swathed this
- person's flesh, could not imagine what grotesque disaster had befallen the caller.
-
- Lips like quivering gossamer wings trembled in the grey flesh. A hand, skeletal and crippled, shot
- through with bright red blood vessels, touched the wispy ginger hair that grew in a bizarre floral circle
- around the deformed head.
-
- 'Are you Ryder?'
-
- The voice, at least, was normal. And male.
-
- 'Identify yourself, caller.'
-
- Ignoring the question the other man went on, 'What're you trading in this time? Minerals?
- Specialities?'
-
- 'What's it to you?'
-
- 'Whatever it is you're thinking of buying, I can do you a better deal.'
-
- 'I wouldn't trade with you if I was running hot from a supernova.'
-
- The human grinned (or so it seemed).
-
- 'Rafe Zetter would. How come you're so fussy?'
-
- 'You know Rafe?' Alex asked, perturbed and puzzled by the grotesque man's invocation of the
- friendly name.
-
- 'Me and half the Universe.' The deformed man leaned closer to the monitor. His features filled the
- screen totally. 'Parasites.'
-
- 'I'm sorry?'
-
- 'These things. This . . .' tapping his face. 'Parasites. Spider worms. I did a stint in the pen. on
- Dykstra's world, and the little buggers took a liking to me. These are the larvae, about two million of them.
- They'll hatch out in about ten years, and that'll be the end of me. I sort of hope I'm at a dinner party with
- someone I don't like, at the time, but you can't plan for these things. I don't blame you for not trusting me . .
- .' Pale eyes glittered from beneath the heavy, pulsating folds of grey flesh. 'But don't judge by appearances.
- Alex–it is Alex, isn't it? I mean, for hell's sake tell me if I've got the wrong number . . .'
-
- 'I'm Alex Ryder.'
-
- 'And I'm Patrick McGreavy. I'll say just two things to you. The first is this: when you kill the
- snake, you'll lay a ghost that's haunted me for more than five years. I'm not a flier. What I am doesn't matter.
- There are more people like me than all the sunflower seeds you've traded in your life. People who need
- vengeance. People who can't do it for themselves. Kill the snake and you'll do a service to us all.'
- Alex couldn't help the wry smile that touched his lips, even though he had rarely felt less like
- smiling. He felt as if he was being manoeuvred, manipulated, like a robot ship, an autoremote,
- programmed to fly in endless, mindless circles. What the hell was going on? He was Jason Ryder's
- son, and until three months ago his best combat experience had been in a SimCombat trainer. His
- pilot's licence had hardly dried. And somehow, despite all of this, he had been chosen as nemesis
- to exact a savage vengeance from a ship that was certainly far more than a simple–and simply
- deadly–pirate.
-
- There were people watching him, and waiting on him, their fingers crossed, their breath held.
-
- Why him? Why him? (And Elyssia . . .)
-
- 'Okay,' he said quietly. 'I get the message. You said "two things".'
-
- 'Right. Rafe told you to trade in Shanaskilk fur, as soon as you could afford it. Am I right?'
-
- He was right. It was one of Rafe's last pieces of advice to Alex, and Alex had not forgotten it.
-
- McGreavy went on, 'When Rafe told you to do that he was sending you to me. You've got to get an
- iron ass. You've got to trade in something really worthwhile. Unship and fly across to South City, to the
- private traders' centre in the Magellan Building.'
-
- 'I've already got an "iron ass",' Alex said.
-
- 'You think so, do you? Do it anyway. Take a chance. Make your way to the Magellan building, South City .
- . .'
-
- After a moment's hesitation, and with a glance at Elyssia, who just shrugged and nodded, Alex
- agreed.
-
- A Coriolis station is nothing less than a vast city built on six planes and spread, around the wide empty sky
- of its interior, facing inwards. From South City, the roof on the world is North City. At night, the lights that
- glow above your head are the lights of streets and buildings.
-
- Alex checked out of the ship's berth and took a sky taxi across the void. The tiny automatic ship
- slid delicately and smoothly between the incoming and outgoing ships. Alex watched in fascination as the
- towering buildings of South City dropped away below and the grey sky edged closer. To his left, he could
- see the pattern of streets and parklands on the inhabited plane known as Commander City. Facing the
- entrance to the station, on that particular level lived the high ranking officials and various planetary envoys
- and ambassadors. They enjoyed a landscape which included lakes, rivers and ski-slopes with real snow.
-
- Below him, the Nemesis became a tiny dart-shape on the broad landing pad. Above him, the
- towering offices and living blocks reached down towards him like geometrical stalactites.
-
- There was an abrupt moment's disorientation and suddenly the roof was the ground and now the
- Nemesis was a single, winking light in the heavens. The taxi dropped swiftly to street level, between the
- grey and black monolithic structures. Lights of different colours blinked and shone, and when the
- atmosphere began, a strange dusty shimmer seemed to envelop the city.
