Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Science-Fiction,
adventure,
Suspense fiction,
Science Fiction - General,
Fiction - Science Fiction,
Psychopaths,
Space ships,
Disasters,
Space colonies
unfortunate name Hubris. It's going there to set up a stage-one runcible to bring the rest of the runcibles through, and to search for survivors, though it's unlikely there'll be any. We have to know what happened there. I don't have to tell you how important this is.'
'I know. If someone has found a way to sabotage runcibles… Could it be Separatists?'
'There's that possibility.'
Cormac leant back in his seat, sipped at his Scotch, but found he had finished it. Blegg took his glass.
'No, I…'
'Ian Cormac, it is time you learnt what it is to be human again.'
Blegg went to the bar and Cormac turned to watch him. The seadapt barman served him immediately, even though there was a crowd waiting. Blegg said something to him and the barman laughed, the gill slits on each side of his neck opening and closing as he did so. Blegg shortly returned with two fresh drinks. Cormac took his and stared into it doubtfully.
'It's said you do not have internal augmentation -that you link with AIs in some other manner,' he said, without looking up.
Horace Blegg chuckled. 'A lot is said about me, but don't concern yourself. Your primary concern is this mission. For its duration you'll be without direct information access.'
Cormac felt something lurch inside him. It was a confirmation of something he had been expecting, something that was overdue, yet it was something he could not visualize at this moment.
'Why… surely there will be a transmitter on the ship?' he said, perhaps trying to delay the inevitable.
Blegg shook his head. 'In the service of Earth and the Human Polity you have been gridlinked for thirty years now. Studies show that nearer twenty years is the safe limit psychologically. Your ability to comprehend the spectrum of human emotion has been impaired, and it is imperative that it should not be. Without it, your usefulness becomes… less.'
'I am becoming dehumanized, is that what you're telling me?'
'Your recent mission has shown this.'
Cormac considered his complete misjudgement of the situation with Angelina. He reached almost instinctively for access. It flooded through the wiring in his skull, with all its reassuring excess of information.
'I see,' he said, suddenly feeling more confident. 'But by taking away my information access, do you not impair my efficiency another way?'
'It's our opinion we're removing an impairment.'
'Wouldn't someone else be better?'
Blegg smiled. 'You're just right for this mission.'
Cormac sat back in his seat and studied the man. It was said he was immortal, a telepath, and that he could wear any guise. Cormac was completely aware that he was being manipulated, but how he just could not see. He reckoned that when he did find out, the surprise would be a nasty one. That was how it usually went. He closed his eyes and tried to bring some stillness to himself, before asking his next question.
'Sleep,' said Blegg, almost as if reading his mind. 'These shuttles run slowly for our purposes, but at least there will be time for you to rest, and to consider.'
Who the hell are you telling to sleep?
He managed to ask that one question before blackness came down on him like a falling wall.
Dark Otter: amphibious lifeform found on the planet Cheyne III in the Aldour belt. Gordon gave these creatures this name because of their similarity to the otter (lutra) family of Earth (for more information on the otter, refer to 'Earth', subsection 'Extinct Species', heading 'Carnivores', reference 1163), though this similarity is superficial, and only noticeable in the creature's juvenile form. Physiologically they are closer to the Terran amphibians and go through a similar, though inverted, metamorphosis. Its juvenile stage ranges in size from one centimetre to three metres. It then changes into the limbless pelagic adult. There are three sexes: male, female, and egg-carrier. Egg-carriers up to fifty metres in length are reported to exist, which is something of an anomaly because they are
Michael Cunningham
Janet Eckford
Jackie Ivie
Cynthia Hickey
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A. D. Elliott
Author's Note
Leslie Gilbert Elman
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