Chapter 1
"That's the ship," Marla Sukhoi told her husband. She pointed
to the white needle on the spaceport's flight pad. "The Temenus. It
launches in eight hours."
Lee nodded. "Eight hours. They changed their plan. Do you think they suspect?"
Marla shook her head. The midnight air had made her black hair damp, and it
clung to her forehead in loose strands. "Central's always suspicious, but it
doesn't have a reason to suspect us."
Lee grinned crookedly, white teeth in a dark broad face. "I'm just nervous."
"You'd damned well better be," Marla said. Security around the spaceport was
good, and Lee carried a half-dozen thumbnail bombs in his pocket. "Too many
things can go wrong."
"Cheerful tonight, aren't you?" He reached out and stroked her cheek. " 'So
lovely fair, that what seem'd fair in all the world seem'd now mean.' I'll be
back for you."
"I know." The quote from Milton -- Adam's description of Eve, another type of
firstborn -- warmed her as it always did. She kissed him. "Now get going."
"Right." Lee hurried down the slope. Despite his words Marla did not think she
would see him again. His chances of sabotaging the Temenus were good,
but his chances of survival were poor. A sense of loss and sorrow welled up in
her, only to fade out before it could overwhelm her. Damn the originators, she
thought. The changes that the genetic engineers had made in her people made it
all but impossible for the people of Hera to sustain an intense emotion. She
was able to view Lee's impending death with a sense of detachment that seemed
to reduce the love she felt for him.
Marla turned away and jogged back to town. She was not afraid of being
observed. Central Security had decided that extra surveillance would only alert
the subversives to the start of Operation Unity, so Central had gambled by not
increasing its activities around the spaceport. By the same token, only the
people who had to know about Captain Blaisdell's secret orders had been told
about Unity. Marla Sukhoi, who ran the Olympus Spaceport, was one of those
people.
And now I'm a traitor and a murderer, she thought. So be it. When she had
learned about Unity she had discussed its implications with Lee. They had
concluded that if Unity succeeded it would provoke the primals into destroying
Hera, and that would lead to the loss of their family, along with everything
else. They could not count on the resistance movement to stop Unity, so they
would have to do it themselves. Logic left them no other course.
Even so, she did not want to kill the Temenus' crew. She wished that she
were smart enough to think of an alternative.
Marla reached her home as the sun rose. She woke the children and got their
breakfast ready. Gregor, the younger of her two boys, waited until Marla had
her hands full before he brought up a problem. "I didn't finish my math
homework last night."
Marla wondered why six year olds liked to leave their problems for the worst
possible moment. "Anna, can you take care of this?" she asked.
"Okay. Come on, Geeker." Anna took her younger brother by the ear -- a maneuver
she had picked up in her aggression classes -- and pulled him over to the
dining room table. Marla watched in disapproval; the classes were supposed to
teach children to suppress their aggressive instincts, not give in to them.
Anna put the boy's school pad in front of him and called up his calculus
assignment. "What's the problem?"
"This one," Gregor said, jabbing a finger onto the pad. "Gotta integrate e to
the minus x squared. I can't do it."
"Nobody can," Anna said. She spoke with all the authority of a ten year old.
"It's an undefined operation. You have to sneak up on it. Write the Taylor
polynomial for e to the x, substitute minus x squared for x, and integrate the
polynomial."
"Teacher said we had to do it as an integral," Gregor protested.
Joachim, the older boy, blew air out of his cheeks. "Then write down that it's
a trick question, and solve it as a sigma series. They want you to learn to
look at the questions, not just the answers."
Marla put breakfast on the table while her children squabbled over Gregor's
homework. At least the talk kept them from noticing that their father was
missing. It was not unusual for Lee to leave early; he was a field geologist,
and the children probably reasoned he was out testing another new piece of
equipment. After they had eaten, Marla bundled the children off to school, then
went to the neighborhood tube station. The capsule that took her to the
spaceport was empty, which suited her mood.
The capsule brought her to the spaceport entrance, where she nodded to the
guard and walked to her office. On her way across the green she passed the
marble column that commemorated the spaceport workers killed in a primal attack
three years ago. A damaged freighter had made an emergency landing at the
spaceport, and while repairs were made to the ship its crew had realized what
the Herans were. The primals had gone berserk and killed several people with
their phasers before they were stamped out.
Once inside her office Marla settled into her daily routine. The computer
delivered reports to her in order of importance. Combat Operations had spotted
a Romulan ship outside the Heran system; analysis suggested it was heading home
after a routine exploratory flight. A primal ship was en route to the sector to
lay a series of communication and navigation beacons; Operations wanted a
warship readied to shadow it, in case the primals made trouble. The three robot
warships of the Special Reserve were to be activated and deployed for maneuvers
in deep space. The Hephaestos Institute needed to borrow a courier for a test
of its long-range transporter system.
Marla ground her way through the work, half-expecting to see a security report.
She found none, but that meant nothing. Central Security kept a tight lid on
reports of sabotage and other forms of dissidence. Lee might have been caught
at once, and her first hint would come when she was arrested.
A glint of light caught Marla's eye, and when she looked out her office window
she saw the white needle that was the Temenus rising into the clear morning
sky. A wave of guilt made her look away. If all went well, Lee's bombs would go
off in six days and the ship would vanish. But if all went well, Central
Security would never know if Temenus had been lost to an accident, or
sabotage -- or an attack by the primals. The uncertainty should make them
hesitant about trying Unity again.
Or so she hoped. She didn't understand the Modality. Over the past few years
the Heran government had grown more secretive, more authoritarian. It had
revived the originators' dream of conquering the old human race, and that
threatened to bring down destruction on Hera.