-
- The streets were crowded here and it took Alex only moments to realise that the South City of this
- particular Coriolis station was the 'down town' area. Illegal trade abounded, in narcotics, robots, slaves,
- sensuastims, prostitution and frozen organs. Spacers walked slowly, cautiously, most of them still wearing
- near-full suit, a certain sign that this was the rough quarter. Hookers, of all sexes (the Galaxy counted
- seventeen at this time) and races, but mostly humanoid, solicited from hovering platforms, ready to escape
- fast from any over-welcoming, unwelcome client. Advertising hoardings here were almost completely
- devoted to proclaiming the illicit pleasures which were available in South City. Police cars and remotes
- roared overhead, as did med-ships. The streets were alive with noise and bustle and filth.
-
- The Magellan building, a dark, squat cube, sat amongst this confusion like a great, brooding
- monster. It had no visible windows. Lifts rose and fell on its outer walls, slow-moving green lights that gave
- it an uncanny sense of being alive.
-
- Alex had come without a hand weapon, and now began to regret it. Practically everyone–and
- everything–he saw carried a gun, in contradiction of orbit-space law. He walked cautiously through the
- crowds of reptilioids, cloaked amphibioids, armoured insectoids, squat, bristling felines, and the grotesque
- robo-tanks in which things that looked like giant molluscs, or worms, or branches of heather, moved within
- the safety of their own environment.
-
- He entered the Magellan building and noticed the stench for the first time, the combined body
- odours of a thousand alien life-forms; surprisingly some–those who drank raw methane gas–managed to
- excrete sweat that smelled as sweet as apple blossom.
-
- But most did not.
-
- The private trading centre was a vast hall, surrounded by the entrances to offices and warehouses.
- What was sold in this crowded, noisy place, was anything that was considered too risky, or bizarre, or
- commonplace to sell on the open market. The trader who loaded up his cargo bay from a private purchase
- had better check with the planet's export monitoring system before leaving, or his reception, at the other
- end, might be a little more violent than he'd expected.
-
- Alex scanned the high walls for a hint of McGreavy's warehouse. As he did so he found himself
- standing behind two tall, violent-looking insect-forms, their bodies armoured in light grey, their facetted
- eyes swivelling to stare at him as they talked together, chelicerae clashing and clacking in their peculiar
- mode of communication.
- Alex stepped away, heart beating, blood rushing to his head. Compound eyes, jointed limbs, head
- antennae, double cutting jaws . . .
-
- Thargoids!
-
- Here, on a space station!
-
- Thargoids were deadly. Thargoid spacers had their fear-glands removed, and were considered to
- be the most effective and potent of humankind's enemies. The bounty for killing a Thargoid was huge, and
- for capturing and delivering the juvenile form, the Tharglet, to any Space Navy research centre, even
- greater.
-
- What were they doing here?
-
- The Thargoids chatted together and watched Alex coldly. Alex noticed that each had an appendage
- resting on its thoracic plate, where they holstered their hand-lasers.
-
- 'Back off,' a voice whispered, and Alex turned. McGreavy stood there blinking through his
- deformities. Alex had not grasped how short the man was; he only came up as far as Alex's chest.
-
- 'Thargoids . . .' he whispered.
-
- 'Bullshit,' McGreavy said, and dragged Alex away. 'They're Oresrians, and the one thing that can
- make an Oresrian deadly is being confused the way you've just confused them, with their deadly enemies
- the Thargoids. Check the thorax markings and the shape of the fourth joint on each hind leg before you
- jump to conclusions again . . .'
-
- Alex followed McGreavy gratefully, away from the whispering insects.
-
- McGreavy's warehouse was small, cramped and smelly. Alex followed him through into the dimly
- lit interior, and felt a pang of discomfort as the grotesque little man closed the doors behind them. In several
- large, transparent crates, peculiar creatures shuffled and murmured, excited at the sudden disturbance.
-
- 'Are these what you have to offer?' Alex asked in a low voice. McGreavy chuckled. He walked
- over to the nearest crate and brought up the light, to illuminate more clearly the odd creature within.
-
- Alex stared. The creature was vaguely familiar, but the memory refused to come. It had a thick
- shell, patterned neatly, and limb holes at regular intervals around this bony house. For the moment the beast
- was securely hidden within its protective environment.
-
- 'What are they?'
-
- 'Mymurths,' McGreavy said. 'If they seem familiar it's because they're astonishingly like an animal
- of Old Earth: the tortus, as I believe it was called. These things have two heads, four legs, and two anterior
- organelles that seem to serve no purpose. They're named for the planet of their origin. Mymurth. But you'll
- be shipping them to Cirag. The Ciragians have a special relationship with the Mymurth.'
-
- 'They eat them?' Alex guessed.
-
- They worship them,' McGreavy corrected with a twitch of his flimsy lips.
- 'Worship?'
