Kwaide (The Ammonite Galaxy S...

By Timeslice

31.9K 2.5K 85

In this follow-up to Valhai, Diva and Six are still scrapping with each other, but manage to find the time to... More

Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Twenty
chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Last Chapter

Chapter Nineteen

919 72 0
By Timeslice

Chapter 19

THE MEETING WAS dispirited. The idea of trying to escape nuclear weapons was terrifying. They had no idea what to do to avoid the coming conflict. All the rebels had congregated around the conference centre, and similar meetings were being held in the other two camps.

“Maybe Arcan could spirit us all away somewhere else?” suggested Diva. She seemed absent, not her usual self.

Grace shook her head. “The Sellites can detect where we are from outer space,” she said. “Even if we move they will find out our new location. The only way to do it would be to separate into individual groups of two or three – and how could we organize that in time? There are thousands and thousands of refugees now.”

“Even if we could space everybody out, they would die anyway,” pointed out Six morosely. “We need the supplies from Coriolis to subsist even here – and other parts of the wastelands are even more hostile. Perhaps we should vote on whether to abandon the revolution. Many of the Kwaidians here may prefer to go back to their old lives.”

“If the Elders allowed them their old lives back.”

Cimma stood up. “You have no choice,” she said. “By all means take a vote on it, but I see no alternative but to continue the fight. You have all come too far now to go back to cowering in a dungeon or a conduit. You must fight!”

There was a general murmur of agreement. Ledin, the pilot – who was very highly considered by the rest of the refugees – stood up too.

“I think we should take a vote now. All those in favour of going back to being slaves, stand up!”

There was a long pause, as everybody looked around the rest of the participants. Nobody stood up.

“Then we fight,” determined Ledin, and sat down.

Applause broke out, and the atmosphere began to lighten. There were a few moments of low conversation, and then a long silence set in. Nobody knew how to do battle against nuclear weapons.

In the end it was Grace who stood up next.

“Sell hasn’t the capacity to send missiles directly here from Valhai. So they will have to bring them by spaceship. The only solution I can think of is to enlist Arcan’s help in destroying the nuclear warheads.”

Six gazed at her in admiration. “Brilliant!” he said. 

Grace shook her head. “It won’t be easy. Arcan can only move what he can ‘see’, which means that somebody has to find the spaceships, board them, detect the nuclear weapons and let Arcan know their location.”

Ledin pursed his lips. “That sounds very dangerous. Why can’t the orthogel entity simply blow the ships to smithereens?”

Grace shook her head again. “Arcan will not knowingly cause damage to any other sentient being, unless it is unavoidable. He would not help us if we asked him to kill for us.”

“Fair enough,” Ledin said. “Nobody could say that Arcan has not been a great help to New Kwaide! Who will undertake the mission?”

Grace looked around. “There is really very little choice,” she pointed out. “We will have to take our own spaceships, which means that Diva, Six and I are the logical choice. We all know how to pilot a ship, we all know Arcan, and we have all lived on Sell.”

“So have I!” Cimma stood up and lifted her chin proudly. “I will come too.”

“I think your place is here, Cimma,” Six told her. “The refugees will need you to lead the training program. But we will need you, Ledin, to stay on the orbital station. I think we should place a team up there from now on. We need to be able to defend the little that we have gained. If there are refugees on board they can call Arcan in an emergency.” He bent down and removed the circle of orthogel which he had been wearing around his ankle. Take this. I will show you how to call Arcan later.”

All these ideas were put to the vote, and then the meeting broke up. There was much to be done in preparation for an attack on the camps. 

BACK ON VALHAI the three friends explained the situation to Arcan. They were sitting in Six’s old bubble in the ortholake, and the visitor from Dessia was also present, via video camera.

“I have been thinking for some time that the Sellites should not have nuclear weapons at their disposal,” he said. “But I don’t know exactly where they are stored.”

“Perhaps a trade could be effected,” said the hovering sphere. “You could help them to eliminate the weapons on board the spaceships, if they help you to eliminate those on Valhai.”

