George R. R. Martin - A Peripheral Affair

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A Peripheral Affair
George R. R. Martin
Copyright ©1973 by George R. R. Martin
First published in the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, January 1973
Out on the periphery, where the human worlds grew few and far between, a spider's
web stretched between the stars.
It was an old web, its strands heavy with stardust. The spiders that patrolled it were
fat and rusty, and it had been nearly fifty years since last a fly was snared. But still the
web endured, though it had long outlived its purpose.
The worlds the web entwined still bore witness to that purpose, still wore the
radioactive scars that told of the ancient struggle that had seared through the
Periphery. It had been there, a century earlier, that the expanding globe of the Allied
Starsuns of Terra had first come into contact with the rival empire that called itself the
KwanDellan BrotherWorlds. It had been there that the long, bitter KwanDellan War
had been fought—to no conclusion.
The web had been spun in the uneasy armed peace that came in the wake of that war.
Amid a chaotic jumble of Alliance worlds and independent colonies and the home
planets of a dozen alien species, the starspiders wove a complex network to catch
KwanDellan flies.
The web spinners were the scouts, the swift, lightly armed three-man scouts. They
were the smallest starships of all. But they were not small. Each was a quarter-mile
long, its decks crammed with sophisticated sensing equipment. In the early days,
more than 200 of them prowled the Periphery.
The spiders were the heavier ships, the cruisers and the battlewagons and the
dreadnoughts. They were far fewer in number, but they carried the sting. Should a
KwanDellan warship venture into the starweb, it would be they who caught and slew
it.
But, for fifty years, there had been no warships to slay.
The hostile peace had lasted only a decade. There are many directions in space, and
the region called the Periphery was just one frontier. Both Alliance and
BrotherWorlds found easier expansion elsewhere.
Trade began as hostility waned. Human and KwanDellan discovered that they had a
lot in common and that each had things the other wanted. A profitable business
relationship ripened into friendship.
And meanwhile, in other sectors, new wars diverted Earth's attention.
The KwanDellans abandoned their own patrol web as soon as it was no longer
needed. But human institutions are not so easily dismantled. The Periphery Defense
Force remained. But it decayed.
Some ships were transferred away to fight in newer wars. Others were
decommissioned and never replaced. Only a trickle of new ships were sent out to the
Periphery to aid the aging starspiders.
The Periphery became a backwater. It remained a turbulent border region where a
dozen species met and mingled and fleets of merchantmen plied their trade. But no
longer was it the front lines. The explorers and the adventurers had moved on to
greener planets and blacker skies.
And then one day a light flashed red at Alliance Sector Headquarters on New
Victory. Somewhere out between the stars one of the strands in the web had broken.
Or so it seemed. * * * *
The monitor room was large and circular, and the holomap in its center was a pit of
darkness. From the command catwalk built around the room the men on duty could
look down into a mock void where the stars of the Periphery glittered in miniature,
and smaller green pinpoints of light scuttled endlessly. The monitor panels
themselves lined the walls up on the catwalk; banks of gleaming duralloy and steady
green lights.
But now one light had gone red, and one of the pinpoints had blinked out down in the
holomap.
Fleet Admiral Jefferson Mandel, the sector commandant, was notified at once, and he
strode onto the catwalk almost eagerly. He was a short, bull-like man, with narrow
dark eyes and a shining bald head. A row of multicolored ribbons danced on the chest
of his dull black uniform while the silver galaxies of his rank spiraled on his
shoulders.
His mouth was set grimly when he located the lieutenant in charge of the monitor
room. “What is it?” he snapped.
“It's a red light, sir,” the lieutenant replied. He pointed.
Admiral Mandel looked at him sternly. “I realize that, Lieutenant. What does it
mean?”
The lieutenant shrugged. “It probably means the monitor computer is out of order.
We're checking that now.”
Mandel looked displeased at that. He glared at the red light, glared at the lieutenant,
and put his hands on his hips. “Let's assume the computer is functioning properly. In
that case, what does this red light mean?”
“In that case, sir, one of our scouts has been destroyed,” the lieutenant answered
calmly. “But that's hardly very likely.”
“I'll be the judge of that,” Mandel said. “Is there anything else that could account for
this? Besides a malfunction, that is.”
“No, sir,” the lieutenant replied. “Not to my knowledge. The computer on every one
of our starships is in constant linkage with our monitor computer here by subspace
radio; so we know the location of each ship at all times. When a light goes red here, it
means one of our ships has stopped signaling.”
Mandel nodded. “Nothing else that could stop the signal besides an attack on the
ship?”
“An attack wouldn't stop the signal,” the lieutenant said. “Nothing short of total
destruction would. The ship's computer is in the heart of a starship, heavily armored
by duralloy plates and shielded by special force screens. Even the crew would have
difficulty getting at it. And there are two independent backups in case of malfunction.