-
- McGreavy nodded. 'To the Cirag race, the Mymurth are the reincarnations of gods. A particular
- sort of god, called an 'avatar'. The animal form of a god. The Mymurth look very like the legendary avatars
- of Ciragian religion and mythology. They're from another world, of course, and have no connection with
- Cirag at all. But any Ciragian family will give a small fortune to have a living Mymurth in its temple.'
-
- Alex was fascinated and intrigued. The bulky creatures moved sluggishly about, their fleshy pink
- limbs emerging from the shells to propel them through the slush that filled their cages. 'How much is a small
- fortune?'
-
- 'Each of these will fetch a hundred credits. Maybe more. And I have twenty-eight. Twenty-eight
- hundred credits. That'll buy you all the shields and weaponry you need . . .'
-
- 'Why not trade them yourself?'
-
- McGreavy laughed sourly. 'With my record? You must be joking. No thanks. It takes me half a
- standard year to get a pen full of these things, and Rafe Zetter usually has a customer for me, someone like
- yourself who needs credit fast, to perform a certain act . . . of violence . . .'
-
- Alex found himself staring at the bright eyes of the hideous face before him. He was no longer
- overly conscious of the deformities, or of the pulsating life that existed just below the man's skin. He was
- aware only of the fact that he wanted–needed–to trust this acquaintance of Rafe, and yet didn't.
-
- 'Make me an offer I can't refuse,' McGreavy said, and hard reality hit Alex again.
-
- He said, 'Three hundred.'
-
- McGreavy chuckled and shook his head. 'The idea is that you make the profit. You won't do that
- offering me three times what you're likely to make for a Mymurth.'
-
- 'I meant . . . three hundred for the lot.'
-
- For a second McGreavy stood in silence, staring at the younger man. 'Is this a joke?'
-
- 'No joke. I have three hundred credits in the world. You've got the wrong boy, McGreavy.'
-
- 'You just sold a cargo load of Shanaskilk fur!'
-
- 'And bought weapons and a fuel scoop. I bought the furs at a loss to begin with. I'm no trader,
- McGreavy. I'm a combateer. I did tell you.' Alex looked down at the Mymurth. 'I'll buy eight off you. How's
- that?'
-
- 'I sell the lot, or not at all. I want fifteen hundred credits for them. Rafe said you'd come through . .
- .'
-
- 'Rafe was wrong. Shift them through some other sucker . . .'
-
- Alex turned to go. McGreavy's whimper of panic was almost funny to hear. 'I save these things up for Rafe.
- Who else is going to trade in Mymurth?'
-
- 'I'll take ten off your hands, for three hundred credits. The more you stall, the less I'll offer.'
-
- Alex was enjoying this.
-
- 'I need to shift the lot. To Cirag.'
-
- Where was Cirag, Alex wondered. It was not a name that rang any bells.
-
- 'Then you'll have to trust me,' he said. 'Like you trust Rafe. I'll give you a down payment of three
- hundred against one third of what I get at Cirag. I'll come back and pay you off.'
-
- McGreavy stared at him in silence; the man's breathing was laboured. 'One third will hardly cover
- my outlay. Fifty percent.'
-
- 'Forty percent,' Alex said. 'And no further bargaining.'
-
- The Mymurth shuffled anxiously. McGreavy shrugged with defeat. He summoned the vid-witness,
- and the two men signed the agreement. Twenty-eight Mymurth for sale to Cirag, forty percent of the
- proceeds to be returned to Pat McGreavy at South City, Coriolis 7, Xezaor.
-
- If McGreavy was right, and the money was forthcoming from the religious nutcases on Cirag . . .
-
- Where was Cirag?
-
- . . . the Nemesis could be equipped with beam lasers, extra missiles, extra shield energy units, and
- an energy bomb, and the hunt could begin in earnest.
-
- Alex returned to his ship to report on the day's trading.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER SEVEN
-
- They had been set up, of course.
-
- And in a way, they went into the set-up gamely. Alex checked up on the planet Cirag and
- discovered that it was not listed with the Official Planetary Register. That was the reason for its unfamiliar
- name. Not to be registered was not in itself unusual. Only inhabited worlds were listed. There were millions
- of inhabited star systems of use to miners, traders and explorers, which could only be located by reference
- to the Galactic Gazatteer of Worlds.
-
- But Cirag was inhabited by intelligent beings.
-
- That meant just one thing: Cirag was an independent world, had refused Federation status, was
- dangerous, probably deadly, most likely the haven for freebooters and criminals, and almost certainly a
- system in which the general principle of 'laser first, talk second' was applied.
-
- We've got to be crazy . . .' Elyssia said.
-
- Alex agreed. 'Could Cirag be Raxxla? Could it be the world my father mentioned before he died?'
-
- 'No way. Cirag is Cirag, and Raxxla–if it exists–is in another Galaxy; you know the legends.
- Cirag is just a hell-hole of a world, by the sounds of it. Give the guy his turtles back. Let's trade life-bones.'
-
- But Alex said no. Something about the whole deal, about the way he felt manipulated, guided, had
- whet his appetite for this venture. There was good money to be made, and the Nemesis could finally equip
- itself to perfection.