Six gave the machine a hostile look. “Who asked you to butt in?” he asked.

The machine whirred. “I am merely trying to be of assistance,” it said. 

“Well, don’t,” snapped Six. “It is none of your business.”

“While it is true that we have a non-intervention policy with type 3 and below, we are obliged, in principle, to defend any class 2 and above.”

“Well we are class 3, according to your non-adaptable rules, so run away and play someplace else.”

“Arcan is class 2. I am obliged to assist him.” The machine hummed. “Although it is unclear what I should do in the event of a conflict between non-intervention in category 3 and obliged aid in category 2. That situation has never arisen.”

“I can see all these decisions are a bit much for you,” the untouchable told it. “Why don’t you go for a swim around your nutrient tank for a few days? I am sure it would be of great help.”

“All these things should be left to the higher species,” said the orb.

Six took a menacing step towards the globe, and looked it straight in the lens. “These things are my business, it is my planet. Honestly, I should grow a few more brain cells, if I were you. I think they left you a bit short.”

“Historically type 3b worlds are often obliterated by type 3a weapons. It is a statistically proven fact. It may even be considered part of the price of technological advance.”

“You can take your statistics and—”

“Six!” Grace said. 

He looked in her direction. “And recalculate them,” he finished lamely. 

“I shall accompany you at all times,” said the tiny machine. “Arcan may require my support.”

“Yeah. A fat lot of help you are going to be!”

“I shall mentor you.”

“Go mentor yourself! We don’t need your help when we have got Arcan. As if!”

“Nevertheless my duty is clear. The Dessites would expect me to protect Arcan at all times.”

“Have you been able to communicate with him directly yet?” Six asked sweetly. “No? – I thought not. You can only talk to him with normal sound via the two-way communication device. He can’t ‘see’ you, can he?”

“We are working towards a solution, but at the moment unassisted communication is still in the future.”

“These things take time, Six,” Arcan told him, sounding faintly amused by the whole process. “I will have to travel to the visitor’s spaceship at some stage, but we are still very much in the initial stages of exchanging parameters.”

“If these are only the initial stages it seems to have an awful lot to say for itself!”

“You probably find it difficult to understand,” said the little machine. “I have seen plans of your neurological layout and it is easy to see that you must use up most of your brain power just keeping that ungainly packaging on the move.”

“Wh-what?”

“That thing you call a body. Very impractical design. All those arms and legs. All that weight you have to carry around. And bone! Such an inefficient way of sustaining rigidity!”

Six looked at Grace and Diva. “I can’t believe I am being insulted by a few brain cells floating in a tank!” he said with utter disgust. “Arcan! Are you going to let him insult a friend of yours like that?”

“I am sorry, Six, but I am afraid I am in agreement about your brain. I myself have been surprised you could accommodate any facts at all in that limited area. I have told you before how wasteful it is to have bodies that have to walk around their habitat looking for food.”

“Never mind all that,” Diva interrupted, tired of listening. “Are you going to help us remove the nuclear warheads or not?”

“I am,” promised Arcan. “Though I would like your help after to find the weapons on Valhai too. I was going to suggest it myself.”

Grace nodded. “We can’t afford to leave any nuclear weapons at Atheron’s disposal. He is bound to use them if we do. I think we should eliminate any means of mass destruction which the Sellites have, if we can.”

Arcan scintillated. “I am prepared to destroy any nuclear weapons in the system – irrespective of who has made them. But the visitor has a point about not interfering with other species, and I will not interfere as far as conventional weapons are concerned. The globe is right – if I do, then I would have to take part in every little skirmish anywhere in the system, and you already know I am not prepared to do that!”

“Understood. That seems very reasonable. Apart from the nuclear weapons, you will leave us to our own devices.” Grace looked around at the others, and Diva nodded solemnly. Six’s face tightened, and it was clear that he would have preferred another decision, but he eventually gave a nod. 

“Yes,” he said reluctantly. “I suppose that is fair.”

