
Copyright Notice: Farscape is owned by The Jim Henson
company, Hallmark Entertainment, Nine Network Australia and the Sci-Fi
Channel. They own all rights to characters mentioned within this story. I
have merely borrowed these characters to play with, and promise to return
them in good working order.
Spoilers: All of Season 2, up through "A Clockwork Nebari"
Summary: Scorpius makes John an offer he can't refuse
Author's note: This story was originally published in seven
parts in October of 2000. Reposted in January 2001 with minor
revisions. It can be found on the web at:
http://members.aol.com/ngma607/return.htm
Searing heat blistered his fingertips and John Crichton dropped
the plasma-welder with a startled curse. It clanged off the
floor of the shuttle bay, as John shook his hand trying to ease
the stinging pain.
"John, you aren't paying attention. You need to focus," a soft
voice said.
John Crichton did not turn around. He knew that there was no one
to see. The voice was his torment, his alone.
He fixed his gaze on the left wing of the Farscape module. How
long had he been here? He didn't even remember coming down to
the shuttle bay, or deciding that it was time to repair the
micro-meteor punctures that the craft had received during his
last trip. And yet he must have done so, for the holes were
neatly welded, and running his hand along the wing he could find
no flaws.
Not that he would trust to his own eyesight and sense of touch.
He would let the DRDs do a proper scan in a moment.
"You need to be careful, John," the voice reminded him.
Crichton said nothing. Sometimes, if he ignored it, the voice
went away. Other times it did not. At least it was only a voice
this time, easier to deny than the visual hallucinations.
Why did it have to be Scorpius that he heard and saw in these
visions? Why couldn't he be one of the people who saw Elvis, or
a six-foot rabbit?
"Because you're not afraid of a six-foot rabbit," he said aloud.
And he was afraid of Scorpius. Or more specifically of what
Scorpius would do to him, if he was ever recaptured. John had
survived a few days in Scorpius's care. Barely. Even now,
memories of the time he had spent in the Aurora chair were
enough to make his stomach knot, and a cold sweat run down his
back. John could not face that. Not again. He would take his own
life before it came to that.
And yet his fear of Scorpius was an old one, still present but
now it shared space with a new fear. Slowly but inexorably, John
was losing his grip on reality.
It was not just the hallucinations, the conversations he had
with someone that no one else could see or hear. Gaps were
appearing in his memory, times when he had no idea where he had
been, or what he had been doing. Like today. He remembered
morning and breakfast, Rygel droning on about his favorite
Hynerian delicacies. It seemed like moments ago that he had
stood up, leaving his uneaten rations for Rygel to finish. But
his chronometer showed that it was now deep into the night, or
the sleep cycle as the others called it. Where had those missing
hours gone? Where had he been? And what had he been doing?
Since his precipitous arrival on Moya, Crichton had worked hard
to prove his worth, and to gain the acceptance of the crew. They
had learned to trust him, and he had learned to value their
friendship. Now all that was coming apart.
It was becoming harder to hide his growing weakness from his
friends. He knew Aeryn suspected something. He had even told her
some of it, when he had to explain why he had nearly killed her
with a shot meant for someone who was only a hallucination. And
Zhaan was quiet, but her eyes saw far more than she said. Many
times he thought about asking her for help, remembering the
unity they had once shared. Yet each time something inside him
stopped him, before he could frame the words.
Perhaps it was that he already knew there was nothing she could
do to help him. No one could. Confessing his fears would only
hasten the day when his condition would be discovered, and the
crew would be forced to act.
And so he had learned not to start when he heard a voice that
could not be there, or saw visions that no one else did, and a
dozen other ways to cover up the fact that John Crichton was no
longer in control of himself. What choice did he have? Should he
summon the crew and confess to them?
He could see it now, everyone gathered in the common room as he
said "Guess what? Turns out Aeryn was right after all. Humans
don't do well in space. I'm cracking up. Sorry for the
inconvenience."
And if he confessed, what would they do? They were his friends,
but they could not save him from himself. Sooner or later, his
friends would have to act, as much for their own protection as
his.
Would they banish him from Moya, leaving him to make his way
alone? Or would they lock him in a cell, watching helplessly as
he slipped deeper into madness? Would someone have the
compassion to end his life, when there was nothing of John
Crichton left?
He knew his time was running out. He had days, perhaps a week at
most, but no more than that before someone, probably Zhaan or
Aeryn, summoned the nerve to confront him. He could no longer
hide the signs of what was happening to him, for the mental
stress was taking its toll on his body. He had to force himself
to eat, but still he was losing weight. And his face was drawn
from lack of sleep, though that, too, was a mystery. Most nights
he spent a full sleep cycle in his bed, and yet he woke each
morning nearly as tired as he had been the night before.
Two days ago Zhaan had offered him a concoction to help him
sleep, mentioning that she had heard him cry out the night
before in his sleep. And yet he had no memory of that dream, or
of any dreams in these past days, and this troubled him. Somehow
not being able to recall his dreams was more frightening than
any nightmare could be. It was as if there was another piece of
him that was slipping out of his grasp, a part of him lost
forever.
"Commander Crichton?" Pilot's voice came over the comm.
"Yeah Pilot? What's up?"
"I am receiving a very odd communication signal," Pilot said.
There was a pause. "At least I *think* it may be a signal."
"From a ship?" Crichton hazarded a guess. It could not be from a
planet or a base. They were deep in the Uncharted Territories,
far from any solar system. Or at least they had been, last time
he had noticed. And a ship meant the potential for danger.
"No, Moya does not sense a ship anywhere. And yet there is this
signal," Pilot said. "It is really most odd."
The tension that had gripped him began to fade. It was an
anomaly. A mystery, nothing more.
"Can you play it for me?" he asked.
"Certainly," Pilot said.
There was a series of tones, pulses of uneven length. Like the
old Morse code, except these were of different pitches, almost
musical. The signal ran for about ten seconds, paused and then
repeated.
"Is that it?"
"Yes," Pilot said. "The signal just repeats over and over again,
on very low frequency communication waves. Similar to those of
your module."
"You mean radio," John corrected him. "Then there's no need to
worry. That signal could have been sent yesterday or a thousand
years ago. Radio waves can travel forever in space."
"Are you certain?" Radio waves were far outside of Pilot's
experience, almost as much as a telegraph would have been. A
primitive form of communication, when compared with Sebacean
technology.
"No," John said. He was no longer certain of anything. "But if
I'm wrong, you'll be the first to know. No need to wake the
others, but to be on the safe side, why don't you ask Moya to
run the deep range scans every arn for the next day."
"Very well," Pilot said.
There was a brief click, and John knew that the communication
channel had been closed. There had been something strangely
familiar about that musical signal. It repeated over and over
again in his head, as if it were one of those annoying radio
jingles. He shook his head to clear it, but the odd tune
persisted.
A moment later he moved back to the Farscape module. At his
touch the canopy opened, and he climbed inside. As if in a dream
he saw his right hand move to the communications board, tuning
to the emergency frequency, and then flipping the communications
toggle on. He donned the headset, carefully preserved although
not used since he had left Earth and IASA behind.
The module had its own communications system, one that was not
monitored by Pilot. This was somehow important, and yet the
thought disappeared almost as soon as it had formed.
"This is Commander John Crichton of Farscape One," he said, his
voice flat and calm as if this was just another routine
transmission.
"John, I am pleased you received my message. We need to talk,"
Scorpius's voice crackled through the headset.
He should have felt surprise, but somehow he did not. And unlike
the soft voiced hallucination which tormented him, John had the
feeling that this imperfect, scratchy communication was the real
thing.
"Where are you?" he asked.
"Close. Very close indeed. In a few microts the Leviathan will
have fallen into my trap. You will be surrounded by ships from
my command carrier."
His heart sped up. They were in danger. He needed to warn Pilot
and the others. A small part of him screamed that he needed to
summon help, but it was drowned out by whatever was controlling
him.
"So why are you telling me this?" It was foolish for Scorpius to
tip his hand like this. There was still time for Moya to
starburst and escape. That is if this was really Scorpius and
not just the newest variety of his hallucinations.
"I am telling you this because you have a choice, John. Stay
where you are, and the Leviathan will be captured, and you and
all your friends will become my prisoners. Whether you surrender
peacefully or risk your lives in some foolish attack, in the end
it will be the same."
He felt sick as he realized his long nightmare might finally be
coming true. Prisoner of Scorpius. It did not bear thinking
about. "You said I had a choice," Crichton said, struggling to
keep his voice calm.
"I have no interest in the others, only in you. You can choose
to surrender yourself, and I will promise to let the Leviathan
leave unhindered. Your sacrifice for their safety."
It was a trap. It had to be. And yet---
"How can I trust you? And why would I be so crazy as to give
myself up, so you can put me through the hell of that damn chair
again?" His voice cracked.
His right hand shook and he clenched it into a fist, grateful
that Scorpius could not see him. There was no need to let
Scorpius know how much he frightened John.
"I have never lied to you, John," Scorpius said. "Surrender and
keep your friends safe. Or try to preserve your own life, and
you damn then all. Time is running out. In the end, you know
there is only one choice to make."
There was a burst of static and then the radio went silent.
John stripped the headset off. It wasn't real. It was just
another hallucination. It had to be, he told himself.
What if it wasn't? He had promised himself he would never be
taken alive by Scorpius. To surrender himself willingly went
against every instinct, every fiber of his damaged soul. And
yet, could he bear the alternative? What would it mean if Aeryn
or Chiana or the rest were Scorpius's prisoners as well? Did he
have the right to subject any of them to the horrors that he had
endured?
Scorpius was interested in one thing only. Wormhole technology.
Crichton had this knowledge, his friends did not. To Scorpius,
Moya's crew was useful only as bait or as hostages. It was
possible indeed that Scorpius might keep his word and let them
go free, once he had what he wanted. Even Crais had confirmed
that Scorpius had no interest in Moya or any of her passengers.
Only Crichton himself drew this relentless pursuit.
His life for theirs. It was almost the same bargain Crais had
tried to make with him, when John had been Scorpius's captive.
Strange to think that back then he had been afraid of dying at
Crais's hands, not realizing that in a short time a quick death
would seem preferable to the pain of having his mind ripped
apart by Scorpius's infernal device.
But the bargain Crais offered had been a bluff, and Crichton had
seen through Crais's lies, before was forced to make the
impossible choice between protecting Gilina or saving his
friends.
Scorpius would not make the same mistakes that Crais had. He
would not have made his offer, unless he was certain that John
would have no choice but to accept.
Moya lurched and the engines protested suddenly and then fell
uncharacteristically silent.
"Commander Crichton! Moya's short-range sensors have detected a
squadron of Peacekeepers. They just appeared, out of nowhere,
and are moving to surround us."
"Can we starburst?" Crichton asked.
"No, we can not escape them," Pilot said. "I have summoned the
others, they are on their way to the command center."
"John, where the frell are you?" Aeryn's voice came through the
comm. "We need you up here. Now."
A sense of fatalistic calm descended over him, washing away the
fear. He made no movement to leave the module.
"Pilot, keep looking," John said. "There ought to be a command
carrier around there somewhere."
"A command carrier?" Aeryn asked.
John did not respond. He hit the button that lowered the canopy,
and his hands began the familiar ritual of bringing the module
to life. A small part of him noticed that his hands had stopped
shaking, now that he had made his decision.
Scorpius knew him, almost as well as he knew himself. In the
end, there had been only one choice he could make.
His hands continued to move, skipping most of the normal
preflight checklist. There was no need for safety precautions.
It would not be a long trip.
The engine sequencers ran through their cycle, and the module
came to life.
"Commander Crichton, what are you doing?" Pilot asked.
"Pilot, tell Moya she has a dozen microts to open the shuttle
bay door, or I am going to open it for her," John said. He had
made his decision, now he needed to implement it. Swiftly.
Before he lost his nerve, or his friends tried to stop him.
"John, what are you thinking? This is no time for foolish
games," Ka D'Argo said.
Aeryn said nothing. If he was right, even now she was making her
way to the shuttle bay at a dead run, preferring direct
confrontation. But she would not get her wish. Not today.
John aimed the Farscape module at the closed doors, and placed
his hand on the control throttle, letting power begin to trickle
through the craft. Slowly it began to move. "This is going to
leave a big hole," he warned.
At the last possible instant, the doors slid apart, and the
Farscape module slipped out into the blackness of space.
A prowler swept by, close enough so he could see the face of the
Peacekeeper pilot, and then the craft continued on. His eyes
followed its path, and he saw it was one of many that were
circling Moya, holding her hostage like an atom surrounded by
particles. Every direction was closed off. There was nowhere for
her to go, no escape for the ship or its crew.