-
- And the hunt could begin. Vengeance could begin.
-
- 'It's hit or miss, right? And in Rafe's eloquent language, we'll not know a goddam about any
- failure.'
-
- 'We've got to be crazy . . .' Elyssia repeated.
-
- 'Let's not talk to any strangers, at least . . .'
-
- Out of Witch-Space.
-
- The planet Cirag floated before them, a pastel yellow world, the dark markings upon its surface–
- mountains, probably, or deserts–forming a pattern that reminded Alex of bones. At nineteen light years
- from Xezaor, the Nemesis had made two refuelling stops, and as they came into System Space they had
- energy enough for a two-light-year jump only. The nearest world, Alex knew, was more than twice that
- distance away.
-
- No matter With their new fuel scoop they would simply transit the sun's corona, and recharge the
- fuel cells.
-
- Cirag's sun was a large, yellow star, old, but with much life left in it yet. It was active, too. As
- Elyssia–at the astrogation console–turned towards it, so two immense streamers of fire were erupting
- from its surface, whirlpools of plasma that were spectacular when seen through the Nemesis's polarising
- filters.
-
- 'Let's catch some of that heat,' Elyssia said, and punched for top speed. The Nemesis surged
- forward.
-
- But they flew for no more than a minute.
-
- 'Holy Mother of the Stars!'
-
- Alex stared at the scanner screens and felt his stomach turn over. The bright marks there were so
- large that they could only be Boa or Anaconda class cruisers. They had formed an attack pattern, four large
- ships, surrounded by the darting points of light that was its fighter escort.
-
- On the viewscreen, against the glowing sun, the assault group were dark smears, rapidly closing.
-
- 'Boas,' Elyssia said. 'They're set up as fighter cruisers, by the look of it. At least they're slow. Hang
- on . . .'
-
- Alex gripped his seat, then grimaced as he fell for the same trap that his father had always set for him. But
- this time it was as well that he secured himself. The universe shifted; his body organs did somersaults.
- Elyssia feigned an escape loop, and the fighters–Mambas by the looks of them–broke formation and went
- into the scatter mode that meant pursuit. But Elyssia completed the loop to come full back against the
- looming pirate craft.
-
- She sailed under the belly of the leader with as much calm and cheek as you please. It belly-shot at
- them, and she rolled the Cobra so that she could side-strafe back. All along the Boa's under-belly, shards
- and sparks flew brightly where the shields were lowered around the laser housings.
-
- 'Markings are unfamiliar . . .' Alex said. There had been black and green flags with bright sunbursts
- on them, and non-terrestrial ideographs on the sides.
-
- 'Intentions very familiar . . .' Elyssia breathed. Behind them, two of the Mambas were closing fast.
- Pulses of laser fire made eerie streaks in the dark circle of space around the glowing sun ahead of them.
-
- The huge ships had turned too, and were accelerating towards them. Elyssia made it clear, without
- speaking, that they'd never reach the star and have time to refuel. Alex, never taking his eyes from the
- scanners, knew as much.
-
- Elyssia rolled the Cobra and turned to fight. She targeted a missile and dispatched it on the turn,
- and the nearest fighter became a glittering dust cloud. The other streaked fire across the forward shields,
- and the Nemesis shuddered and whined. Two stabs of her finger on the sidefire button, and the second
- Mamba tumbled, its shields still up, its pilot disorientated by the unexpected hit. Elyssia closed in for the
- kill . . .
-
- Killed.
-
- One of the Boas loamed large from the darkness. It was rolling slowly, and beams of light played
- from its spike nose. Elyssia targeted a missile. Sweat ran freely from her face, and her hands were white
- with tension. Alex, feeling helpless, gripped the sides of his chair, leaning forward, jumping and starting in
- sympathy with every sudden movement, every avoiding action.
-
- The Boa ECM'd the missile before it had gone a tenth of the distance between the two ships. The
- Nemesis slid smoothly along its belly and again turned side on, strafing the sensitive underparts as it
- matched the giant's slow roll.
-
- And then it happened. From somewhere, out of nowwhere, pulsing laser fire made a direct aft hit
- on them. The Nemesis shuddered and stuttered and was forced into a rapid, dizzying roll. Alex swore,
- feeling his body wrenched by the seat harness. The shock had nearly taken his head off. He straightened up,
- assessing the situation: there were two Mambas behind, and they were closing rapidly on the maw of an
- Anaconda; it hovered there in the void, like a giant net waiting to swallow them.
- 'Let's see you get out of this . . .' Alex said loudly, and glanced at Elyssia to see why she was
- running so straight.
-
- She was slumped in her chair. Blood flowed freely from her scalp and nose. Her eyes were closed.
- She must have had her seat belt too loosely fastened, and had struck the console when the cobra had
- bucked.
-
- Alex leapt from his co-pilot's seat and literally wrenched the woman free, throwing her to the floor.
