I shrug. “That’s one of the things we’re going to confirm.”
“Confirm.” Karl catches the word. “Confirm what? What do you know that we don’t?”
“Let’s run the readouts before I answer that,” I say.
“No.” Squishy crosses her arms. “Tell us.”
Turtle gets up. She pushes two icons on the console beside me, and the suits’ technical readouts come up. She flashes forward, through numbers and diagrams and chemical symbols to the conclusions.
“Over five thousand years old.” Turtle doesn’t look at Squishy. “That’s what the boss isn’t telling us. This wreck is human-made, and it’s been here longer than humans have been in this section of space.”
Karl stares at it.
Squishy shakes her head. “Not possible. Nothing human-made would’ve survived to make it this far out. Too many gravity wells, too much debris.”
“Five thousand years,” Jypé says.
I let them talk. In their voices, in their argument, I hear the same argument that went through my head when I got my first readouts about the wreck.
It’s Junior that stops the discussion. In his half-tenor, half-baritone way, he says, “C’mon, gang, think a little. That’s why the boss brought us out here. To confirm her suspicions.”
“Or not,” I say.
Everyone looks at me as if they’ve just remembered I’m there.
“Wouldn’t it be better if we knew your suspicions?” Squishy asks.
Karl is watching me, eyes slitted. It’s as if he’s seeing me for the first time.
“No, it wouldn’t be better.” I speak softly. I make sure to have eye contact with each of them before I continue. “I don’t want you to use my scholarship—or lack thereof—as the basis for your assumptions.”
“So should we discuss this with each other?” Squishy’s using that snide tone with me now. I don’t know what has her so upset, but I’m going to have to find out. If she doesn’t calm down, she’s not going near the wreck.
“Sure,” I say.
“All right.” She leans back, staring at the readouts still floating before us. “If this thing is five thousand years old, human-made, and somehow it came to this spot at this time, then it can’t have a forcefield.”
“Or fake readouts like the probe found,” Jypé says.
“Hell,” Turtle says. “It shouldn’t be here at all. Space debris should’ve pulverized it. That’s too much time. Too much distance.”
“So what’s it doing here?” Karl asked.
I shrug for the third and last time. “Let’s see if we can find out.”
They don’t rest. They’re as obsessed with the readouts as I’ve been. They study time and distance and drift, forgetting the weirdness inside the hole. I’m the one who focuses on that.
I don’t learn much. We need more information—we revisit the probe twice while looking for another way into the ship—and even then, we don’t get a lot of new information.
Either the barrier is new technology or it is very old technology, technology that has been lost. So much technology has been lost in the thousands of years since this ship was built.
It seems like humans constantly have to reinvent everything.
Six dives later and we still haven’t found a way inside the ship. Six dives, and no new information. Six dives, and my biggest problem is Squishy.
She has become angrier and angrier as the dives continue. I’ve brought her along on the seventh dive to man the skip with me, so that we can talk.
Junior and Jypé are the divers. They’re exploring what I consider to be the top of the ship, even though I’m only guessing. They’re going over the surface centimeter by centimeter, exploring each part of it, looking for a weakness that we can exploit.
I monitor their equipment using the skip’s computer, and I monitor them with my eyes, watching the tiny figures move along the narrow blackness of the skip itself.
Squishy stands beside me, at military attention, her hands folded behind her back.
She knows she’s been brought for conversation only; she’s punishing me by refusing to speak until I broach the subject first.
Finally, when J&J are past the dangerous links between two sections of the ship, I mimic Squishy’s posture—hands behind my back, shoulders straight, legs slightly spread.
“What’s making you so angry?” I ask.
She stares at the team on top of the wreck. Her face is a smooth reproach to my lack of attention; the monitor on board the skip should always pay attention to the divers.
I taught her that. I believe that. Yet here I am, reproaching another person while the divers work the wreck.
“Squishy?” I ask.
She isn’t answering me. Just watching, with that implacable expression.
“You’ve had as many dives as everyone else,” I say. “I’ve never questioned your work, yet your mood has been foul, and it seems to be directed at me. Do we have an issue I don’t know about?”
Finally she turns, and the move is as military as the stance was. Her eyes narrow.
“You could’ve told us this was a Dignity Vessel,” she says.
My breath catches. She agrees with my research. I don’t understand why that makes her angry.
“I could’ve,” I say. “But I feel better that you came to your own conclusion.”
“I’ve known it since the first dive,” she says. “I wanted you to tell them. You didn’t. They’re still wasting time trying to figure out what they have here.”
“What they have here is an anomaly,” I say, “something that makes no sense and can’t be here.”
“Something dangerous.” She crosses her arms. “Dignity Vessels were used in wartime.”
“I know the legends.” I glance at the wreck, then at the handheld readout. J&J are working something that might be a hatch.
“A lot of wartimes,” she says, “over many centuries, from what historians have found out.”
“But never out here,” I say.
And she concedes. “Never out here.”
“So what are you so concerned about?”
“By not telling us what it is, we can’t prepare,” she says. “What if there’re weapons or explosives or something else—”
“Like that barrier?” I ask.
Her lips thin.
“We’ve worked unknown wrecks before, you and me, together.”
She shrugs. “But they’re of a type. We know the history, we know the vessels, we know the capabilities. We don’t know this at all. No one really knows what these ancient ships were capable of. It’s something that shouldn’t be here.”
“A mystery,” I say.
“A dangerous one.”
“Hey!” Junior’s voice is tinny and small. “We got it open! We’re going in.”
Squishy and I turn toward the sound. I can’t see either man on the wreck itself. The handheld’s imagery is shaky.
I press the comm, hoping they can still hear me. “Probe first. Remember that barrier.”
But they don’t answer, and I know why not. I wouldn’t either in their situation. They’re pretending they don’t hear. They want to be the first inside, the first to learn the secrets of the wreck.
The handheld moves inside the darkness. I see four tiny lights—Jypé’s glove lights—and I see the same particles I saw before, on the first images from the earliest probe.
Then the handheld goes dark. We were going to have to adjust it to transmit through the metal of the wreck.
“I don’t like this,” Squishy says.
I’ve never liked any time I was out of sight and communication with the team.
We stare at the wreck as if it can give us answers. It’s big and dark, a blob against our screen. Squishy actually goes to the portals and looks, as if she can see more through them than she can through the miracle of science.
But she doesn’t. And the handheld doesn’t wink on.
Читать дальше