John picked a direction at random, and accelerated. The module
was modified, but it was not nearly as fast as a prowler, or for
that matter, a command carrier. It was useless to think of
escape, merely of ending this quickly. He would find the
carrier, or the carrier would find him. Either way, the end
would be the same.
"John, what do you hope to accomplish?" Zhaan asked, in cool
tones of reason.
"A trade," he said. "Scorpius gets what he wants, and you and
Moya get to go free."
"John, don't be stupid. You can't bargain with such a creature.
Return at once," Aeryn said, her voice sharp edged with concern.
"We will find a way out of this, but only if we all stick
together."
An hour ago he would have given anything to hear such
reassurances, but now they were too late. Aeryn, once so
pragmatic, was indulging in foolish optimism if she thought
there was indeed any chance of avoiding this fate. Once John had
possessed such an optimism himself, but it had fallen away,
another casualty of his experiences in these past months.
The Farscape module passed between two prowlers and slipped
through the outer shell of the blockade. No one tried to stop
him, or to follow him. So Scorpius was that confident of John's
compliance. And why not? They had not seen the trap coming until
it had sprung. No doubt he had planned John's capture with equal
efficiency.
"I would have left the ship anyway," John said, trying to
explain. "Aeryn, you know that. The hallucinations are getting
worse. I no longer know what is real and what is not. My being
there was a danger.... to all of you."
"John, we trust you," Aeryn said.
"How can you, when I can not trust myself?" Even now, he did not
know if his sacrifice was an act of courage or just another sign
that he had descended into madness.
John could hear the sounds of the crew arguing, and someone was
shouting his name, but he refused to listen. His throat was
tight and his eyes wet with unshed tears, as he left behind his
friends, and the ship that he had started to think of as his
home. Leaving them hurt, with a pain that was almost physical.
Would they ever understand why he had done this? Would they ever
forgive him?
"Do one thing for me. Starburst, the moment the fighter screen
breaks," John said. He closed his eyes for a moment and prayed
to the Goddess that Zhaan served that Scorpius would honor his
bargain, and let his friends go free. John's sacrifice had to
mean something.
The module vibrated slightly and then changed direction. So the
carrier's crew had found him, and was now using its capture
field to haul in their prize. He took a deep breath, as he
realized that in a few moments he would be face to face with the
one person he feared most.
The alien module settled gently onto the hangar floor, and as
the docking bay doors slid closed, Scorpius felt satisfaction,
mingled with a tinge of relief.
He had planned this operation carefully, considering every
possible variation, until nothing was left to chance. And yet in
the past Crichton had shown himself a wild card, who found the
one contingency that no one had considered. But this time he had
met his match. Scorpius had offered the bait, and Crichton had
fallen into his trap.
He had known from the start that there was no way to take the
Leviathan by force and still guarantee Crichton's safety. For
while the neuro-chip should be able to prevent Crichton from
suicide, it would not be able to stop him and his companions
from an act of desperation that would lead to all of their
deaths.
Nor could the chip prevent one of Crichton's companions from
killing him, taking his life in a misguided attempt at mercy.
No, trying to take Crichton by force was too risky. Instead, he
had offered Crichton the one thing he could not refuse, the
chance to save the lives of his friends.
Still he was puzzled. Three days ago, Crichton, acting under the
chip's control, had sent a signal, indicating the experiment was
to be terminated. But it had not given the code that would
indicate that Crichton had succeeded in discovering the secrets
of wormhole technology, leaving him to wonder at the reason for
the summons.
Why now? What threat had the neuro-chip perceived, that required
putting an end to the charade of freedom that Crichton had
enjoyed for these past months?
There was no movement or sign of life from inside the module,
and yet the scans had confirmed that Crichton was alive and
inside. A hundred microts passed, and just as he was about to
order his guards to open the module, the clear canopy raised,
and Crichton's face appeared.
His eyes searched the room, until his gaze fell on Scorpius.
Then Crichton pushed himself out of the seat, and climbed out of
the capsule.
Scorpius signaled the guards to stay in their positions at the
door, and as Crichton descended, he crossed the few meters that
separated them. He was intrigued by the craft that until now he
had seen only through Crichton's memories. Unique, the only
vessel known to have traveled through a wormhole. And yet the
craft was a minor treasure, compared to the creature that
piloted it.
As Crichton's feet touched the floor, he paused for a moment,
laying both hands flat on the sides of the craft, and pressing
his forehead against it, as if somehow he drew strength from the
vessel. Then he pushed away, and turned around.
"You've got what you wanted. Now let Moya go free," he said,
fixing Scorpius's gaze with his own.
Few Sebaceans dared return his gaze, for they were afraid of
him, and what he could do to them. Crichton had more reason than
any to be afraid, and yet he caught and held Scorpius' stare,
unyielding.
Such courage had to be respected.
"I have already recalled my ships," Scorpius said. "And yet the
Leviathan lingers. Perhaps your friends harbor some foolish
thoughts of rescue."
Crichton shook his head. "They know better than that."
"See for yourself," Scorpius replied, waving his hand towards
the communications console on the nearby wall.
Crichton, after one look at Scorpius, crossed over to the wall,
where the console screen displayed the image of the Leviathan,
and the retreating ships.
"I have kept my word," Scorpius said, coming to stand behind the
human.
At the sound of his voice, Crichton flinched. An unusual
reaction, or perhaps not, given the fear that Crichton was
trying so hard to hide. Still he was beginning to suspect that
there was something wrong, some subtle clue or sign that he had
overlooked.
Crichton touched his comm badge, apparently not even considering
that Scorpius could block any transmission. But he was curious
to hear what Crichton had to say, and waited.
"Pilot, what the frell are you doing? Why haven't you
starburst?" Crichton demanded.
"John, we--" a female began.
"No," Crichton interrupted. "This is not the time to be stupid.
Think of Jothee. Think of Talyn. Think of yourselves, damn it,
but get the frell out of here. Now!"
Crichton turned the communicator off. An instant later, the
screen image began to brighten, until the Leviathan turned
incandescent, and then vanished.
It was as Scorpius had planned. He had no need for the Leviathan
or any of its crew, save as a means of gaining Crichton's trust.
Crichton stared at the screen for a long moment, and swallowed
hard. His shoulders sagged, and as he turned back to face his
captor, the strength seemed to drain out of his body, as if it,
too, had vanished with his friends. He leaned back against the
wall, suddenly needing its support.
The eyes that met his were dull. He realized that Crichton had
used all of his courage and strength to carry him to this
moment. Now that his friends were safe, Crichton could no longer
ignore his own vulnerability.
Scorpius did not like what he saw. His mind registered the
changes in Crichton's appearance, since he had last seen the
human on the Royal Planet. Crichton had lost mass since then,
the borrowed Peacekeeper's uniform hanging loosely on his frame.
And his face was drawn with fatigue, and with something that hid
behind his restless eyes, that now would not keep still.
"What did you mean when you told your friends the hallucinations
were getting worse?" Scorpius asked.
Crichton laughed, a harsh sound without true mirth. "You made a
bad bargain. Damaged goods. Humans don't take well to having
their minds frelled with. Ever since Gammak base I've been
hearing voices, seeing things that weren't there. Won't be long
now before Mama Crichton's boy becomes a permanent resident of
the loony bin."
The reference was obscure, but the meaning came through. And the
Scarran heritage that gave him the ability to detect lies, told
him that John Crichton indeed believed that he was going mad.
Many Scarrans could read and control minds, but Scorpius could
only perceive thought patterns. This was enough to worry him.
Crichton's thought patterns were jumbled, chaotic, a mind under
great stress, on the verge of tearing itself apart. He probed
deeper, sensing confusion, despair, and overwhelming fear that
was not quite panic.
"What is it you see in your visions?"
Crichton pressed his lips together, and shook his head, this
time careful to avoid Scorpius's gaze.
A mystery then. So be it. He would let Crichton have the
illusion of his secrets. Once Scorpius accessed the neuro-chip,
it would tell him what he wanted to know.
Crichton straightened up, pushing himself away from the wall.
"Let's get this over with," he said. "You might as well save
your questions for the chair."
Scorpius shook his head. "There is no need to fear the Aurora
chair," he said. "It has already proven itself ineffective. We
both know it will not give us the knowledge we seek."
He had looked forward to matching wits with his adversary, but
that would have to wait. Crichton could barely stand, and he
needed to know what had happened that had driven the human to
this state. Now.
"You are exhausted. You need to rest," he said.
"Tell me something I don't know," Crichton replied, the sarcasm
coming automatically to his lips. And yet his expression
revealed his confusion, as his fears warred with the desperate
hope that he might indeed be spared the torments of the Aurora
chair.
It had never been his intention to make Crichton suffer. The
Aurora Chair had simply been the most efficient means of
extracting information. And indeed it had proven effective, for
it had uncovered knowledge that Crichton himself did not know he
possessed. It was Crichton's own stubborn refusal to yield that
had turned what could have been simply an unpleasant experience
into unbearable agony.
Once he realized that the knowledge Crichton held could not be
extracted by the chair, Scorpius had released him, placing his
faith in the neuro-chip, and in Crichton's own intelligence and
determination to discover the wormhole technology that would
lead him back to his home world.
And now that chip had summoned Scorpius, to protect Crichton
when it was clear that Crichton could no longer protect himself.
It was ironic that the enemy Crichton most feared was also the
one person who could save him, and preserve his sanity.
"John, you have nothing to fear," Scorpius promised, slowly
reaching his right hand into his belt case, and withdrawing the
medi-injector.
Crichton was too valuable to risk harming. Wormhole technology
would tip the balance of power in favor of whomever held the
secret. Such a man could rule the universe, if he chose.
Scorpius would keep Crichton safe... and in time would control
him.
As the injector crossed into Crichton's line of sight, he
stepped sideways, but Scorpius had expected this, and grabbed
Crichton with his left arm, pinning him the wall. Crichton
struggled, but he was no match for Scorpius's strength. With his
right hand he pressed the medi-injector against the human's
neck, and injected the drug.
His face was only inches from Crichton's, and he could almost
taste the human's overwhelming despair. "A sedative, nothing
more. When you are rested, we will talk."
"Talk." Crichton repeated. "Yeah, right."
"Talk," Scorpius affirmed. He held Crichton in place, watching
as the consciousness faded from his eyes, and his muscles turned
limp, until Crichton's head lolled to one side and fell forward.
Only then did he signal for the guards to come, and to carry
Crichton to the quarters that had long awaited his arrival.
The task of taming Crichton would not be easy. But Scorpius had
the advantage of the neuro-chip, and of years of experience in
interrogating prisoners. Crichton was obviously anticipating
torture, whether mental or physical. It would be interesting to
see how he reacted when he realized that Scorpius had something
quite different planned for him.
There was a moment of disorientation, and then the Leviathan
emerged from starburst. Aeryn Sun shook her head to clear the
lingering dizziness, as Moya's engines hummed back to life.
Her eyes sought out the others. They looked stunned,
disbelieving, as was she herself. It did not seem real, somehow.
One moment she had been sleeping in her quarters, and then next
awakened by Pilot's urgent alarm. Almost before she knew what
was happening, it was over. John was gone, having surrendered
himself to his greatest enemy.
Less than a quarter arn from the first alarm, till the moment
when Pilot had initiated the starburst.
Aeryn's fists clenched by her side. Pilot had done what he had
to do, and yet at the moment she hated him for it, nearly as
much as she hated herself for being so helpless.
"Were we followed?" Rygel asked.
"No. And Moya's sensors indicate no trace of any other ships in
this area," Pilot said.
Ka D'Argo growled. "That is no guarantee of safety. Moya didn't
spot these Peacekeepers until they had already surrounded us."
"I do not understand why Moya was unable to detect the
Peacekeeper ships," Pilot fretted. "Her sensors were off-line
earlier, but Commander Crichton had finished his recalibrations
several arns ago."
"Typical," Rygel said. "The human doesn't fix things, instead he
takes apart things that are working fine and breaks them."
It was true that when Crichton first arrived on Moya, he had
been as likely to break things as he was to fix them. But those
days were long past, and it was not like him to be careless. Not
when he knew their lives were at stake.
And if it was not carelessness, what could it be?
"Scorpius must have found a new way to hide his ships," Aeryn
said, though she had never heard of such a technology. Still she
was a warrior, not a tech.
"Perhaps," D'Argo said.
"And where were you when this started?" Aeryn said, turning to
pin Rygel with her stare. "You had the watch tonight. So why
were you the last to arrive in command?"
Rygel drew his robe tightly around him, and his throne-sled rose
in the air, retreating from her. "I was in my quarters, sleeping
if you must know. Crichton offered to take the watch. Said he
wanted to work on his module. I saw no reason why both of us
should lose sleep."