- This was no time for courtesy. He buckled in, stabbed fire at the Anaconda's ram-scoop, then overflew,
- dodging laser and outrunning a missile, which then closed on him with alarming speed before he was able to
- destroy it.
-
- The planet Cirag was ahead of them once more. He began to run for safety, and then thought an
- alarming thought: what guarantees did he have that the Coriolis network would protect him if he got in
- range? He had no such guarantee. The space stations were as likely to be against him as the ships that
- pursued him.
-
- But if he could let them know what he carried, if he could communicate that he carried their god
- creatures, perhaps they would send their fighters to keep the freebooters at bay.
-
- To his right a Mamba appeared out of nowhere. He rolled the Nemesis and shot from his rear laser,
- then slowed speed, span and strafed the killer vessel from his port gun, watching the Mamba tumble out of
- control, not destroyed, just dead.
-
- If only he could release the cargo, jettison the cannisters containing the Mymurth life-systems,
- perhaps the pursuit would end. He and Elyssia would be out of pocket by three hundred credits, but so
- what? Neither he nor Elyssia were élite, yet. He might feel like an élite combateer, but faced with this sort
- of–
-
- A Mamba strafed him. Shields screamed. He targeted a missile, but used side-fire to battle with
- the attacker . . .
-
- –faced with this sort of pressure, neither of them could survive.
-
- Elyssia came round, staggered to her feet and stared, through blood-encrusted eyes, at the combat.
- Cirag came closer. A tiny spinning point of silver light winked and beckoned to them, but the sight of it did
- not fill Alex with joy.
-
- 'There must be more than Mymurth in those cannisters . . .' Elyssia said quietly.
-
- 'Let's discuss it later,' Alex retorted, as he rolled and veered to escape the fire coming from the
- closest of the big ships.
-
- The woman left the bridge. Hanging on for dear life, she went down to the cargo bay . . .
-
- And suddenly the attack finished.
-
- Alex nearly jumped with surprise. One moment his tail had been hot, and his port laser almost at
- exploding point. The next: nothing. The heavy lights of the massive pirate ships dropped away into the
- background. Two of the Mambas continued to dog his tail for a moment, firing last, optimistic bursts of fire.
- Then they vanished, streaking away into darkness, away from the sun.
-
- Alex slowed the Nemesis and checked damage levels. They were not seriously hurt, but two
- missiles were gone, and energy levels were low. Their cargo was intact, however, and if the pirates had
- backed off, this close to the world, it could only mean that Cirag would defend its visitors.
-
- Elyssia came back onto the bridge, holding the small, black box that was a Thru-Vis camera. 'They
- look like turtles. They stink like turtles. They're as boring as turtles. But I've taken a couple of Thru-V shots,
- just to see if anything else is hiding in there . . .'
-
- 'Good idea. Let's see?'
-
- 'Two or three minutes . . .'
-
- She placed the camera down, sat back in the co-pilot's seat and looked at him. 'You okay?'
-
- Alex nodded. 'Shaken. How about you?'
-
- 'Bruised, bloody but unbowed. We in the safe zone?'
-
- 'Looks that way.'
-
- The Coriolis station span gently before them, bright with sunlight, casting its shadow on the patchy
- grey and yellow of the huge world below. Several ships were tethered to buoys close by. They looked safe
- enough. Lights flashed on the Station. Everything gleamed, everything welcomed.
-
- Alex sailed gracefully past the immense flying city, then turned to face the entrance.
-
- But there was no entrance. 'What in God's . . .?'
-
- He sat there, motionless in space, rotation matched with the Coriolis, facing blank metal. By
- zooming in he could see the shape of the entrance, closed, now, protectively.
-
- 'Afraid of strangers?' Elyssia suggested.
-
- 'We need fuel badly. They'd better not be too afraid . . .'
-
- Then the crackle of an audio message coming in. On the screen, only the space station, with stars
- and the sun behind.
-
- 'Identify, identify. This is Craig Orbit Space.'
-
- 'Cobra class trader, the Nemesis,' Alex said. 'We have a cargo of Mymurth. Open the gates.'
-
- There was silence for a while, though the channel remained open because it continued to hiss and
- crackle. Then:
-
- 'Attention, Nemesis. Mymurth trade in Coriolis stations is prohibited. '
-
- 'What? '
-
- 'Release your cargo before coming aboard. Release cargo. You will be compensated.'
-
- Alex glanced at Elyssia. 'What the hell do we do?'
-
- 'Sounds unprofessional to me,' the woman said. 'Sounds a little fishy . . .'
-
- She picked up the camera and removed the developed and printed film. Staring at the two prints
- for a moment, she suddenly seemed to realise what she was looking at and gasped.
-
- 'Oh my Sweet World . . .' she said slowly, and passed the prints to Alex.
-
- On the screen, the entrance to the space station began to open slowly. Two lights shone there, like
- eyes, tiny in the dark void space beyond.
