
skilled pilot working alone. But the ship served its human masters most precisely and reliably when it was
operated by a crew of six, who could divide its several functions efficiently among them. The five crew
stations other than the pilot's, all separated in different parts of the ship, were now filled with Domingo's
friends and fellow colonists. He congratulated himself, as the voyage of the relief force got under way,
that days ago, even with wedding preparations and mayoral duties competing for his attention, he had
made himself take time over the final selection of the crew for his new ship and for a couple of
test-and-training flights.
Domingo himself now held the helm. He was sitting in his armored chamber near the center of the ship,
still wearing some of the good clothes he had put on for his daughter's wedding. On his forehead rested
the spacecraft commander's mindlink control band; it was a physically light weight, but he well knew that
it could be as heavy as any crown.
Without moving a finger or even blinking an eyelid, the captain personally held thePearl on what he
considered her best course for Liaoning—close to, but not identical with, the best course as
simultaneously calculated by the ship's computer. He still considered the human brain, particularly his
own, superior to hardware at the most difficult parts of the incredibly complex task. There was some
feedback from the equipment to the optic centers of the brain, making the control a partly visual process,
trickily akin to imagination— inexperienced pilots often got into trouble imagining that there was no
difference.
The autopilot, teamed with the ship's computer, might have managed to conduct the flight just as
well—or almost as well—as he could, but right now the captain preferred to drive his new ship himself.
ThePearl boasted new engines and improved protective fields—at this speed inside the nebula you
needed protection against collisions with mere molecules, there were so many of them. Domingo might
have raced well ahead of the five other ships in his small squadron, but he did not. Urgent as was the
need for speed, he calculated that it was a still more urgent need that his force stay together in the face of
a certainly formidable and possibly superior enemy.
Leviathan. The captain had a personal score to settle with that particular legendary foe—whether or not
it made sense to feel a personal enmity toward a machine. But he couldn't be certain that he was going to
encounter Leviathan this time. All he could really be sure of was that he was leading his people against
berserkers.
The berserkers were robotic relics of some interstellar war that had been fought long before the
beginning of written history on Earth. They were, in their prime form, vast inanimate spacegoing
fortresses, moving lifelessly across the Galaxy in obedience to their fundamental programming command
that all the life they could find must be destroyed. In all the centuries of expansion of Earth-descended
humanity among the stars, berserkers were by far the greatest peril that they had encountered.
Still without stirring himself physically, Domingo could have called up on any of several screens or stages
the image of whitespace whipping by outside. But after making the checklist test of that function shortly
after launching, he forebore to use it. Instead, during the first hour of the flight, Domingo called up human
faces, those of his fellow colonists aboard the other ships, coming and going on his screens and stages. In
this way he held conversation fairly steadily with the other units of the relief squadron. There were five
other ships in all, including the craft commanded by Gujar Sidoruk, and Niles Domingo, as commander
of the relief force, wanted to make sure that when the combat zone was reached they would all continue
to follow his orders.
That willingness established to his satisfaction, as well as it could be before the fact, he ordered intership
conversation to be broken off and imposed complete radio silence.
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