Trust Rygel to think of himself first. She had seen John only in
passing yesterday, but even then he had looked exhausted. Any
idiot could have seen that he was in no condition to take on the
responsibilities of the night watch.
But if Crichton had already been in the module bay, it explained
why he had been able to leave so quickly, before she could reach
him. And yet why was he working on his module at that hour?
There were no urgent repairs that needed doing. Surely whatever
needed doing could have waited until tomorrow.
Unless there was another reason he was there.
"Pilot, was there anything else unusual that happened? Any sign
that the command carrier was near?" Aeryn asked.
"Moya picked up a low frequency communications signal. I asked
Commander Crichton about it, and he said it was something called
radio, and that there was no need for concern." There was a long
pause. "Then a few moments later, the Peacekeeper ships
appeared."
Aeryn swallowed hard.
"Crichton knew they were coming," D'Argo said. "He said so
himself, when he told Pilot to look for the command carrier."
"No," she insisted automatically. And yet a part of her had
already begun to doubt. There were too many coincidences.
"Of course he did," Rygel said. "No doubt you'll find he reset
the scanners as well, so we would have no warning."
Chiana drew closer to D'Argo, placing one hand on his shoulder.
"But why would he do that? He hates this Scorpius. You know
that."
Crichton hated Scorpius, but even more he feared him. Whatever
Scorpius had done to John, it had scarred his soul permanently.
John would give his life for his friends, yes. But he would not
conspire with his enemy. Nor was it like him to give up so
easily, without a fight. And yet he had done exactly that.
Handed himself over to Scorpius, without giving any of them the
chance to reason with him or to come up with a better plan.
Zhaan had silently watched the interplay, but now she spoke.
"Aeryn, what did John mean when he said his hallucinations were
getting stronger?"
With one hand Aeryn pushed away the hair that had fallen into
her face. "After the Royal Planet, John told me he was having
visions. Seeing Scorpius, even talking with him. He told me not
to worry, that if the visions continued he would go to you for
help. I thought it might be transit sickness."
Zhaan shook her head gravely. "I knew there was something
troubling him, but he never spoke to me, nor did he mention
these visions."
Aeryn realized she had been a fool. It was John's nature to talk
about what troubled him, and to try and solve the troubles of
those around him. It was one of his most endearing and annoying
qualities, depending on whether he was sharing his own feelings,
or trying to probe hers. She had counted on John behaving as he
always had, and assumed that he had gone to Zhaan for the help
that she could not give him. When the weeks had gone by with no
further mention of the visions, she had thought him cured.
She had not realized that John might have changed, so much that
he would not, or could not ask for help. For he had said nothing
to Zhaan, and apparently the visions had grown worse instead of
going away. There had been desperation in his voice in his last
message, a tone that reminded her of the tortured creature she
had rescued from the Gammak base.
How long had he carried this burden? And why hadn't he trusted
her enough to share it with her? What had happened, that had
made him believe his only choice was to surrender to his worst
enemy?
"Pilot, D'Argo and I will check the sensors," Aeryn said. She
already knew what she would find.
D'Argo nodded.
Chiana took her hand off D'Argo and glared at him angrily. "You
can't believe this. Crichton would never betray us."
She turned and began to walk away.
Aeryn's words made her stop in her tracks. "Crichton didn't
betray us. He betrayed himself."
Still there were advantages in having designed the neuro-chip as
an analog of his own personality. The chip had prioritized the
information presented in precisely the same order that Scorpius
would have chosen, had he done the job himself. There would be
time later to go through all of Crichton's memories, but for now
he knew what he needed to know, to understand Crichton's mental
state, and to make his plans accordingly.
Just as Crichton's physical composition was similar to a
Sebacean's but not quite identical, so too, his neural patterns
were subtly different. His mind had proven surprisingly
resilient, in the face of stresses that would have overwhelmed a
lesser creature.
Too resilient, in fact. For each time the chip had been forced
to override Crichton's conscious mind, it had left behind a
thread of neural pathway. The pathway should have been erased,
but instead traces had remained. Crichton's subconscious mind
had seized upon these traces, forging its own links to the
functions of the neuro-chip.
Within a few weeks of the implant, the links were strong enough
that under stress Crichton's mind became aware of the chip.
Unable to comprehend its function, his mind had translated the
chip's input into aural and visual inputs, which Crichton
perceived as hallucinations in which he heard and saw Scorpius.
The neuro-chip had performed as designed, preserving Crichton's
life and sanity through its actions. But each time the chip
acted, the links grew stronger, and as what he perceived as
hallucinations became more common, Crichton grew more afraid for
his sanity.
And then Crichton had fallen into the hands of a Scarran
interrogator, who had twisted his mind to the breaking point.
With the neuro-chip's help Crichton had escaped, but the mental
wounds he had received could not be undone. The wounds remained,
festering, the chip's need to hide its existence ensuring that
Crichton would not seek the help he so desperately needed.
As Crichton's mental condition continued to deteriorate, the
neuro-chip had recognized the threat, and had sent the signal
for recall.
Crichton stirred, and his thought patterns began to brighten. He
made an inarticulate noise, and then raised one hand to his
face.
"Crichton," Scorpius said, letting him know that he was not
alone.
Crichton's eyes flew open, and he half-rolled, half-fell off the
sleeping platform, landing on the floor and then rising
awkwardly to his feet. As his eyes locked on the chair where
Scorpius sat, he turned slowly to face him.
There was fear in his posture, and in the expression on his
face.
Physically Crichton was stronger than he had been the day
before. The full day of drugged induced sleep had alleviated the
worst of his exhaustion, and time would do the rest.
But mentally he was balanced on a knife-edge. It would be a
simple matter to break him, to push him over the edge of
madness. It would be far harder to heal his mind. Especially
when Crichton was unlikely to cooperate.
Scorpius had deactivated the neuro-chip, which should break the
destructive cycle of apparent hallucinations. Time would tell
whether the resulting damage could be reversed.
"Sit, and we will talk," Scorpius said.
He expected Crichton would retreat to the sleeping platform, or
perhaps the wall, to put the maximum distance between them. But
again Crichton surprised him.
"Is it live or is it Memorex?" Crichton asked, as if to himself.
He advanced across the room, coming to stand before Scorpius.
Then he reached out with his right hand a hand that trembled
only slightly as he touched Scorpius on the shoulder.
As his fingers brushed Scorpius's thermal suit, Crichton nodded,
then dropped his hand.
It took a moment for the meaning of the gesture to sink in.
Crichton was testing his reality, using tactile sensation to
confirm that this was indeed Scorpius, and not simply another
hallucination.
It really was Scorpius. In the flesh, so to speak. John backed
up slowly across the room, until he reached the bed, and then
sat down heavily.
Scorpius said nothing, but there was a strange expression on his
face. For a moment it looked like pity, but he had to be
mistaken. The Scorpius he knew was a ruthless interrogator. John
did not want to know what it would take to inspire his pity.
"What do you want?" he asked.
"The same thing you do," Scorpius replied. "Knowledge. The
secret to unlocking the creation of wormholes, for a start."
"I can't give you what I don't know," he said, spreading his
hands wide. It was no use trying to pretend to a courage he did
not own. Any information he had was Scorpius's for the taking.
It was simply a question of whether John gave the information
willingly, or surrendered it under torture.
For all he knew, the Aurora Chair was the least of Scorpius's
toys. Who knew what refinements Scorpius might have invented in
the months since John's escape? He could feel his heart begin to
race, and he tried very hard not to think about what else
Scorpius could do to him.
"You do not have the information. Yet. But I believe that given
time you will discover the answers we seek," Scorpius answered.
"So this is it? You torture me until I agree to work for you?"
"John, I said you had nothing to fear. You will not be harmed.
But you will remain here, as my guest. In time you will see the
wisdom of cooperation. I can afford to be patient."
He had expected anything but this. It had to be a trick. "Sorry,
Scorpy, the game doesn't work that way. Once you've been bad
cop, you can't expect me to believe that you're the good cop
now. Next you'll tell me you only want to help me."
"John, do you enjoy being obscure? Or are you simply testing the
limitations of the translator microbes?"
John shrugged. There was a distant planet where millions of
people shared his culture and spoke his language without the
help of alien bugs in their brains. He knew his Earth references
sometimes confused his friends, and even his enemies, but he
could not give them up. Indeed he clung all the more firmly to
them, as a way of reminding himself that there was indeed a
place where he was not alone, a stranger among aliens who could
never quite understand who or what he was.
"I know you do not believe me, but you need my help," Scorpius
said. "In fact I am the only one who can help you."
For a moment the living Scorpius sounded exactly like the
creature he had seen in his visions these past months. It was an
eerie feeling, like deja vu. He reminded himself that this was
just the newest of Scorpius's mind games. Soon he would tire of
this pose, and then the real Scorpius would emerge.
"For now, there is nothing you need to do, except to rest and
regain your strength. These quarters are yours. When you are
hungry, use the ship's interface and food will be brought. If
you are bored, the technical station contains research data that
will be of interest. One warning though, the device around your
neck is keyed to this room. Should you try to leave, it will
administer a sedative and you will be unconscious within
microts."
John raised his hand, and discovered that there was a plastic
collar encircling his neck, a thin band about two fingers wide.
It made him angry, as he wondered what else had been done to him
while he lay unconscious.
"Scorpy has a new pet, is that it?"
"A reasonable precaution, nothing more. If you recall, last time
you were on one of my ships you managed to destroy it with
remarkable efficiency. And then, of course, there was the Gammak
base. I find this command carrier useful, and would prefer that
both you and it remained undamaged."
Scorpius smiled, as if he found humor in the situation.
John tugged at the collar, but it would not budge. It was not
tight enough to hurt, and yet he could not insert even a
fingernail between the warm plastic and his own skin.
"So this is your answer, a dog collar?"
"Would you prefer that I chain you to the wall? Or station a
guard in here, to keep an eye on you at all times?"
His words were being twisted. Everything Scorpius said sounded
reasonable, until you realized that it was just a trap.
Scorpius's true goals were unchanged. This was just a new mask.
John felt his frustration rising. There had to be something he
could do, some way to argue with this creature. But his thoughts
just chased themselves in circles.
He clenched his fist, digging his fingernails into the palm of
his hand, grateful for the distraction of the pain. He had come
prepared to endure torture, and to hope for his own death. He
did not think he was strong enough, or sane enough, to play this
new game of Scorpius's.
"That is enough for today," Scorpius said.
John looked up. His body tensed as Scorpius rose to his feet,
but his captor did not come any closer. Instead his eyes
regarded John critically, and then he nodded as if he had
reached some decision. "We will speak again tomorrow," he
promised.
And then he left, leaving John far more confused than he had
been before. Surely Scorpius could see how close John was to
breaking. And yet why had he chosen to leave, rather than
pursuing his obvious advantage?
"This can't be good," he said to himself, and to those who were
surely monitoring.
John Crichton had spent the past months dreading what might
happen if he was recaptured by Scorpius. Never had he imagined
this. After five days, he was ready to climb the walls with
boredom. He scowled as he shoved his hands in the pockets of his
pants, and began to pace around his quarters.
Scorpius had kept his promises. John had not been tortured or
threatened. Instead he was treated as a valued prisoner. Food
was delivered whenever he wanted, from a selection that seemed
luxurious to someone accustomed to the hit or miss provisions on
Moya. With nothing better to do, he caught up on his sleep, and
in his waking hours tried very hard not to think about his
friends.
He saw no one, except Scorpius. Sometimes he appeared briefly,
as if merely checking on his prisoner. Other times he stayed,
and tried to engage John in conversation. Depending on his mood,
John would allow himself to be drawn into a dialogue, but
steadfastly refused to discuss anything related to wormhole
research. All the while he kept wondering how long it would take
for Scorpius's patience to wear out, and for the gentle
questions to be replaced by harsh interrogation.
This should have caused him to panic, but it did not. In face he
realized that he was far calmer than he had any right to be. At
first he suspected Scorpius might be drugging him, administering
some form of tranquilizer in his food or injecting it through
the damn dog collar. But as the days passed, he found a simpler
explanation. The hallucinations which had tormented him for so
long had finally vanished.
Maybe the visions had been linked to his fear of recapture.
Maybe they had simply been the product of accumulated stresses.
Whatever the reason, all he knew was that they had ceased the
moment he had stepped on board the command carrier.
It was strange, but he felt stronger now, more himself than he
had in months. It was not that he was healed, it was too soon
for that. But he felt as if he had taken a step back from the
edge of the abyss. Perhaps there was still time to reclaim his
sanity and purpose.