-
- Alex looked at the Thru-V pictures, and for a second couldn't comprehend the grotesque sights he
- saw. Looking through the bodies of the Mymurth, the camera had picked up the spider-like life-forms that
- were living inside the shuffling, harmless turtle-forms. The sight was discomforting. Jointed legs seemed to
- be reaching out into every limb, and every body space. The central black body was shiny, and from it
- peered a number of bloated, faceted eyes. Two long, bristly tendrils stretched into the Mymurth's brains
- from each of these hideous parasites.
-
- 'What are they?' Alex whispered, and Elyssia said,
-
- 'Trouble. They're immature Thargoids'
-
- Alex felt his heart quicken. Tharglets! He was transporting Tharglets, the larval forms of one of the
- most deadly life-forms in the known Galaxy!
-
- Set-up? Being set-up hardly began to describe the way they'd been duped on Xezaor!
-
- No wonder the pirates had closed so ravenously . . .
-
- 'There's good bounty on Tharglets. The Navy pay well, for research purposes.'
-
- 'They're also deadly; and they make ideal mercenary fighters if trained and developed. We've been
- carrying fighters for Cirag. Pirate fighters. No wonder they want to destroy us. They won't want any
- evidence left of this . . .'
-
- Alex stared at the space station. For a moment Elyssia's words just went in and didn't register. He
- was thinking of the pirates who had attacked, and who had been beaten back . . .
-
- He was thinking that the danger was over . . . they were at a Coriolis station, and the only danger
- now was illegal trading . . .
-
- He was thinking safety . . .
-
- He watched as the bright eyes slid forward, out of the space port. Behind the eyes came the bulky
- shape of the ship to which they were attached. Behind the ship came light, bright light, a gleaming yellow
- beam that cast the shadow of the ship across the Nemesis . . .
-
- The shadow of a snake.
-
- The Cobra!
-
- He would have known that ship anywhere. It was months since he had seen it, but not a night had passed
- when the shape of it, when the evil of it, had not infested his dreams.
- The ship that had destroyed the Avalonia came slowly towards him, and he had no doubt at all as
- to its identity.
-
- And nor had Elyssia.
-
- She sucked in her breath and moved towards the console. 'I want him. Let me take the controls . . .'
-
- 'Sit down,' Alex said coldly, and Elyssia turned angrily on him.
-
- 'I have as much stake in this as you . . .'
-
- 'Luck of the draw,' Alex said. 'The pilot of that ship killed my father . . .'
-
- 'Killed my whole family! We were escaping from Teorge, and we asked that ship for help, for
- supplies. It took my sister and myself as slaves, and blasted my family's vessel to pieces. I escaped. My
- sister didn't. Alex, I want that bastard!'
-
- 'Too late . . .'
-
- Fire blossomed from the front of the Cobra. The Nemesis rocked and rattled. Alex targeted a
- missile, then stabbed laser fire back. The energy spread over the Cobra's screens like a bright yellow flower.
-
- It accelerated towards them. Alex accelerated too, but rose over the killer, and over the space
- station.
-
- We can't fight it! We've not got the weapons, nor the defences. Not yet. Damn! What should we
- do?
-
- On the rear screen, Alex saw the sombre shape of the killer rising above the Coriolis station. A
- flash of light presaged the warning INCOMING MISSILE, and Alex targeted the ECM to destroy it. As he
- did so, he turned. The two ships tore past each other, majestic metal galleons, raking each other with fire
- before turning and approaching again.
-
- Twice they duelled in this way. The Nemesis groaned beneath the weight of the laser strikes on its
- hull; the energy in its storage cells began to drain away. In Alex's mind there was only confusion. The Cobra
- knew him, and wanted him, and wouldn't let go. And this was the ship he wanted to kill . . .
-
- But he wasn't equipped to kill it . . . Not yet. Not yet!
-
- So despite Elyssia's objections, Alex turned and ran for the sun.
-
- The Cobra followed. The two ships manoeuvred and looped, slowed and speeded up. Whenever
- possible, Alex rear-lasered, and this had the effect of driving the pirate back a little. It targeted and
- dispatched three more missiles, and Alex shot them down. He was tempted to think that that represented the
- full missile load of the Cobra, but he wisely avoided such complacency. His own missile remained targeted,
- ready to fly, but he imagined that it would meet a quick and pointless fate.
-
- The sun edged closer. It grew in size and majesty. The cabin temperature of the Nemesis rose.
- Immense arms of plasma curled out from the surface, like weird creatures rising above a molten sea. Alex
- flew towards one, fuel-scoop ready.
- The Cobra fired at him. Shields screeched.
- The duelling ships entered the realm of the Inferno . . .
-
-
- Alex said, 'It's working. Look . . .' The fuel gauge was edging up as the scoop sucked in raw plasma and
- converted it to the energy form needed for Witch-Space transit. He skimmed the Nemesis along the edge of
- the great ocean of fire. The arms of the corona was millions of miles long, thousands wide, and curling
- round, like a whirlpool. At its centre, then, there was a calm place, a place away from the heat and danger.