“What do you want me to do?” asked Arcan.

“Take us over to the orbital station on Kwaide, and then we will let you know if we manage to track the weapons. You would have to transport them somewhere where they can do no harm.”

“I will place them where we found Six, in a degrading orbit around Nomus. They can explode on the failed star with no consequences.”

“That sounds fine. Wish us luck!”

“I will be going with you. You will not need luck.”

THEY MET UP with Ledin on the orbital platform above Kwaide. He had brought a detail of men up to the station and they were already settling in.

Grace looked around with interest. She hadn’t been back since they had saved the station from Xenon’s attack. She felt rather fond of the hub – in a strange sense it felt almost welcoming. She made her way over to the central control panel, and waited for Diva and Six to join her.

“So – what’s the plan?” Six asked as he walked over.

“We have to find the Sellite ships. Then we have to get aboard, and isolate the weapons – that shouldn’t be any problem. Then we tell Arcan where they are, and … zazz! … end of weapons!”

“You make it sound easy!”

“I think we should get on with it before our friend from Dessia arrives to spy on us – just as well that it will take the visitor three days to get over here from Valhai.”

“Honestly, Six, you took an instant dislike to it on no basis whatsoever!”

“How can you like a life-form who probably looks like a plate of soup? I suppose we could always have it for lunch if we get caught short. Use up all those nutrients to feed our wastefully inefficient bodies.”

“The machine was a bit rude, wasn’t it?”

“Definitely – considering the actual body is only a few tendrils flopping around in a fishbowl. Not exactly the highest step on the evolutionary pyramid.”

“I suppose we could beat it out of here before the Dessite ship arrives,” said Grace doubtfully, looking at Diva.

“Let’s do it!” she grinned. “I can’t say I feel much like having some recording device telling me what to do.”

They spent the rest of the day equipping the two space traders with enough food and supplies for a fairly long stay in space. Diva and Grace chose to take the Variance, and Six was left with Atheron’s old vessel. Diva regarded it through the open spacelock thoughtfully.

“Oh no! What now?” said Six.

“This ship ought to have a name …” said Diva slowly.

“It certainly ought not,” said Six. “It is a machine, not a friend for life.”

“All spacecraft have names,” Diva informed him. “It is considered lucky.”

“That is sneaky of you, Diva!”

She smiled. “I think we should call it something that suits you – something that would make you feel at home. How about ‘Resistance’, after the time you had to spend in the ship after Atheron had kidnapped you?”

“Hmm. Resistance. That’s not so bad,” he admitted. “At least it isn’t from statistics!”

“It sounds dangerous, and heroic.”

Six preened. “Bit like me then.”

“I don’t think you are dangerous or heroic!”

“I remember. You don’t think much of me at all.” He looked her straight in the face, and she fell silent.

Grace was puzzled. “I don’t know what is wrong with you two. I wish you would get back to normal.”

“We are normal,” explained Six. “Just lack of sleep, I guess. I’ll make sure I have time to rest on board – what was it? Oh yes, ‘the Resistance’”

“I am tired, too,” said Diva rather uncharacteristically. “I will let you take first watch, Grace.”

“Ok. We had better head out to our quadrants then.”

“Sure. We will talk later,” Six agreed, striding into the airlock and pushed at the buttons until the doors hissed closed, leaving the two girls on their own.

Continue Reading

You'll Also Like

386 28 15
Ahh, Earth the wonderful planet where all stories begin,...... well most stories anyway. Some even start in the Milky Way Galaxy or in one similar to...
116 4 11
He's plotting the war against his captor. She's intrigued by her captive. What will happen when lines begin to blur and hearts begin to melt? Will he...
Alliance By B.E. Wheeler

Science Fiction

476K 5.8K 14
Mel had a few goals in life. Nothing too crazy. Finish school, which she did. Continue the fisher with Dad, which she was doing. Someday she would se...
269K 17.4K 46
The conclusion of The Runner series. ================================== Half a year has passed since the fall of Babel. In that time, tales of the Ru...