He had even begun having dreams again. Last night he had dreamed
that he was on his first shuttle mission, remembering the
excitement and the overwhelming need to prove that he had earned
the assignment on his own merits, not simply because he was Jack
Crichton's son. When the shuttle returned, his father had been
standing with the reception committee on the pad. Mindful of the
watching reporters, all he had said was "Good job, son," but the
look in his eyes had meant more to John than any IASA mission
summary ever could.
In his dream he had seen his father, and reached for him, only
to wake up and remember where he was. It did not take a genius
to understand why his subconscious had dredged up this memory.
There would be no return for John, no reunion with his father
and his friends, unless John managed to unlock the secret of the
equations hidden within his brain.
Not that he hadn't tried. But life onboard Moya had given him
little time to spend on research. Instead most days were filled
with the simple necessities of survival, and of evading their
enemies. Even when he had free time, Moya was hardly an ideal
research base. Her star charts were woefully inadequate, and
full of errors. Her information banks had been designed by
Peacekeepers. They contained limited technical knowledge, and
virtually no science data. Indeed even the theoretical
principles behind the Leviathan's ability to starburst seemed to
have been considered classified military information, and thus
omitted. It had taken him months and the help of Pilot, to
figure out the basics of biomechanoid technology, and to learn
which pieces could be adapted to work with his module.
On his own he might never find the answers he sought. John
paused as his steps brought him over to the technical station,
the Peacekeeper equivalent of a computer and information
retrieval unit. A part of him wanted to investigate the unit, to
find out what was stored within. Scorpius had been researching
wormholes for years, and would have access to the best technical
information and theoretical knowledge that the Peacekeepers
owned. If he permitted John to view only a fraction of that
knowledge, it would still be more information than he could hope
to find anywhere else. It was a priceless treasure.
Yet even as he yearned to explore, he held back, knowing that
this was exactly what Scorpius wanted. Scorpius was counting on
John's natural curiosity, and his hunger to learn more about
wormholes. He would not give anything away for free. Any
information he let John have was given with the expectation that
he would be able to reclaim full value later, by taking from
John whatever he could discover about wormhole technology.
It was a precarious position. Sooner or later, John would have
to make a choice. He could choose to cooperate, to play along
for now, taking what information he could, and hoping that he
could find a way to escape before he gave Scorpius the knowledge
that would make the Peacekeepers an unstoppable force. Or he
could wait until Scorpius decided to change the rules of the
game, and found a way to coerce him.
Was refusing to look at the data his only way to resist? Or was
John throwing away his one chance to get the information he
needed to go home? Which choice was the right one? If only he
could talk to someone he trusted. Aeryn. D'Argo. Dad. Someone
who could help him negotiate this minefield, and to steer clear
of Scorpius's traps.
Was there any way to turn the tables on Scorpius? If John
pretended to cooperate, was it possible that Scorpius would
lower his guard and provide the opportunity that John needed to
escape?
As long as he stayed in these quarters, there was no chance of
escape. John had found that out for himself, on the second day.
He had opened the door, and had taken barely one step into the
corridor, before he felt a cold jab in his neck. He remembered
the startled face of the Peacekeeper sentry, and the sensation
of falling, and then nothing else until he woke up, to find
himself lying in bed, back in his quarters.
He needed to get out of these quarters. Five days of searching
had convinced him that there was nothing here that he could use
as a weapon, or a means of escape. Outside these walls was the
resources of a command carrier. It was too much to hope for that
he would have allies, but there would be weapons, ships, and
perhaps a chance to escape.
It would be a dangerous game. He would have to convince Scorpius
he was cooperating, and to do that he would have to give him at
least some knowledge, for Scorpius was too intelligent to be
deceived by lies or the techno-babble that Crichton had used on
others. It would be a delicate balance, enough information to be
convincing, but not enough to ensure that Scorpius could unravel
the secrets of wormhole technology. And the game could only be
played for so long. Sooner or later, he would have to find a way
off the ship, or he would have to end his own life, rather than
yield what he knew to his enemy.
"You can do this, John," he said. He had to. There were no other
choices.
John sat down in the chair in front of the technical station.
His passed his right hand over the clear surface, and a glowing
list of symbols appeared. The first entry caught his eye. Star
charts. He pressed the symbol and a three dimensional
holographic map sprang to life.
Slowly his search widened, until he was viewing models of this
galaxy, and of those nearby. Crichton appeared to be searching
for a particular type of galaxy, for he discarded one image
after another. He lingered for a few moments on the sketchy
image of a flattened spiral galaxy, and then continued his
search. But the momentary pause was a clue, and when he twice
came back to that image, Scorpius knew that it had special
significance to the human. In all probability this was his home
galaxy.
From his station, Scorpius called up the information on that
galaxy. There was scant information, merely references taken
from a race that had inherited data from the beings known as the
Ancients. Far too distant for the Peacekeepers, or any of their
allies or enemies to explore, the galaxy had been simply a
scientific curiosity. Until now.
If Crichton really was from that distant part of the universe,
it meant that the wormhole had carried him farther than even
Scorpius had believed possible. It was a testament to the power
of wormholes, and a confirmation that Scorpius had been right to
place such a high value on his captive scientist.
It was time to reward Crichton, and to give him a new reason for
cooperation.
Scorpius was smiling. No doubt his watchers had informed him the
moment John had become accessing the data within the technical
station. He must be pleased that John was finally beginning to
cooperate.
John had tried to disguise the true goal of his queries, but he
did not know how successful he had been. He had not been able to
resist going back to look at that spiral galaxy a second and
then a third time, wondering if it was indeed the Milky Way.
As Scorpius came nearer, John felt himself tense, and the
familiar undercurrent of fear that the sight of Scorpius always
brought with it. No matter how gentle his treatment had been in
these last days, a part of him still remembered the horrors of
the Gammak base, and that Scorpius had been the author of that
suffering.
"I have an item you lost," Scorpius said. "Something you may
find of value."
Scorpius pulled a small object out of his belt pouch and tossed
it to him.
John reached up and caught it automatically. Lowering his hand,
he opened his fist, and saw a microcassette tape.
One of his microcassette tapes, with the IASA logo and his own
handwriting on the label.
"Where did you get this?" His chest felt tight. All of his tapes
were on Moya. Had Scorpius gone back on his word? Had Moya and
his friends been captured after all?
"The tape has the experimental data from the Dam-Ba-Da depot.
Once I knew it was there, I took steps to retrieve it."
John turned the tape over in his hands. He had never thought to
see this data again. Dam-Ba-Da had the unique distinction of
having a predictable solar flare cycle. During the solar flares,
John had used the Farscape module to try and recreate the
conditions that had led to the wormhole formation on Earth. He
had come close. Very close, but the proto-wormhole was unstable,
and John had been forced to land on the planet and seek repairs
for the Farscape module. In return for the repairs he had been
forced to bargain away the information he had gained during his
test.
It was another reminder that Scorpius knew all too much about
him, and about his experiences. John did not remember Scorpius
questioning him about his time at the Dam-Ba-Da depot, but
clearly this must have been part of the memories captured by the
Aurora Chair. Indeed much of his sessions in the chair were
hazy, simply blurred impressions of pain, confusion, and the
desperate struggle to keep his mind focused on not betraying his
friends.
"I have already done my own analysis on that data, and placed
the results within the technical station. I would be interested
to know if you concur with my conclusions," Scorpius added.
The test readings were valuable. In less than four cycles the
solar flare cycle would repeat itself, and the mechanic Furlow
would have the opportunity to use the data contained on the tape
to try and create her own wormhole. She had not struck John as
the type of person who would bargain away such a valuable asset.
"What happened to Furlow?" John asked.
"She is no concern of yours."
"You killed her, right?" It was the obvious answer, but he
wanted to force Scorpius to admit it.
"Although she recognized the value of the data you had
collected, she lacked the ability to provide new insights into
the research. Once it was determined she had no further use, she
was terminated as a security risk."
The casual words struck a chill within him. It was another
reminder that Scorpius could be utterly ruthless in pursuing his
goals. Indeed John himself was kept alive only because it served
Scorpius's plans. Like Furlow, the moment Scorpius had no
further use for him, John would be killed.
Gilina had been killed because she had tried to help him. Furlow
had been killed simply because she had known him, and had
bargained for the solar flare data. How many other deaths was he
responsible for, either directly or indirectly?
John bowed his head. Death had followed him since the moment of
his arrival. True Tauvo Crais's death had been an accident. But
it had not taken long before John had learned what it was to
kill, to deliberately take another intelligent being's life. At
times he had done so almost casually, without thought. It was no
wonder that these days when he looked inside himself, he did not
recognize the man he had become.
"Will you answer a question for me?" he asked, slowly raising
his head.
"Ask."
"How many Peacekeepers did I kill when I destroyed the Gammak
base?"
Scorpius's face was carefully bland, and John knew his question
had surprised him.
"Dozens? Hundreds?" John asked.
"I had anticipated that you might find a way to attack the base,
and so I ordered an evacuation," Scorpius said slowly. "Over
half the base's complement escaped, and brought with them vital
memory cores. Still your attack did great damage. Months of
valuable research data was lost, along with several hundred of
the staff."
The dead personnel were mentioned almost as an afterthought. It
was clear that Scorpius's concerns were for the missing data.
John closed his eyes, and swallowed hard. Several hundred. That
made him a mass murderer. There was no comfort in knowing that
others had helped create the plan, and to carry it out. In the
end, it had been John's choice to set off the chain reaction
explosion. The responsibility for what happened was his, and he
could not escape his guilt.
"I didn't think. I hated the place, and what had been done to
me. I needed to strike back, and to destroy it," he said,
wondering why he felt compelled to explain. "It wasn't till
later...."
His voice trailed off. It wasn't until much later that the full
horror of what he had done sank home. Perhaps he could have
rationalized killing Scorpius, and Niem, and the guards who had
mistreated him and Stark. But there had been others on the base.
People not so different from Gilina Renaez and Aeryn Sun. Good
people, trapped by the Peacekeeper culture and a system that
required them to be so much less than they could be. People who
did not deserve to die at his hands.
His distress must have been visible on his face.
"John, these were not your friends. They were your enemies. It
was an act of--"
"Stop," John said sharply, opening his eyes and shaking his
head. "I don't want to hear it. It is over. Done with. Nothing
you say can make what I did right."
His goal had been worthy, attacking the base to provide a
diversion, which would allow Moya and his friends to escape. And
yet in the name of that goal he had committed murder on a grand
scale, an act that would have once been unthinkable. How much
had he changed in these two cycles? How long could he keep
telling himself that the end justified the means?
How different was he now, truly, from Scorpius? Would there come
a time when he, too, would see murder as simply a logical
solution to a difficult problem? Were there still acts that he
would not commit? Was there anything he would not do, in order
to return home?
He had left Earth as a scientist. An explorer. Now he feared he
would return as a cold-blooded killer.
It had been a mistake to tell Crichton about the destruction of
the Gammak base. Scorpius should have refused to answer the
question, or simply revealed that there had been an evacuation.
But he had misread the human, thinking that Crichton's question
was an attempt to confirm that his efforts had been successful.
So he had given Crichton the truth, only to realize his mistake
from the human's reaction.
He had known Crichton grieved over the deaths of his friends. He
had not realized that Crichton would also grieve over the deaths
of those who had been his enemies.
Crichton's mood had turned dark, and for the rest of that day he
had not spoken a single word. Nor had he even glanced at the
test results from Dam-Ba-Da. Instead he had retreated back into
the depression that had gripped him when he first came aboard.
The next day Crichton's mental condition was no better. When he
saw Scorpius he was all too willing to talk, a steady stream of
verbal insults and threats meant to provoke Scorpius into taking
action against him. Consciously or not, Crichton was courting
his own destruction.
The human was fortunate that Scorpius was too intelligent to let
himself be provoked. Instead he relied on his patience, and
increased the dosage of the tranquilizers.
It was tempting to think of reactivating the neuro-chip, to get
a glimpse inside Crichton's mind. And to use the chip to erase
those memories which were proving harmful. But Scorpius could
not take that risk. The neuro-chip had already done enough
damage. And while the chip had been successful at erasing short
term memory, it was far more difficult to erase long term
memories that had already been assimilated. Tampering with that
part of Crichton's mind might inadvertently destroy the wormhole
knowledge that the aliens had implanted.
For several days the situation continued as a stalemate, until
Crichton himself broke the impasse by sending a message that he
wanted to speak with Scorpius.
As he made his way to the human's quarters, he wondered at the
meaning of the summons. Was this simply Crichton's latest
attempt to provoke him?.
Crichton had clearly been expecting him, for he sat facing the
door, and he rose to his feet as Scorpius entered the room.
"You've gotta stop this," Crichton said.
"Stop what?"
Crichton raised his hand and rubbed his skull vigorously. "This.