-
- Alex headed towards it. The cabin filled with an eerie brilliance in which shadows seemed to
- writhe and beckon. The sun was an unbearable glare. The temperature of the ship rose dramatically. Fire
- played about the hull, and the shields moaned and creaked.
-
- 'Not long,' Elyssia said. At last she too had come to realise that they were just not ready to fight the
- Cobra. They had to get out of here, and fast. The nearest star was six light years distant, their fuel gauge
- showed a jump capability of four, and rising . . .
-
- In the calm sea, wrapped around by sunfire, the Nemesis hovered, and waited. Somewhere in the
- brilliant glow of the plasma arm the Cobra searched for them, but perhaps they were safe, now, safe from
- scanning, or from probing, since no electronic eye or ear could pierce the intense radiation field of the
- corona.
-
- 'Five light years and climbing. Get ready to go, we're already targeted . . . '
-
- 'I'm ready,' Alex said. He tried not to think of the consequences of such a long, unsupervised jump .
- . . in the first instance they would just jump small distances, but the hyperdrive mechanism wouldn't tolerate
- too many such feeble movements.
-
- Alex turned the Nemesis so that it gently span in a circle, searching the flickering, shadowy fire for
- danger.
-
- 'Five point five light years. A minute more. Just sixty seconds . . .
-
- 'Just thirty seconds . . . we're filling up lovely . . .
-
- The ship hummed. Alex dripped with sweat.
-
- 'Just twenty seconds more, Alex, and we can fly like star seed . . .'
-
- On the scanners the merest flicker of light hinted at the presence of the Cobra. It was on the other
- side of the strand of plasma; a curtain of fire separated them. Nemesis and killer stood motionless in space,
- facing each other through the great erupting wave of sunfire.
-
- 'We're ready to go,' Elyssia said. 'Alex. Go! Now!'
-
- Alex Ryder shrugged her off. 'No,' he said. 'Not yet . . .'
-
- 'Alex! '
-
- He pushed the ship towards the fire. The flickering, ghostly image on the scanners moved too.
- Closing.
-
- And with a sudden cry, Alex stabbed speed into the Nemesis' engines, and raced towards the veil
- of flame and plasma. All vision had gone. All he could see was his father's face; and the white ball of flame
- that had been the Avalonia . . .
-
- All he could feel was grief, and anger, and hate . . .
-
- All he knew was that he had a missile targeted on the Cobra, and that he had one last, desperate
- chance . . .
-
- The ships closed. The distance between them was the distance of the plasma veil. It played on the
- hull of the Nemesis, and the shields screamed and complained. He could not go too deep . . .
-
- Not too far in . . .
-
- Too dangerous . . .
-
- He fired the missile.
-
- The tiny vessel sped into the sunfire, weaving and ducking as it homed on the Cobra. It didn't show
- on Alex's scanner. It didn't show on the Cobra's scanner. Not until it was too late . . .
-
- The Cobra triggered its ECM. Alex saw the burst of brightness, the sudden detonation . . . and then
- he saw the great fireball that gyrated around the destroyed missile.
-
- Momentum, heat, plasma, fire . . . all gathered together into a ball of death that swept from the
- corona and engulfed the Cobra.
-
- No shield known could stand against such intense energy, the raw energy of the sun, stung and
- screaming, blown into a great tidal wave of explosive terror.
-
- The Cobra bathed in light and fire. Alex watched the scanner, and suddenly . . .
-
- The light was gone.
-
- The Cobra was dead. Destroyed. Gone forever.
-
- The Nemesis slowed and turned, went back to safety.
-
- No-one on its bridge said a word. But in the bright light of the ageing sun, tears glistened on two
- faces.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER EIGHT: CODA
-
- The holoFac of Rafe Zetter gleamed and shimmered on the bridge of the Nemesis, as if with pride. Behind
- it, the full face of Lave was a welcome and relaxing sight. The last of the Mymurth and their precious
- parasites had been off-loaded into two Navy Asp-type ships. The final payment had not yet been agreed, but
- the figure would not be less than one hundred credits per creature.
-
- 'I knew you could do it,' Rafe said, chewing happily and stroking his wispy sidewhiskers. 'Had to
- be sure. But was confident enough to get you to Cirag before you were ready.'
-
- 'We could have been killed,' Alex muttered. 'That system was crawling . . . '
-
- 'But a good combateer, even an élite combateer, knows when to run, and how to run. I'm proud of
- you . . . you ran and scored.'
-
- And as he spoke, so on the screen a message came through from the Galactic Police HQ on Lave
- Coriolis 6.
-
- Congratulations to Alex Ryder, and thanks on behalf of the Galactic Co-operative of Worlds for
- your efforts and skill in destroying pirate vessels as documented by you, and verified by on-board V-film.
- We have pleasure in assigning to you the Combat Status of 'Deadly'. Your legal status of 'Offender' has been
- negated. Your new rating as Deadly will be lodged in the GalNetwork within a standard day.
