
Back then, Keith had called the whole thing magic. After all, it had
taken all of Earth's resources twenty years earlier to establish the New
Beijing colony on Tau Ceti 1, just 11.8 light-years from Sol, and New
New York on Epsilon Indi III, only 11.2 light-years away. But now
humans routinely popped from one side of the galaxy to the other.
And not just humans. Although the shortcut builders had never been
found, there were other forms of intelligent life in the Milky Way,
including the Waldahudin and the Ibs, who, together with Earth's humans
and dolphins, had established the Commonwealth of Planets eleven years
ago.
Keith 's pod reached the edge of docking bay twelve and moved out into
space. The pod was a transparent bubble, designed to keep one person
alive for a couple of hours.
Around its equator was a thick white band containing life-support
equipment and maneuvering thrusters. Keith turned and looked back at
the mothership he was leaving behind.
The docking bay was on the rim of Starplex's great central disk As the
podpulled farther away, Keith could see the interlocking
triangularhabitat modules, four on top and four more on the bottom.
Christ, thought Keith as he looked at his ship. Jesus Christ. The
windows in the four lower habitat modules were all dark. The central
disk was crisscrossed with hairline laser scorches.
As his pod moved downward, he saw stars through the gaping circular hole
in the disk where a cylinder ten decks thick had been carved out of it.
Hell to pay, thought Keith again. Bloody hell to pay.
He turned around and looked forward, out the curving bubble. He'd long
ago given up scanning the heavens for any sign of a shortcut. They were
invisible, infinitesimal points until something touched them, --he
glanced at his console--as his pod was going to do in forty seconds. Then
they swelled up to swallow whatever was coming through.
He'd be on Grand Central for perhaps eight hours, long enough to report
to Premier Petra Kenyatta about the attack on Starplex. Then he'd pop
back here. Hopefully by that time, Jag and Longbottle would have news
about the other big problem they were facing.
The pod's maneuvering thrusters fired in a complex pattern. To exit the
network back at Tau Ceti, he'd have to enter the local shortcut from
above and behind. The stars moved as the pod modified its course to the
proper angle, and then---and then it touched the point. Through the
transparent hull, Keith saw the fiery purple discontinuity between the
two sectors of space pass over the pod, mismatched star-fields fore and
aft. To the rear, the eerie green light of the region he was leaving,
and up ahead, pink nebulosity--Nebulosity?
That can't be right. Not at Tau Ceti.
But as the pod completed its passage, there could be no doubt: he'd come
out at the wrong place. A beautiful rose-colored nebula, like a splayed
six-fingered hand, covered four degrees of sky. Keith wheeled around,
looking out in all directions. He knew well the constellations visible
from Tau Ceti --slightly skewed versions of the same ones seen from