The drugs or whatever you're doing to me. Makes my brain feel
all... fuzzy."
It was true that the tranquilizers tended to depress neural
functions. Fuzzy was hardly a scientific term, but accurate
enough.
"John, the drugs are meant to help you. You yourself said that
your mind was confused and unstable," Scorpius said.
Crichton nodded. "I know. But it's not going to get better. Not
like this. Not when I can't think straight."
He hesitated. He had planned to cut back on the tranquilizers
gradually, as Crichton's mental condition stabilized. But
perhaps there was a point to Crichton's argument. His mind might
be able to heal itself, given time.
"Do this, and I'll look at the damn test data for you," Crichton
offered.
"And why would you do that?" Why now, after carefully avoiding
the data for the past weeken? What had inspired this offer of
cooperation?
"You've already seen it. I won't be telling you anything new,"
Crichton said. "I was the one who got it. I might as well see it
for myself."
A logical enough answer, and proof that however fuzzy he claimed
his thoughts were, Crichton was still capable of reasoning.
"Very well. We will try things your way. For now," Scorpius
said. If Crichton upheld his end of the bargain, then he would
uphold his.
"Thanks," Crichton said, then bit his lip as if he wished he
could take back what he had said.
Instead Crichton appeared eager, almost anxious to talk.
"Tell me something first," Crichton said. "Why wormholes? Why
not try something you already have, like duplicating the
starburst drive?"
"John, if this is an attempt to delay---"
"There's no rush. We both know the analysis you put in that tech
station was a bucket of dren. So there's no reason not to answer
my question."
Scorpius took a seat opposite Crichton, noticing with interest
that despite his closeness, for once Crichton showed no sign of
the fear that he had shown before in his presence. Even the
human's thought patterns were clearer than they had been, more
focused. It was as if he had found a way to anchor himself.
And perhaps he had.
"It takes living energy to generate a starburst field, something
the race known as the Builders must have known when they
designed the biomechanoid Leviathans," Scorpius explained.
"Weird. So you took their word for that? No attempts to figure
out your own starburst drive?"
Since the discovery of the Leviathans, Peacekeeper scientists
had searched for a way to replicate the starburst drive
artificially, so far with no success. The research was at a dead
end.
"There have been attempts to integrate the starburst
capabilities into a Peacekeeper vessel, something you yourself
have seen."
"Talyn. Right. Well that's one experiment with a mind of his
own," Crichton said. "Still, why wormholes? Have you seen them
before? Other visitors like me popping up all over Peacekeeper
space?"
"No, you are the only wormhole traveler that we have
encountered. But we have known of the possibility for some time.
The fragmented data that we have from the Ancients tells us that
they used wormhole technology, although little is known about
how they created them."
It had taken Scorpius nearly five cycles of research to create a
miniature proto-wormhole in the Gammak base laboratory. Crichton
had managed to create wormholes twice within a mere cycle. The
first had been by accident, but the proto-wormhole at Dam-Ba-Da
had been a deliberate creation. And all done without any of the
resources which Scorpius had at his disposal, and without the
knowledge that the Ancients would later implant in his mind.
"So all your scientists are off chasing something they think
exists, but they don't know how to get there. Ain't it a bitch
when that happens? It's kind of like Fermat's enigma."
"Fermat's what?"
"Fermat's enigma. It's a famous logic problem, back home."
Crichton leaned forward, and began gesturing with his hands.
"There was this mathematician named Fermat. He wrote that he had
found an elegant proof to a theorem that no one had been able to
prove before. Only he didn't have enough paper to record it. The
guy's been dead over three hundred years, and still
mathematicians are knocking themselves out, trying to find the
proof that Fermat supposedly had. One bright guy managed to
prove the theorem, but his answer was extremely complicated and
relied on esoteric set theories. It couldn't be the same proof
that Fermat found, so the rest of them keep on trying."
Crichton leaned back and smiled, his eyes focused on a distant
memory. "Even DK got sucked into that for a while, until I
convinced him to come back to the fold and work on the Farscape
thesis."
"You never felt tempted to solve this yourself?"
"Why? The theorem was Fermat's. I had my own dreams, and my own
theories to prove."
Scorpius tried to imagine this world of Crichton's, a place
where scientists pursued research simply because it intrigued
them. It was a concept unthinkable in the Peacekeepers' domains,
where technology was valued solely for its military
applications. Perhaps this was the key to Crichton's unique
approach. A system that valued discovery for its own sake would
produce a very different type of scientist.
"And the data from Dam-Ba-Da?" he prompted.
"You'll have to do better than that if you want to test me,"
Crichton replied. "The analysis was dren. A different entry
vector or faster approach would have changed nothing. The
readings confirmed what I'd suspected, that the proto-wormhole
was inherently unstable. It broke up before it was truly
formed."
That agreed with his own conclusions. Like the miniature
wormholes he had created in his lab, the proto-wormhole on
Dam-Ba-Da had been an incomplete formation. A sign that the
research was on the right track, but that they still lacked some
crucial understanding of the phenomenon.
"And the solution to making it stable?"
"Don't know yet," Crichton said. "But give me time, and I'll
figure it out."
It was not quite a promise.
D'Argo nodded, sparing her merely a glance before returning his
attention to Jothee, his newly rediscovered son. At the far end
of the table, Rygel and Chiana paid her no heed as they
continued an elaborate drinking game.
Aeryn had left some time before, claiming that there was
maintenance that needed to be done on Moya. It had been an
obvious lie, but with uncommon tact the others had pretended to
accept her excuse at face value.
Like Aeryn, Zhaan's own feelings were mixed, her joy at Jothee's
rescue tempered by regrets over the two friends who should have
been here to share in the celebration. Stark, who had given his
life to save them, and whose information had led D'Argo to his
son. And Crichton, whose mysterious defection still puzzled and
haunted the crew.
As time had passed, they had come to accept the fact that
Crichton was no longer with them. It had been awkward the first
time someone had impatiently commed Crichton to fix a technical
problem, only to remember that he was gone. Quietly the watch
schedule was rearranged to fill the gaps caused by his absence,
and she no longer looked at his empty place in the common room
wondering what was delaying him.
Rygel had made a halfhearted attempt to take control of
Crichton's possessions, but he quickly backed down when
confronted by D'Argo.
It would be easier for the crew to accept, if they knew
something of Crichton's fate. Was he still alive, a prisoner,
being tortured by Scorpius? Or had he already been killed, his
spirit set free from this plane?
Aeryn still carried deep anger, and refused to accept what had
happened. She needed a reason, someone or something to blame.
She had gone through Crichton's possessions, looking for any
clues to his behavior. She had even listened to all of the sound
recordings he had made in his time on Moya, though she had
shared the contents of only the final tape with Zhaan.
That tape had been chilling. Crichton had begun by confiding his
concern over his sanity, and then drifted into a strange
one-sided argument, apparently with something he thought was
Scorpius. Irritably he had ordered Scorpius to leave him alone,
to get out of his head. There had been another pause, and then
the phrase "I must remember to tell Zhaan..."
His voice had trailed off, leaving them with no idea as to what
he had meant to tell her. The recording was silent for several
hundred microts, and then Crichton was heard remarking "Wonder
why this is on?" and then a click that signified he had turned
off the device.
The tape was evidence of Crichton's confusion, and the strange
visions he had mentioned to Aeryn. But it provided no
explanations, just more questions. The real wonder was that he
had been able to keep up the pretense of normalcy for so long.
Zhaan entered her quarters, and then pressed the wall plate that
shut the door behind her, signifying her desire for privacy.
From a small cabinet she took out her meditation mat and incense
sticks. Laying the mat on the floor, she slipped off her robe
and then lowered herself gracefully to sit cross-legged on the
mat.
She lit the incense sticks, and began the ritual hand gestures
as she invoked the powers of the Goddess. Holding her palms
upward to signify her openness to spiritual guidance, she
cleared her mind of everyday concerns, and began the meditation
chant.
Deeper she sank into the trance, until she reached the plane
where the physical realm and the spiritual realm coexisted in
harmony. As she opened her mind for guidance, she saw a familiar
being.
"Stark," she whispered.
It was Stark, not as he had appeared in the physical realm, but
rather the glowing being of light and compassion that she had
seen when she linked with him in Unity. A spirit memory, brought
on by her earlier musings.
"Pa'u Zhaan. It is good to touch your spirit again," Stark said.
His spirit voice was even stronger than it had been before, as
if the darkness which had once been part of him had been
banished forever.
"I have thought of you often," Zhaan said.
"And I of you. I would have come to you sooner, but it took me
time to make the transition from my corporeal state to the
energy form that I now inhabit."
"Energy form?"
"Yes, the Plokavians were only able to destroy my body. As I had
hoped, my spirit form remained intact."
Joy lightened her heart as she realized that this was indeed
Stark, and not merely an echo of his spirit drawn from her
memories. "I can not tell you how happy this news makes me. For
a long time I have grieved, thinking you lost forever."
"I know. That is one of the reasons why I came to you," Stark
replied.
"And the other reason?"
"Crichton."
Crichton and Stark had shared a bond born of their mutual
imprisonment on the Gammak base. Stark had done his best to try
and heal Crichton after his experiences, but he had confided to
her that he was not certain that he had succeeded. They had
agreed that they could do nothing else unless Crichton asked for
their help. At the time it had seemed a wise decision. Only now,
in hindsight, could she see how wrong they had been.
"Crichton is not here. Several weekens ago he left Moya and
surrendered himself to Scorpius," Zhaan explained.
A whisper of sorrow drifted like gray mist across the spirit
realm.
"That I know as well," Stark said. "I have seen him, although
unlike you he can not sense my presence."
"Crichton is alive? Is he unharmed?"
"Physically he is unharmed, although even now Scorpius molds him
to do his bidding. I watched and observed, and discovered that
Crichton has unwittingly been under Scorpius's control since the
time of his imprisonment. There is a device implanted deep
within his mind, that allowed Scorpius to control his thoughts
and actions."
"Goddess defend," Zhaan whispered. Such a thing was an
abomination.
"An abomination indeed," Stark said, sharing her thoughts.
"Can you help him?"
"I will wait, and see. There is a possibility. If the time
comes, I may need you to help me, at once and without question.
Can you do that?"
"Of course," Zhaan said. "Just ask and it will be done."
"You are gracious and kind," Stark said. His spirit image raised
his hands until the palms were extended towards hers. She
reached out with her own hands, and pressed her palms against
his, feeling the joyous glow of contentment that came from
sharing unity with a kindred soul. Then the image faded, and he
was gone.
As Zhaan returned to the present, she was faced with a new
dilemma. Should she share what she had learned with the others?
She could not reveal the truth of what had happened to Crichton
unless she revealed her source. And that would mean also telling
them that Crichton was still alive, and still very much in
danger.
What kindness would there be in sharing such knowledge with
those who already grieved for him? Instead she would keep her
own counsel, until she knew if there was indeed anything that
she or the rest of Moya's crew could do to help their lost
shipmate.
"No, all this is new. See?" Crichton gestured towards the port
wing of the Farscape module. "This is where the thruster rockets
were. I took them out so I could install the cooling fins for
the hetch drive."
Scorpius nodded.
Crichton ran his hand along the wing, and then raised himself up
and peered into the cockpit. Everything looked exactly the way
he had left it. Which meant that either Scorpius had left the
module undisturbed, or his techs were very, very good at taking
things apart and putting them back together again. If he had to
bet, he would bet on the techs.
"The thruster rockets were chemical based?"
"Yup. And the engines, although they were more sophisticated,
and used a different formula for the fuel mix."
Designing engines that could provide enough thrust for the
Farscape experiment had been an incredible feat of engineering
that had taken two years, and untold hours of his and DK's
lives. Ripping those engines out had been like ripping out a
piece of himself, but there had been no sense in keeping them.
There was no fuel for the old engines, and the new hetch drive
had made the module exponentially faster.
"The chemical fuel you described is inefficient and mass
intensive. How could such a small craft carry enough fuel for
the journey?" Scorpius asked.
Crichton ducked under the nose of the module, and then stood up
on the other side. "You saw my memories. This girl didn't have
to break orbit on her own. We hitched a lift on the shuttle,
which was strapped to chemical booster rockets that brought us
up out of the gravity well. Shuttle casts off the rockets,
powers its own way up the final stage into orbit. Then they open
the cargo bay and launch us on our way. Simple."
"And the experiment?"
"All I needed the engines for was a few minutes of high-velocity
acceleration. After that, they would automatically shut down. If
all goes as expected, I report the results, burn engines to
align me for reentry, and then let gravity bring me home."
If something unexpected happened, the plan had been that he
would try to achieve a stable Earth orbit and wait for the
shuttle to rescue him.
"A gravity drive?"