-
- 'Select wisely in battle, and be strong.'
-
-
- So there it was. Alex was not yet twenty earth years of age, had come within one step of being rated more
- highly as a combateer than most people would even dream about.
-
- He was deadly; he had killed the Cobra; why the Cobra had killed his father Alex hadn't thought to
- ask . . . of the ship's pilot, at least. He had guessed that the ship and its bounty killer pilot had simply been
- earning a wage.
-
- Instead, he said to Rafe, 'Did you know the ship was at Cirag?'
-
- 'Had a good idea of it, Alex. That's why we sent the Tharglets with you. Nobody, but nobody–if
- they're a tad evil–can resist booty like that. I knew it would bring every freebooter for a light year after
- you, but I reckoned you could handle them. Most importantly, I was damn sure that your cargo would bring
- out the Cobra.
-
- 'You fought well. You showed the sort of instinct for combat that I remember in Jason. He was
- right. You are the man to follow him.'
-
- 'Follow him where?'
-
- Rafe chuckled and shook his head. 'You see, that's the big question. Your father was chasing the
- mythical plant Raxxla. Does it exist, or does it not? If it does, then on Raxxla there's an alien construct that's
- a gateway to other Universes, and all that's in those Universes in the way of bounty, and treasures, and
- aliens, and life . . .
-
- 'Jason Ryder was convinced that Raxxla existed. That's why he trained for, and became a part of,
- the Dark Wheel, the legend-seekers. I hadn't heard much from him or about him for some time until just
- before he died, when he told me he'd found evidence for the real existence of Raxxla. He came back from
- Deep Space to get a proper team together . . . ' Rafe smiled bitterly. 'But just before he was due to go back,
- he decided to take a safe-worlds holiday jaunt with his son . . . and an assassin was waiting for him.'
- 'But why?' Alex asked. 'Why kill him for finding Raxxla?'
- 'Because there are people on Raxxla already. This is only a guess, mind you, but from what
- happened to Jason I'd say it was close to being right. We've long suspected that a corps of élites lives there,
- and are exploiting the gateway. They're powerful, twisted men. Powerful enough to hire an assassin to kill
- the threat to their dominance.'
-
- Rafe leaned a little closer to Alex, his bright eyes gleaming, an intense look on his grizzled face.
-
- 'I've put you through your paces, Alex, you and Elyssia both. The Dark Wheel needs you. Both of
- you. But believe me, what you've just been through is nothing to what you face now. You've got to become
- élite, Alex. And that means a lot of training, and a lot of fighting, and maybe a lot of months, even years.
- But then the Universe will open up before you in a way you never imagined possible.'
-
- Alex stood silent, thoughtful, watching the old man. In the corner, half in shadows, Elyssia stood
- and watched too, frightened by what she was hearing.
-
- 'Has the grief gone?' Rafe asked, and Alex nodded. The old trader smiled.
-
- 'How does it feel to be rich?'
-
- 'Empty,' Alex said, and Rafe Zetter laughed.
-
- 'You'll do for the Dark Wheel, Alex. You'll do . . .'
-
-
-
- READ THE NOVEL/PLAY THE GAME
- A BOY WITH STARS IN HIS EYES
- SHOOTING THE RAPIDS OF HEAVEN
-
- On his inaugural flight as a 'harmless' combateer, Alex Ryder experienced the sharp divide between Sim-
- combat and live action in the fast lane of Witch-Space. Seated next to his father, the occasion (a
- celebration!) was suddenly jarred by the fatal laser fire of a fellow trader . . .
-
- Emerging from unconsciousness aboard a Moray hospital ship. Alex's first impression was conditioned by a
- sleazy holoFac of Rafe Zetter (a friend of Alex's father who has blotted his legal status by trading in slaves).
- As Alex's mind grappled with his senses, his desperate questions seemed to provoke still more perplexing
- riddles from the old warrior.
-
- What had the trader hoped to gain (their cargo had been almost worthless)? Why had Jason Ryder stayed to
- engage the attacker, when he could have bailed out with Alex? What had he meant by 'Raxxla! Remember
- Raxxla!', as Alex slid into his escape pod?
-
- But gradually, with Zetter's help, Alex began to assemble some pieces of the jigsaw. His father was no
- simple trader, far from it; he had been one of the few - an élite combateer. The marauding trader was no
- bounty hunter, but an assassin programmed to kill.
-
- As a thirst for revenge spurred the fury of Alex's emotions, he understood that Jason's mission must now
- become his. To succeed, he too would have to prove himself worthy of -
-
- THE ORDER OF ELITE
- a fighting quality far beyond
- courage, macho and cool precision
-
-
-
-
- 'Elite: The Dark Wheel' is a novella written by Rob Holdstock and inspired by the intergalactic space
- trading adventure program, ELITE, by David Braben and Ian Bell. A sequel to the novella is planned for
- publication in 1985.
-
- Acornsoft Limited, Betjeman House, 104 Hills Road, Cambridge CB2 1LQ, England
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