showing the five inhabited belts. A tangle of curving red lines marked the estimated courses of the hundreds of Worldbreakers currently starward of the veil, as they swept through the belts on great destructive arcs. In the centre was a solid ring of red, the hazy image of the thousands more Worldbreakers within the veil performing their mysterious industries in close orbit around the sun.
Yellow blobs picked out the two hundred or so remaining human cities. There were no name labels, and on a map this scale Jonas couldn’t tell which city was which. One city down in Belt Two was close to the red line of a Worldbreaker, and was picked out with a warning symbol. If that Worldbreaker changed course towards the city, it would have to be evacuated.
There was one other symbol that Jonas didn’t recognize, a blue star, in the void between Belts Two and Three.
As soon as Keldra noticed Jonas she made a hand movement and the blue star vanished. She was holding a foil tray of instant breakfast, something like powdered eggs, and a stained coffee cup perched on the edge of her control nest.
‘So, where are we going, Captain?’ he asked.
She swallowed her mouthful. ‘Columbia. I told you.’
‘You’re not much of a liar, Keldra. I felt us change course.’
She looked for a moment as if she were about to deny it, but then seemed to change her mind. She made a hand movement and a line appeared on the screen, showing the Remembrance’s new course. ‘We’re stopping off at Santesteban first. I want to sell the stuff I got from your ship. Pick up some supplies.’ She gave him a patronizing smile. ‘I don’t suppose it’s your kind of place.’
Santesteban was one of the independent cities that thrived off of piracy. It allowed armed civilian ships to dock, and it didn’t have law-enforcement treaties with other cities, so pirates could use it as a safe haven as long as they didn’t interfere with the city’s own interests.
Jonas studied the chart. Now that he knew which dot was Santesteban, he thought he could identify Columbia from his memory of belt orbits. Going to Santesteban first would be a significant detour, too large just for the sake of offloading loot and buying supplies. Keldra’s story was clearly a lie, but for now he decided not to push her for an answer. ‘So what do I do here?’ he asked. ‘I’m Administrator-caste, but there’s no one for me to administer. I can’t help much with the engineering.’
‘You get communications,’ Keldra said. ‘You’re a lying, manipulative bastard. From now on you get to lie and manipulate for me. That’s when we get to Santesteban, though. In the meantime there’s some grunt work you can get on with.’ She pointed across the room, and a terminal to one side lit up and purred. It hadn’t been there yesterday; it looked like Keldra had installed it for him.
He sat down and examined the terminal. It was set up as a communications console, but actual access to the communications laser was locked out for the moment. If he waited until she ordered him to transmit something he might be able to get out a coded message at the same time, although he wasn’t sure to whom. Perhaps the Solar Authority would help him if he could keep up his Gabriel Reinhardt act.
He flipped through the terminal’s other settings. Cargo space allocation, servitor duty rosters, damage monitoring. Dozens of tasks that needed a human eye from time to time, but not a very talented one. There was no access to anything critical, of course, and even if he did find some way to use cargo space allocation against Keldra, she would know about it instantly.
‘I’ll give you access to the comms laser when you need it,’ Keldra said. ‘For now, there’s a list of tasks in the console. Get to work.’
Keldra kept the ship on a twenty-four-hour cycle, with the corridor lights dimming for twelve hours each day. Another sign of the pirate’s obsession with Earth, Jonas assumed. Despite the cycle, Keldra herself kept an irregular schedule. He sometimes heard her moving about in the corridor in the middle of the night, and there was no pattern to the times he would find the foil tray from an instant meal lying on the dining room table. He preferred to keep a regular sleep pattern, and after a couple of days he had synced himself with the ship’s day-night cycle, but he never knew when she would buzz the intercom and summon him to help with some repair or maintenance task.
Keldra had put in place an impressive network of automated routines to make her small army of servitors work with the mechanical systems to keep the ship in good repair and respond to minor incidents. Watching the servitors in action, the Remembrance seemed more like an organism than a machine, with the servitors as individual cells and Keldra in her nest as the brain. Even so, no amount of automation could completely make up for the lack of a free-willed crew. Keldra spent most of her time just maintaining the ship, coping with the daily minor emergencies caused by its age and its many modifications. The workshop that had been Tarraso’s was now cluttered with untidy heaps of machinery, waiting for Keldra to either repair them or strip them down for parts. Jonas’s mechanical skills were modest, but she put him to work anyway; there were many jobs that benefited from a second free-willed pair of hands.
When she didn’t need him for some ship maintenance task, Keldra barely spoke to Jonas. Sometimes she would walk into the dining room while he was eating and look at him in confusion, as if she had forgotten he was on the ship, before giving him a disapproving glare and walking off. At other times she would stride haughtily by, not making eye contact, as if she thought she could hurt his feelings by ignoring him. But she trusted him – or rather, trusted the threat of her implant – enough that she no longer carried the nerve gun.
Jonas spent his free time roaming the ship, looking for ghosts.
Olzan sat at the head of the dining room table as the rest of the crew filtered in and took their seats. Tarraso and Keldra were both speckled with machine oil from whatever task he had called them away from; Tarraso arrived a few moments after Keldra, since he insisted on thoroughly washing his hands no matter how urgent the summons. Brenn was there immediately in person, although perhaps not mentally. Vazoya arrived last and didn’t sit down, instead hovering in the kitchen doorway with a cup of her bitter black coffee in her hand.
‘I’ve just got new orders from Mr Glass,’ Olzan said, once everyone was seated. He tried to say it casually, to head off any hostility from the crew. This wasn’t something that would be easy to break to them. ‘We’re to abandon the Alexandria run and make for Konrad’s Hope.’
Vazoya made a sour face. ‘What about our cargo?’
‘We dump the cargo to reduce our mass. We’re to get to Konrad’s Hope quickly.’
‘That’s bullshit. Wendell Glass doesn’t know what the hell he’s doing. We should go to Alex first. Whatever’s in Konrad’s Hope can wait.’
‘No it can’t,’ Olzan said. He cleared his throat, not sure of the best way to break the real reason to them. He’d been nervous too when he’d heard it. ‘There’s something else. Konrad’s Hope—’
‘There’s a Worldbreaker,’ Keldra said.
Everyone stared at her. She had barely spoken since Olzan had press-ganged her onto the ship. She was sitting at the end of the table, leaning back in her chair, placing her a little way away from the rest of the group. She had her arms folded and her expression was hard to read; she seemed angry, but not at anyone in the room.
‘There’s a Worldbreaker,’ Olzan said, breaking the silence. ‘It changed course twenty-eight hours ago, so Konrad’s Hope is in the danger zone.’
Tarraso was staring at Keldra. ‘How the hell do you know that? We didn’t know we were going to Konrad’s Hope until just now.’
‘Keldra monitors the Worldbreakers,’ Brenn said helpfully. ‘She likes to know where they all are.’ He was the only one who didn’t seem affected by the news. If something wasn’t happening to the ship right now, Olzan thought, it wasn’t quite real to him.
‘Who the hell does that?’ Tarraso said. ‘That’s…morbid.’
Keldra shrugged.