Crichton laughed. "No, you're over-thinking this. Just gravity,
plain and simple. Farscape falls like a rock, until we reach the
upper atmosphere. Then she becomes a glider, and I try to land
her in one piece."
Scorpius eyes widened in disbelief. "An appallingly low-tech
solution," he said.
"Hey, it's state of the art where I come from. Or it was when I
designed her. Maybe they've thought of something new since
then."
Crichton had often wondered what had happened to the Farscape
project, after his disappearance. Had his loss killed the
project? Or had DK and the team been able to convince IASA to
try again, with the prototype Farscape II that had been in
development?
"It still amazes me that you managed to come so far in such a
craft," Scorpius said.
"Some days I amaze myself," Crichton replied. "It takes real
guts to be an IASA astronaut. Not like your Peacekeeper pilots.
Every IASA craft is an experiment, where a million things can go
wrong, and you don't get second chances."
Farscape had been just such an experiment. Dangerous, but no
more so than a moon landing, or the first orbital mission for
that matter. They had planned for every contingency the IASA
team could think of, and then had gone back and thought of some
more. The list was endless. Engine failures. Control systems
failures. The unlikely chance of impact with space debris or
micro-meteorites. The very real possibility that the Farscape
effect might send him into an uncontrolled atmospheric entry, or
propel him away from Earth at such high velocity that his
braking systems would be unable to slow the craft in time, while
he still had enough fuel to return back to the Earth.
There had been no contingency plans for a wormhole.
"I should say a deficient sense of self-preservation was a more
important requirement for your astronauts, as you call them,"
Scorpius countered.
"Maybe. But I've made it this far, haven't I? Guess humans are
just stubborn that way."
"Stubbornness does seem to be a species characteristic,"
Scorpius agreed.
Crichton bent down, and checked the external monitor on the
hetch drive, confirming that there was indeed no fuel and only
marginal battery power in the module. A prudent safety
precaution, not that there was any real risk that he could try
and steal the module and use it to make an escape.
He continued to inspect the module, planning in his head the
modifications he would make if he ever had the chance. Better
radiation shielding for a start, and the efficiency of the hetch
drive could be improved by a factor of at least twenty percent,
if he replaced the jury-rigged drive controller with a standard
unit. And the control systems could use some tuning....
He could have stayed there for hours, but that wasn't the
bargain he had made.
"It is time," Scorpius said, at last.
Crichton nodded. "Okay. Tell your techs not to mess with her.
I'll be back," he promised the module.
He gave one backward glance, and then followed Scorpius from the
maintenance bay.
The chance to see the Farscape module had been a reward from
Scorpius. A gift, because the human was finally behaving as he
was expected to.
With nothing to bargain with except himself, Crichton had slowly
been forced to see the value of cooperation.
Cooperation meant an end to the mind-numbing drugs. A chance to
leave the tedium of his quarters. First he had been permitted to
visit the officer's physical conditioning area, where each day
he tried to work off some of his frustrations through exercise.
Today, in return for agreeing to explain everything about the
Farscape module, Crichton had been allowed to see his craft, for
an arn.
He did not know if Scorpius was genuinely interested in the
craft, as he claimed, thinking that there was something unique
in its design that might explain its interaction with wormholes.
Or if Scorpius was simply using this as another way to pry as
much information out of him as possible.
Not that he put up much resistance. Indeed the Farscape module
was still a source of pride to him. He could talk about it for
hours, and unlike his friends on Moya, Scorpius's eyes did not
glaze over with bored incomprehension as Crichton explained the
engineering design choices that he had made.
In a way it had been easier when he had been a prisoner on the
Gammak base. Simpler. There Scorpius had been the enemy, and he
the victim. Now he didn't know what to think. As the days
passed, he found it hard to maintain the white-hot edge of his
anger that had sustained him before. For this time, Scorpius did
not threaten him, nor harm him. Instead he offered Crichton the
knowledge that he craved, and a chance to develop the theories
that would lead him back home.
It was an almost unbearable temptation.
If only he wasn't alone. At Gammak base there had been Stark to
share his imprisonment, and his friends to help him escape. Here
there was no one to help him, no one to talk to. No one, except
Scorpius.
From the beginning, Scorpius had kept him carefully isolated.
Except for the sentry that he had glimpsed for a few seconds
during his first escape attempt, Crichton had seen no one except
Scorpius. Even as they walked the corridors of the command
carrier, there was no one to be seen. It was as if he and
Scorpius were the only two beings that existed.
He knew that Scorpius was playing mind games with him, but the
mere knowledge was not enough to help him avoid them.
His first escape attempt had gotten him all of two meters. His
next attempt had been over before it had begun. Crichton had
wracked his brain, trying to think of a way out, with no
success. Scorpius had all the advantages. Resources to monitor
Crichton around the clock, and the damn collar which let his
captors knock him unconscious the moment he showed signs of
deviating from their rules.
The surroundings were vastly improved, but it was the high
security Gammak base all over again. Only this time there was no
friendly tech to provide a diversion, or former Peacekeeper
commando to stage a raid and save him.
This time he was all alone.
Lieutenant Braca approached. "Sir, everything is proceeding as
you ordered. We will reach the supply base in seven point four
arn, and they have confirmed that they have the materials you
requested."
After retrieving Crichton, Scorpius had ordered that the command
carrier leave the Uncharted Territories, and return to
Peacekeeper controlled space. There was no reason to risk his
prize. Now, after weekens of travel, they were approaching the
supply base that marked the edge of the Peacekeepers' domains.
"And the prisoner?"
"The techs have completed their analysis of his research in the
last day. The report is in the system, sealed under your
personal code."
"Good," Scorpius said. "Dismissed."
Scorpius sat in the command chair, and as his fingers brushed
the console plate, the technicians' analysis was displayed.
There were no dramatic revelations, but overall he was pleased
with what he saw. The delicate task of molding Crichton without
breaking him was proceeded as he had planned.
Under his care, Crichton was slowly rebuilding himself. Not yet
healed, but no longer in immediate danger of slipping into
madness. After his initial resistance, Crichton had immersed
himself in the technical data provided as if it were a lifeline,
and indeed perhaps it was. Once started, he was unstoppable.
Reference databases, test results, theoretical models, he
devoured them all with insatiable curiosity. At times he forgot
to eat, or sleep.
As he began assimilating the knowledge, he had endless
questions. Crichton was quite good at spotting the gaps in the
information that had been provided, and in arguing for more.
Crichton's training had given him a conceptual model of the
universe that was subtly different from the way that Sebacean
science explained quantum phenomena. Ideas that were mere
speculation on Crichton's homeworld were proven facts here. That
was not to say Crichton's training was a liability. On the
contrary, the Farscape effect he had theorized was something
that Peacekeeper scientists had never known, or had long since
forgotten.
And although Crichton was not yet willing to discuss his
theories, careful analysis of his research queries indicated he
was approaching the wormhole problem from a very different
angle, starting with the magnetic shear effect caused by solar
flares. How much of his focus was Crichton's own inspiration,
and how much was due to the guidance the Ancients had implanted
within him was an interesting question to ponder.
A low-pitched chime sounded, and Scorpius toggled on the comm
link.
"Sir, the prisoner's behavior is becoming increasingly erratic,"
reported Ensign Kelvar, one of those assigned to monitor
Crichton. "Do you wish us to sedate him?"
Scorpius touched another button, and the surveillance images of
Crichton sprang to life on the screen before him. For once
Crichton was not at the technical station, instead he was pacing
around the room. As he reached the far wall, he paused to slam
his fist against it.
Scorpius frowned. It had been weekens since something had last
triggered one of these fits of self-destructive anger. He had
hoped that Crichton had moved beyond this stage, but clearly he
had been wrong.
"Do nothing," he ordered the ensign. "I will see to this
myself."
When he reached Crichton's quarters, he found the human had
stopped the pacing, but was now continuing to slam his right
fist into the wall with monotonous regularity. His knuckles were
bleeding. Flecks of red blood decorated the wall, the tech
station, the door, and other objects that had been the
recipients of Crichton's wrath. Fortunately there was nothing in
these quarters that was breakable... except Crichton himself.
Crichton saw him enter, but did not acknowledge him.
"You will cease this behavior," Scorpius said.
Crichton ignored him.
As he drew back his fist for another strike, Scorpius seized his
arm. "John, control yourself, or I will do it for you."
Crichton's gaze met his, daring him to carry out his threat.
Then, after a long moment, he nodded almost imperceptibly, and
shook off Scorpius's hold. He let his arm fall down by his side,
seemingly oblivious to the blood that began to drip slowly onto
the floor.
"You have injured yourself," Scorpius said.
Crichton backed away. He lifted his hand, and wriggled the
fingers. "I'm fine," he said. "See? Nothing broken."
The injuries were superficial. It was the reason for them that
he needed to understand. "You should be more careful," Scorpius
said.
"Why? I thought you would like this. Seeing someone in pain.
Isn't that your style?" Crichton challenged.
Now Crichton was trying to provoke him, another reversion to his
earlier behavior. It made no sense. The surveillance report had
indicated nothing at all unusual in the last day. So what had
caused this?
Scorpius sat down by the tech station, careful to keep his body
language non-threatening. "John, what is wrong?"
Crichton shook his head.
"You need to tell someone. And there is no one else," Scorpius
said.
Crichton's need to form emotional bonds with others was his
greatest weakness. When it came to making a choice, he almost
always chose emotional values over logic. Consider the
Peacekeeper Technician Gilina Renaez. Crichton had known her for
only a few days, yet when in the Aurora Chair on the Gammak
base, he had endured agonies to protect her.
It was a weakness that would never have been tolerated in the
Peacekeepers' ranks. Indeed, they would never have entrusted a
sensitive project such as Farscape to one who displayed such a
character flaw. And yet this failing was the key to
understanding what drove Crichton, and how to control him.
Scorpius intended to exploit this weakness. It was why he had
been so careful to isolate Crichton, ensuring that he had no one
else with whom to form a connection.
Crichton sat down on the edge of the sleeping platform, cradling
his injured right hand in his left. "Today it has been one point
nine six cycles since my arrival," he said.
"I do not understand."
"One point nine six cycles. That's two Earth years," Crichton
said. "Two years ago today, that I disappeared."
Scorpius waited patiently, letting the silence draw out between
them, until Crichton spoke again.
"They've probably got the flags at IASA at half-mast. There'll
be a minute of silence at the moment of the test. The tourists
will wonder what's going on, and the tour guides will remind
them of the mission." Crichton took a deep breath. "And some
human interest reporter will hunt down my Dad, and ask him if
he's reconciled himself to what happened. Ask him if he still
supports the space program, and whether it was worth the life of
his only son."
Crichton's voice cracked as he mentioned his father, and there
were unshed tears in his eyes.
"You miss your homeworld," Scorpius said, trying to draw him
out.
"I miss it all. Dad. DK. My sisters. Gods, I can't imagine what
they went through. Are going through. And I want to see them. To
know what's happening. To know that they are okay, and to let
them know that I am alright."
Even when he spoke of his homeworld, it was interesting that he
thought of it in terms of the people he had left behind.
"John, you know what you need to do. I can help you, but
ultimately it is up to you."
Crichton rubbed his eyes with the heel of his left hand,
scrubbing away the tears that he refused to shed.
"Right," he said, with a bitter laugh. "All I have to do is give
you the answer to wormhole technology. And coincidentally, give
the Peacekeepers a map to my homeworld, and the means to reach
there."
"You overestimate the importance of a backwater low-tech
planet," Scorpius countered. "True power lies here, in the
civilizations of this galaxy."
Indeed, even with the advantages of wormhole technology, it
would take time for the Peacekeepers to consolidate their grip
on this galaxy, and bring first the Scarrans and Nebari, and
then the Uncharted Territories under their rule. It would be
many cycles before the Peacekeepers were free to turn their
attentions elsewhere.
"So you are saying I should trust you?"
"Whether you trust me or not is irrelevant. You will never
return to your home unless you find a way to create another
wormhole," Scorpius said. "The question is, how badly do you
want to go home?"
When had unwilling cooperation become active collaboration?
Crichton did not know. He could not remember making a conscious
decision, yet at some point he had crossed the line.
Had it been the first time he had answered Scorpius's questions
about his research? The moment when he had agreed to look at the
technical data? Or had it been even before, from the first
instant he had accepted Scorpius's ultimatum, and surrendered
himself?
It did not really matter. He had chosen this path, and he would
continue to follow it. He had thrown himself into the research,
finding in the unwavering pursuit of knowledge the focus he
needed to preserve his sanity, and his sense of self.
Scorpius had been right about one thing. Until Crichton unlocked
the riddle of wormhole travel, he had no hope of returning home.
