"Deacon!" Tartarus' voice echoed into the bay. "The Chieftain needs you on the bridge!"
< Promise! > Dadab signed with shaking hands. < You will take it apart! > Lighter Than Some swung its snout to face the plow. It tapped a tentacle against one of the machine's sharpened tines, as if considering the quality of its work. < Well, I did rush the assembly. And one machine hardly makes up for the life I took. > "Deacon! The Chieftain insists!"
< Fix! > Dadab signed as he backpedaled through the curtain and out the bay.
"When will the dropship be ready to fly?" Tartarus asked, heading back to the shaft.
"The Huragok has hit a minor snag." Dadab was glad the Jiralhanae had taken the lead— had his back to him. Otherwise he would have known Dadab was lying just by looking at his darting eyes. "But I know it will make things right just as quickly as it can!"
Rapid Conversion's bridge was located halfway up the shaft, toward the prow, as far from the outer hull as possible—a placement that made it invulnerable to all but the most devastating attack. As Dadab scampered inside, close on Tartarus' heels, he noted the bridge was (while not as roomy as the Jiralhanae's feasting hall) large enough to accommodate the entire pack. All were present, most hunched over workstations protruding from the bridge's reinforced walls.
These were filled with holographic switches that flickered against the Jiralhanae's blue armor.
Like Tartarus, they were girded for a fight.
Maccabeus stood before the bridge's central holo-tank, his paws knuckled against its smooth metal railing. The Chieftain's armor was colored gold, but made of a much stronger alloy. Vorenus and another Jiralhanae named Licinus flanked him, and their jutting shoulder plates kept Dadab from seeing whatever the tank had on display.
Dadab bowed, touching his knuckles to the bridge's grooved metal floor. It vibrated in time with the cruiser's jump-drive, idling many bridge lengths to stern. Ever mindful of the Vice Minister of Tranquility's desire for caution, Maccabeus had kept the drive hot in case they needed to beat a hasty retreat from the alien system.
"Come forward, Deacon," Maccabeus said, catching a faint whiff of methane.
Dadab righted himself and followed Tartarus to the tank. "Make room," Tartarus growled.
"Step aside, Vorenus!" Tartarus gave the taller, tan-haired Jiralhanae a cuff.
"Pardon me." Dadab gulped. "Excuse me." His conical tank made sidestepping impractical, and as he pushed past Vorenus toward the railing, his tank clanged against the Jiralhanae's armored thigh. To Dadab's relief, Vorenus was so transfixed he didn't seem to notice.
"Incredible, isn't it," Maccabeus said.
"Yes. Incredible," Dadab said, peering into the tank below its railing.
"Such enthusiasm, Deacon."
"My apologies, Chieftain. It's just that I've seen it before. Aboard the Kig-Yar ship."
"Ah. Of course." Maccabeus adopted an ironic tone. "After all, this is only—what?" He nodded toward the glowing representation of the alien world—its surface covered with insistent, Reclamation glyphs. "A few hundred thousand Luminations?"
The truth was Dadab was still preoccupied with the Huragok's disobedience. And to make matters worse, the bridge was thick with the Jiralhanae's powerful scents. The excited odors had permeated his mask's membranes, and Dadab was starting to feel a little sick.
"The numbers are impressive." Dadab choked back a bitter surge.
"Impressive? Unprecedented!" Maccabeus boomed. Then, his voice a low growl: "Very well. Tell me what you think of this." He jabbed a knuckle into a holo-switch imbedded in the railing, and the image of the alien planet faded—shrunk to a much smaller size as the holo- tank's perspective shifted to a wider view of the system. Dadab saw an iconic image of the cruiser just outside the planet's orbital path, and a safe distance from that, a flashing red triangle indicating a potentially hostile contact.
"It was waiting for us," the Chieftain growled. "Near the remains of the Kig-Yar ship." He pressed another switch, and the holo-tank zoomed in on the contact, bringing it into focus.
"The design matches the ships the Kig-Yar raided," Dadab explained. "A cargo freighter.
Nothing more."
"Look closer," Maccabeus rumbled.
Slowly, the vessel's representation began to turn. Rapid Conversion's sensors had made a detailed scan, and Dadab could see the freighter's blackened hull had been deeply etched, creating patterns in the bright metal beneath. No, not patterns, he thought. Pictures.
Each of the vessel's four lateral sides displayed a different, stylized image of the aliens and the Kig-Yar. In the first picture, one of each creature aimed weapons at each other (the alien held some sort of rifle, the Kig-Yar a plasma pistol). In the second, the alien had dropped his rifle and held out a handful of round objects that looked like fruit. In the third image, the Kig- Yar had cast aside its weapon to accept the alien's offering. And in the fourth, both creatures sat in what appeared to be an orchard. The alien held a basket of fruit, and the Kig-Yar was calmly making its selection.
"A peace offering!" Dadab said excitedly. "They do not wish to fight!" As the hologram of the vessel continued to spin, the Deacon pointed a finger at an outline of the alien planet etched into the lower-right corner of each side of the hull. Two crossed lines marked a point in the middle of the world's singular land-mass, a little below the equator. "And I believe this is where they would like to meet!"
"Apparently at dawn," Maccabeus said, increasing the tank's magnification.
Now Dadab could see that the etchings of the planet were shaded with a terminator line—a shadow that marked the world's passage in and out of night. Cutting perpendicularly across the equator, the line moved around the planet with each successive picture until it intersected the suggested meeting point on the side of the freighter that displayed the presentation of the fruit basket.
The Chieftain refocused the tank on the actual planet. "But there's more."
Now Dadab noticed new details. There was some sort of structure in high orbit above the world. Two delicate, silver arcs tethered to the surface by seven almost invisible golden strands.
Around the structure were hundreds of additional red contact symbols. The Deacon hoped the aliens' message was sincere. If these contacts were warships, Rapid Conversion was in serious trouble.
"Not to worry, Deacon," Maccabeus said, sensing the Unggoy's concern. "They haven't moved since we arrived. And they look to be the same as the other vessel. Simple cargo tugs with no obvious weapons." He gestured with a hairy finger. "But look here—where those cables meet the surface."
Dadab followed the Chieftain's finger. There was a mass of Reclamation glyphs clustered at the bottom of the cables. But close to these was another set of Forerunner symbols—a diamond of bright green glyphs hovering above the site of the aliens' suggested rendezvous.