He had to have faith in himself, and in his own abilities. He
could solve this riddle, if he persevered. And then somehow he
would find an opportunity to free himself, and to make his way
home.
Scorpius had promised that he would release him, once he had no
further use for him. But Crichton knew better than to trust such
a promise. His value would only increase once he had solved the
wormhole equations. Scorpius would not let his prisoner go free,
lest he choose to share his knowledge with others.
And he had gained more knowledge than perhaps even Scorpius had
expected. It had taken him days, but he had crafted a program
that searched the records of the distant spiral galaxy. Over a
thousand stars had met the parameters he had specified, and he
had forced himself to dispassionately examine each record in
turn, as the program showed approximate distance, directional
vectors, and the locations and classes of the nearest
neighboring stars.
Record six hundred and thirty-five had been the solar system.
His solar system. Earth. He finally knew where home was. Now all
he had to do was figure out how to get there.
"Almost," Crichton said absentmindedly, his attention focused on
the screen before him.
"Why the delay?" They had already agreed to the basics of the
experiment days ago, when they had selected this system for the
trials. All that was missing was for Crichton to supply the
final equations that would determine the vectors used for the
test flight.
Equations that held the key to the experiment.
Crichton swiveled around in his chair, affecting a deliberately
casual pose. "Because I won't finish it until you agree to let
me fly the test."
"That is out of the question," Scorpius answered automatically.
"Why?"
"I should think the answer would be obvious." Was Crichton being
purposefully obtuse?
"What is the problem? The module isn't fast enough to outrun
your ships, and anyway, where could I run to?"
"And if you are successful in creating a wormhole?"
"Isn't that the point? Say I manage to create a wormhole. Even
if the module does go through it, you'll still have what you
want. You'll know exactly how I did it, and how to recreate the
phenomenon. If not, test is over, you bring me back on board,
and nothing has changed."
"Do you think the test will be successful?" Was this the reason
that Crichton had withheld the final equations? A last chance to
bargain, before he gave Scorpius the answers they both sought?
"No," Crichton said, shaking his head. "The simulation models
look good, but I think we're still missing something. That's why
I want to be there firsthand, to see for myself what we've got."
He had thought this a ploy, the latest attempt by Crichton to
win his freedom, but his truth sense told him Crichton did not
expect the test to succeed. And yet still the human bargained
for this opportunity.
He realized that a part of Crichton still needed to believe that
he was a pilot and explorer. He was not yet ready to accept that
his life, indeed everything that made him who he was, was now
under Scorpius's control. It was the same part of Crichton that
cherished the illusion that he might someday break free and
return to his homeworld.
Scorpius could afford to indulge his illusions, for they played
right into his hands. Crichton's foolish hopes fueled his
passionate drive to unlock the secret of wormhole technology,
for this was his only way home.
He would allow Crichton to fly the test in the module. Let him
think that he had gained a small victory, never realizing that
Scorpius had already defeated him in every way that mattered.
Scorpius turned his gaze to the woman who stood by his side at
the main console.
The technician nodded. "Sir, all stations report readiness,"
Chief Technician Finivar said. "Sensor platforms are in place,
and the observation craft have taken up their positions."
"We have full tracking telemetry on the module?" Scorpius asked.
"Yes, sir. And the command overrides have been tested and
verified," Chief Technician Finivar said, anticipating his next
question.
Scorpius looked at the view-screen which was displaying the
image of the Hecbal binary system. On the upper right of the
screen was the primary sun, an epsilon class yellow-orange star.
On the lower left was the second star, an ancient white dwarf.
In between them, a blinking red dot indicated the position of
Crichton's module near the barycenter, the point around which
the two stars orbited. The plan was to test the wormhole theory
by having Crichton fly a carefully calculated flight path
towards this gravitationally unique point, so he intersected the
point at the same time as the electromagnetic radiation wave.
If wormholes were indeed an electromagnetic phenomenon, as
Crichton theorized, the test should yield some interesting
results. Perhaps not an actual wormhole, but it would certainly
increase their understanding of the magnetic shear effects
associated with solar flares.
When Crichton had offered up this plan to test his theory, he
had pointed out that uninhabited binary star systems were
common, but solar flares were impossible to predict. Still he
reasoned that given enough time, probability dictated the
likelihood of a solar flare event.
Scorpius had surprised the human by suggesting that there was no
need to wait. A solar flare could be artificially induced, using
a nova-class bomb. Weapons that he had, in fact, already
obtained from the Peacekeeper supply base, anticipating their
need.
From there it had taken but a few days to select a suitable
system and design the test protocols.
Yesterday had been spent testing the nova-class bombs,
calculating the precise speed and impact vector needed to induce
a flare in the primary sun. After studying yesterday's test
results, this morning Crichton had suggested one minor
modification to the trajectory, which Scorpius had reviewed and
approved.
An unfortunate side-effect of this experiment was that Crichton
now knew enough about the design and capabilities of the
nova-class bombs to get them both executed. There was only one
penalty for sharing state secrets, and that was death. But it
was an acceptable risk, considering the end goal which he
pursued.
"You may begin," Scorpius said.
The chief technician began the countdown. "The test begins at
the mark, in five, four, three, two, one, execute."
Precisely on signal, the weapons drone launched the nova bomb
towards the primary sun.
"Impact in thirty microts," a technician announced.
Scorpius kept his eyes on the screen. As the bomb struck, there
was a bright flash, and then the sun began ejecting a stream of
bright yellow matter from the corona, just as it had in the
previous tests.
Only this time the ejection did not end in mere microts, instead
it continued, growing in size, as the faint ribbon of matter
became a stream.
"Oh dren," Crichton said, with remarkable calm. "Houston, we've
got a problem."
On the command carrier, alarms were beginning to sound.
"Sir, this appears to be an uncontrolled eruption," Chief
Technician Finivar said.
"I can see that," Scorpius snapped. The technical displays
confirmed what his eyes were telling him. This eruption was
already two orders of magnitude larger than in the earlier
tests, and it was continuing to grow.
"Crichton, abort and return now," Scorpius instructed, feeling
rising concern. How could this have happened?
"Way ahead of you, boss man," came Crichton's flippant reply.
"Time to get the hell out of here before we all get fried."
And indeed, Scorpius could see that the module was already
changing course, turning on a tight parabolic arc that would
bring the module back to the carrier at maximum velocity.
In the distance, the sun continued to erupt.
Scorpius rose from his seat, unable to stay still any longer.
"Prepare for maximum acceleration out of this system, once the
module is aboard," Scorpius instructed Lieutenant Braca. A solar
flare of this magnitude would destroy the sensor platforms, and
might well damage the scientific instruments on the command
carrier. Prudence dictated retreat.
"Hold on. Something is happening," Crichton said.
Scorpius looked back at the viewscreen. There, at the
barycenter, was a faint shimmer of light. Even as he gazed, it
coalesced into a ring shape, and then began to solidify.
"I don't believe it. He's done it. He's actually done it,"
Lieutenant Braca exclaimed.
They were witnessing the formation of a wormhole.
"Yes," Scorpius said. "But apparently it has missed your
attention that our prisoner has changed course and is using this
opportunity to try to escape."
Lieutenant Braca swallowed nervously.
"Crichton, return at once," Scorpius commanded.
Crichton made no move to comply. Instead he continued on his new
course, turning towards the phenomenon.
"There's something strange---" Crichton began.
Scorpius pressed the switch which controlled Crichton's collar.
"No!" Crichton protested, as the sedative was injected into his
bloodstream.
"Retrieve our errant scientist," Scorpius said. "Now."
"Yes, sir," Lieutenant Braca said.
Scorpius crossed back to the monitoring station. One screen
displayed telemetry from the module, showing that Crichton was
even now slipping into unconsciousness. The other screen
displayed the module's course and speed, which remained
constant.
"Stark?" Crichton whispered.
Scorpius's unease deepened. Crichton should not have been able
to speak. And why would he utter the name of his former
cellmate, someone Crichton's own memories told him was dead?
"The module is not responding to our overrides," the navigation
officer reported. "Radiation from the solar flare must be
interfering with our signal."
"Then try again. Find a way to boost the signal, and get that
module back," Scorpius ordered. His voice was cool, but there
was no mistaking the threat.
Around him, the technicians and officers worked frantically.
Only Chief Technician Finivar remained calm. "We've lost all
telemetry from the module, and are unable to contact the
prowlers. Sir."
Behind him, on the screen, the flare continued to grow.
"Hold on. Something is happening," Crichton said.
He raised his head and looked out the viewscreen toward the
barycenter. There he saw a faint glowing shimmer where reason
told him no light should be.
He eased back on the throttle and began to turn towards the
strange phenomenon.
"There's something strange---"
"Crichton, return at once," Scorpius commanded.
Crichton ignored him, intent on the phenomenon. Was that a ring
shape? Indeed it was, and even before his eyes it shifted in hue
from white to yellow to the dazzling blue that marked the
portion of a wormhole that could be perceived by the human eye.
He felt a sharp prick in his neck.
"No!" he objected, but it was already too late, as the drug took
control of him. He felt himself falling, falling endlessly into
the blackness that was softer than the star-filled skies.
As he tumbled down towards oblivion, he heard someone call his
name.
"Stark?" he whispered.
He could not see Stark, but he could feel his presence, in the
same way that you know the unseen hand on your shoulder belongs
to an old friend, even before you turn to look.
"John Crichton," came Stark's reply.
It was Stark. Strange. So this was what it was to be dead.
Somehow he had expected something else. He had always thought
that even if his death seemed instantaneous to observers, that
there would be a moment when he realized he was about to die. An
instant for him to accept the inevitable, before it occurred.
But he had made the transition without warning. Without
realizing the extent of his danger, until it was too late. He
did not even know how he had died. Or why he felt so strange, so
disconnected from everything. There was no grief, no anger, not
even sorrow. Just a passing thought on how odd it was that his
life had come to an end now, after everything else that he had
survived.
And the knowledge that Scorpius was going to be furious that
Crichton had finally found a way to escape him.
His mind began to drift.
"Crichton, you are not dead," Stark said. "You are still alive."
"Then why are you here?"
"I did not die. The Plokavians destroyed my body, but they could
not destroy my energy form."
"Really?"
"In this form I can speak only the truth," Stark said, and his
words carried the all the kindness that he had shown so long ago
when he tried to ease Crichton's pain during their imprisonment.
"I'm glad for you," Crichton said. "I never meant---"
When they were interrogated by the Plokavians he had tried to
protect Talyn with his testimony. Despite his weapons Talyn was
still very much a child, in need of protection and guidance. But
he had never meant for Stark to sacrifice himself to save them.
"I know," Stark said. "Be at peace with what happened, for I am
at peace now. Far more so than I was in my physical form, when I
still carried the hatred for the Peacekeepers within me."
"But where are we? And how can I be talking to you?"
"This is a moment outside of time," Stark said. "Without a
physical connection I could not reach your conscious mind, so I
had to wait until that moment when your mind was in transition
between the physical world and the dream world."
"I'm in a real jam. Scorpy's got me, and this time I don't think
I can break free," Crichton confessed.
"This, too, I know," Stark said. "And I know you feel helpless,
but I have come, with the help of the Ancients, to offer you a
choice."
"The Ancients?"
"As with my race, the Ancients also share a dual nature, able to
travel between the physical and the energy planes. I encountered
them soon after I made my transition."
"Did they play their games with you, too?" Crichton asked,
remembering his own encounter with the Ancients. The Ancients
had used him, making him believe he had returned to Earth, just
so they could use his mind to test the reactions of humans to
alien visitors. It had been a gut-wrenching experience, made all
the worse when he realized that none of it had been real. Not
Earth. Not his Dad. Nothing except himself and his friends from
Moya.
"The being I met was one who knew of you as well. He was
intrigued that I had encountered you, but dismayed to discover
that the knowledge they had gifted you with had made you a
target for imprisonment and torture."
Many times he had cursed the Ancients for implanting the
wormhole equations in his mind. And yet deep inside him, he knew
it had been meant as a kindness.
"No one expects the Spanish Inquisition," Crichton said, after a
long pause.
He felt Stark's puzzlement.
"Not their fault," Crichton elaborated. "If anyone is to blame,
it is Scorpius."
"John, you have a choice," Stark said. "You can leave this place
and return to your body. Your module will be picked up by the
command carrier, and all will be as before."
"And what's behind door number two?"
"The phenomenon you saw was the beginning of a wormhole
formation. An unstable wormhole, but one that may endure long
enough to let you leave this place."
There was an instant of impossible hope. "Will it take me home?
Back to Earth?"
"No. It is too unstable for that. It can only take you a short
distance, but that should be enough to escape Scorpius," Stark
answered.
Even as his hopes crashed, he told himself that he had known
that such a thing was impossible. If Stark had known a way to
send John home, he would have told him at once.
"The wormhole will take you away from here, to another part of
this galaxy. With luck, it may take you to a place where you
will find help," Stark said.
And if he was unlucky, it would land him into the vast emptiness
of space, where he would die a slow death as his life-support
systems failed.
"The decision is yours," Stark said. "I can make no promises.
Even the Ancients were not certain if the wormhole would be
stable enough for you to traverse it, or if it would break up
prematurely, destroying you and your module."
"It's time to roll the dice. Let's do it," Crichton said.
There was no hesitation in his reply. He might never have
another chance to escape Scorpius's control. It was worth any
risk.
"The Ancients have given me the navigational vectors you must
enter into your module's guidance system," Stark said.
"That's going to be a problem. When we leave here, my body is
going to be unconscious, isn't it?" Crichton asked.
"Normally, yes. But not if you keep your mind focused on the
link with me. Let me share your thoughts, and we can do this
together."
"Will I see you again?" Crichton asked.
"Who can tell what the future holds?"
There was one thing more he had to say, while he still could.
"Stark, whatever happens, thanks. You've been a good friend, and
I'm grateful."
"Your friendship saved my life," Stark said. "I will not forget
you, John Crichton."
His decision was made. It was time.
"I'm ready," Crichton said.
He looked deep within himself, emptying his mind of
distractions, banishing doubts and worries, until he found the
calm center as Zhaan had taught him to do. He held himself
suspended in that center for a moment, until he was joined by
the glowing luminescence that he remembered from his earlier
sharing with Stark.
Stark's spirit touched his, and then they merged, filling
Crichton with an energy that made him feel vibrantly alive, as
if every good part of him now shone brighter and truer.
And then he was falling again, into the blackness, his spirit
body replaced by leaden clay. His own will was insufficient, but
as he drew on Stark's power slowly he opened his eyes, and he
raised his right hand. It took both of their combined wills to
force his hand to type in the navigational commands.
He pressed execute, and the navigational system blinked green,
signifying it had accepted the course changes. There was a brief
moment of exhausted satisfaction, and then once more he was
alone, and falling into the darkness.
Into that darkness came a familiar voice.
"John, you can flee but you can not escape me. A part of you
will always be mine. Always," Scorpius promised.
And then the darkness devoured him and he knew no more.
As the module approached, the proto-wormhole began to collapse
in on itself, torn apart by the very gravitational forces that
had created it.
"No," Scorpius said. The wormhole was unstable. Surely Crichton
could see that. Entering the wormhole meant almost certain
death.
Perhaps that was what Crichton intended, for he showed no
hesitation in his flight path. Scorpius clenched his fists in
impotent rage as the module entered the wormhole and
disappeared.
Microts later, the first of the prowler escorts followed
Crichton into the wormhole. There was a brilliant flash of
light, and then the wormhole collapsed and disappeared.
There was a moment of absolute silence on the command carrier,
as the crew held their collective breaths, waiting to see how
Scorpius would react to the loss of his prize.
"The radiation wave will reach this ship in five hundred
microts," Chief Technician Finivar announced.
"Take the carrier out of this system, to deka point five range,"
Scorpius ordered. The powerful electromagnetic radiation wave
could well destroy the carrier's instruments, and all of the
data that they had just recorded. And he could not take that
risk.
Not now. Not when that data was all that he had left of the
experiment.
As the Hecbal system vanished in the distance, Scorpius turned
to Lieutenant Braca. "We will return to the system once the
flare event has subsided, to conduct further analysis. In the
meantime, you will send a message to all Peacekeeper bases and
commands. Instruct them to scan for the module's tracking
device, and to notify me at once if they receive the signal, or
a communication from the prowler's pilot."
"But sir, you can not believe Crichton survived?" Lieutenant
Braca asked. "We all saw the wormhole's implosion."
"I thought you would have learned by now not to underestimate
Commander Crichton," Scorpius replied, his voice soft with
menace. He had been merciful once before, when Braca had
underestimated Crichton's will to survive, and had let the human
escape from his grasp. The lieutenant should know better than to
expect a second reprieve.
Lieutenant Braca nodded jerkily. "Of course, sir. I will send
the message at once."
Scorpius returned to his seat, idly drumming his fingers on the
arm rest.
The failure was not Lieutenant Braca's alone. Scorpius, too, had
underestimated Crichton. Or, rather, he had not realized how
true Crichton remained to his original character. A scientist,
yes, but also an explorer. Crichton had said it himself. He was
an astronaut, accustomed to taking incredible risks in the
pursuit of knowledge. Even before the wormhole had appeared,
Crichton had chosen to stay and observe the phenomenon, despite
the evident danger.
He did not know how Crichton had managed to defeat the collar,
and remain conscious so he could continue to fly the module. Nor
did he know if this was a carefully planned scheme, or simply
Crichton taking advantage of the opportunity that he had been
presented with.
In the end, Crichton had chosen to trust in his luck. And he
would need luck, for the module had life support for only a few
days. Even if Crichton successfully traversed the wormhole and
managed to escape the pursuing prowler, he would have to exit
near a starship or planetary system, or he would not live to
enjoy his escape.
Deep inside, with a certainty that went beyond logic, Scorpius
knew that Crichton was alive, and that he would survive.
Somehow. Scorpius had faith in his prisoner's ingenuity, and in
the luck that had sustained him so far. Crichton may have
escaped his control, but it was a temporary setback. The
wormhole was too unstable to have carried the human far from
this region. Eventually he would be recaptured.
Then Scorpius would show Crichton that he was indeed nothing
more than Scorpius's possession, and that there would be no
escape for the human. Ever.
"Zhaan, come to the command deck. At once."
Even through the comm, Zhaan could sense D'Argo's anger.
"Of course," she responded. Despite her training, she felt her
pulse quicken with excitement as she realized that they must
have reached the Raisha system. The moment she had waited for
would soon be at hand.
As she reached command, she found D'Argo pacing back and forth.
He whirled around to face her.
"We have reached the Raisha system," D'Argo said. "Pilot tells
me there are no inhabitable planets here, no colonies of any
kind."
Zhaan nodded. "I did not expect there to be."
"Then why did you tell us there were Delvians here? Why bring us
to this place?" D'Argo demanded.
"A necessary deception," Zhaan answered coolly. "If I had given
you my reasons, you would not have come."
"What are you talking about? What's going on? I can't get a
straight answer out of Pilot," Chiana complained, slinking into
command with her customary feline grace.
"Zhaan lied to us. There are no Delvians here."
"Pilot, tell Moya we must remain within this solar system,"
Zhaan said.
Pilot's face appeared on the projection screen.
"Pilot, do no such thing," D'Argo said. "Zhaan has no right to
give orders."
"Not until you tell us what is going on," Chiana added. "Now
start talking."
Pilot looked unhappily from one to the other.
Why was it that she and Pilot were the only ones on this ship
who did not feel compelled to turn each simple request into a
battle of wills? They had no time for this. She could feel a
growing sense of urgency, a sense that was not wholly her own.
She strode across the deck until she stood toe to toe with
D'Argo, challenging him. "You will do this because I ask.
Because I insist. This is not my request, but Stark's."
D'Argo folded his arms across his chest. "Stark is dead."
"No. He continues to exist, although in a form that you can not
see. Stark told me we must bring Moya here and wait."
"Wait for what?" Chiana asked.
"Does it matter?" Zhaan replied. There was no use in trying to
explain. The others would not believe her. She could barely
believe it herself. There was still so much that could go wrong.
Yet even if there was only one chance in a thousand, they had to
try.
Zhaan kept her attention on D'Argo. It was him that she needed
to convince. Chiana would follow D'Argo's lead. "We will do this
thing, for a friend. You, of all people, owe Stark that much,"
Zhaan said.
D'Argo's face hardened at the mention of his debt to Stark.
"We will bide here for a standard solar day. There is no danger,
and it is a little enough to ask, in return for a life," Zhaan
said.
D'Argo gave an inarticulate growl. "I do not know what game you
are playing. But you are right. I owe Stark my life... and that
of my son. If you wish to collect the debt in his name, then so
be it. But in one solar day, we leave this system."
"Thank you," Zhaan said, inclining her head. She turned towards
Pilot's image. "Pilot, please ask Moya to transmit the signal
used to guide the return of her transport modules."
"But all her modules are here---" Pilot began.
"Pilot, please," Zhaan said, losing what little patience she had
left. Every moment spent arguing was a moment they could not
afford. Even now, Crichton might be trying to make his escape.
And there was a chance that the biomechanoid components he had
installed on his module would indeed resonate with Moya's
signal, as Stark had suggested, guiding him on his journey.
Pilot nodded, and she could see his arms moving at the controls.
"Moya has done as you asked," he said. "We have taken position
in orbit around the outermost planet, and have begun to transmit
the recall signal."
Zhaan felt a feather-light touch brush across her soul. "Now,"
Stark's voice whispered, and she could sense the enormous effort
it took for him to reach her. He must be very far away indeed.
Her preparations had been just in time.
Closing her eyes, she raised her palms upward and began to
chant.
"What is she doing now?" Chiana demanded.
"Praying," D'Argo said, his earlier wrath now fading to
puzzlement.
Zhaan focused inward, asking the Goddess to watch over Crichton
and to bring him safely to them.
Immersed in her devotions, she had no sense of time passing. It
might have been microts or arns later, when Pilot's voice broke
into her concentration.
"Moya senses a disturbance in this system," Pilot announced.
"The gravity fields are fluctuating."
Zhaan brought her palms together, and concluded her chant. "Show
us," she said.
The main viewscreen cleared, to show the star field. In the
center was a shimmering distortion, which widened into a vortex
of cerulean blue.
"What is that?" D'Argo asked.
"A wormhole," Zhaan announced. "And, if the Goddess is kind, it
may be Crichton."
"Crichton?" Chiana's voice squeaked. "Crichton's dead."
"No," Zhaan said firmly. "Crichton is still very much alive.
Stark told me that he would try to break free, and that this was
the place where he could be found."
"You are mad," D'Argo said.
Zhaan kept her eyes on the viewscreen, feeling her hopes fade as
the wormhole began to shrink. Then a white craft emerged. A
second craft, a Peacekeeper prowler by its sha
Part I
------
Part II
-------
Scorpius waited patiently for Crichton to awaken, his mind
turning over the knowledge he had gained when he accessed the
memories stored on the neuro-chip. Not that there had been time
to digest all of the information, indeed it would take many
weeks, for the neuro-chip had had months to access Crichton's
conscious thoughts and sensory input.
Part III
--------
Scorpius smiled. Crichton had taken the bait, as he had
expected. He had known that the human would be unable to resist
the lure of the knowledge that he had long sought. It had taken
five days for Crichton to give in to his curiosity, but once he
had accessed the technical station, he had proven insatiable. He
had been searching the star charts for over four arns now,
apparently matching the information within to his memories of
his travels through the Uncharted Territories. Each command,
every notation he entered was echoed on a station on Scorpius's
command deck, and recorded for later analysis.
John heard the familiar click, and looked up from the console as
the door opened, and Scorpius appeared.
Part IV
-------
Two days later, Crichton surprised him by announcing that he had
finished his analysis of the data from the Dam-Ba-Da experiment.
He was not surprised by the speed, after all the analysis had
not been particularly complex. But he had expected that the
human would try to delay as long as possible before fulfilling
his end of their bargain.
On Moya the celebration had been going on for several arns when
Pa'u Zhaan rose from her seat. "I will leave you now," she said.
Part V
------
As Scorpius strode into the command center, the technicians and
duty officers straightened to rigid attention. A
well-disciplined crew under Captain Crais, they had learned even
greater discipline and efficiency under their new commander.
Each person aboard this vessel understood that there was no room
for failure or error.
Part VI
-------
"The command carrier has arrived in the Hecbal system," Scorpius
announced, as he entered Crichton's quarters. "Is the test plan
finished?"
"Okay, I'm in position," Crichton's voice announced over the
communicator. "Ready to initiate test sequence on your mark."
Crichton's fingers danced on the navigation keypad as he entered
the course change. With his left hand he pushed forward on the
throttle, increasing acceleration. His right hand reached for
the toggles that would turn on the auxiliary boosters. But his
hand froze, as his eyes swept over the instrument panel. The
readings were crazy, in some cases off the charts, and in other
cases cycling wildly.
The crew of the command carrier continued their frantic efforts,
but Scorpius knew with chilling certainty that it was already
too late, as Crichton's module changed course, and accelerated
towards the wormhole. Impossible. Crichton should have been
unconscious. And yet somehow he had defeated the collar and the
drugs. Somehow, he was still flying that craft, aiming it
directly into the wormhole.
Part VII
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