“No, sir,” he concluded, shaking his head. “A ship's computer will continue to
function and to signal as long as that ship is intact.”
Mandel looked over at the red light again. “Then it's war,” he said savagely.
The lieutenant looked aghast. “Sir!” he protested. “It's not—I mean—we don't—you
can't—”
“Spit it out, Lieutenant,” the admiral said sternly.
The lieutenant pulled himself together. “There's no cause to talk about war, sir. It
can't be a KwanDellan attack. It can't be. We've been at peace with the KwanDellans
for fifty years, sir. They'd have no reason to attack our ships. Besides, these scouts
have elaborate sensors. That's why they're out there. If a KwanDellan fleet—orany
kind of unauthorized vessel—had been detected, the crew would have plenty of time
to notify us. All we have here is a signal suddenly cut off. Probably a flaw in the
monitor computer or the monitor panel itself. We're checking that, sir.”
“You're naive, Lieutenant,” the admiral said. “You haven't seen war. I have. Maybe
these KwanDellans disguised their ship as a friendly merchantman until they got in
range. Or maybe they've discovered a new gimmick to blank our sensors. All sorts of
possibilities, Lieutenant. And this incident stinks of KwanDellan treachery. Those
bastards have never forgotten the licking we gave them, you know.”
The lieutenant's mouth was hanging slightly open. “But—but, even so, sir, it might
have been some sort of accident. An explosion in the warpdrives, or something. Or
maybe the attacker wasn't a KwanDellan. If there was an attacker.”
Mandel considered that. “Hmmmph,” he said. “We'll be playing right into
KwanDellan hands, but I suppose we had better check thoroughly first, before
mobilizing.”
“Yes, sir,” the lieutenant said smartly, looking enormously relieved. He glanced over
the catwalk railing, down at the holomap. “We can get a couple of scouts to the last
location of the missing craft in an hour, sir.”
“Scouts! Nonsense. The fleet is badly understrength as is, and I can't afford to lose
any more ships if the attackers are still lurking out there. Let's send something that
can fight back, Lieutenant. Something with a little firepower, like a battlewagon. Or
even a dreadnought. Yes, a dreadnought.”
The lieutenant studied the holomap again, his trained eyes making sense out of the
tiny dancing lights with practiced ease. “The Durandal is at Last Landing, sir. And
the Mjolnir is off Duncan's World. We can get either there in a day.”
“Good,” Mandel said. “Beam the Mjolnir . Give Garris a man-sized assignment for a
change. Tell him to use all possible haste. And until we get his report, I want this
place on full battle alert. The KwanDellan might be closing on New Victory even
now.” * * * *
In a small conference room on the Alliance Starship Mjolnir , First Officer Lyle
Richey handed his captain a thick sheaf of papers. “The reports you wanted, sir.”
Captain John Garris accepted the papers and motioned his stocky, gray-haired
second-in-command to a seat. Garris was the younger man of the two, tall and lean
with gray eyes and thin lips and jet-dark hair cropped in a military crew cut.
He looked very unhappy at present. “Anything in here I should bother to read?” he
asked Richey when the first officer was seated.
“Not much,” Richey replied with a half shrug. “The missing ship was named the
Defiance . Standard scoutship in all respects. It was new, though. One of the newest
ships in the Periphery. That's unusual, but it doesn't explain anything. It makes
instrument malfunction even less likely.”
“Any experimental equipment aboard?” Garris asked.
“None,” said Richey. “There is one thing, though. I don't know what it means, but it's
something.”
“Go ahead,” Garris said.
Richey hesitated. “The ship was undermanned. These scouts are all designed to
operate with three-man crews. They use eight-hour shifts; so in theory someone is
always on duty. But most of the scouts out here on the Periphery have been running
on two-man crews for years. We're just not getting the manpower we request, and the
ship's computer takes care of most of the routine anyway.
“But this ship—this ship was even more undermanned than usual. Less than a week
or so ago, one of its two crewmen got sick. He was detached when the scout neared
Last Landing, and the ship was ordered to complete its patrol sweep with only one
man, until a replacement could be assigned.”
Garris leaned back in his swivel seat and considered that, looking thoughtful. “You're
right,” he said finally. “It's something, but it doesn't provide any answers. And there
are an awful lot of questions.”
He began to tick off questions on his fingers. “Number one,” he said, “—if the scout
was attacked, why didn't the crew report it? The computer would have detected an
attacker. Number two—why didn't they, or he, or whatever, run away? A scout is
faster than any warship. Number three—why would anyone attack a single scoutship
anyway? To save a war fleet from detection? But they'd have to knock out more than
one ship for that. Number four—if it was an attack, who did it? The KwanDellan? But
why? That doesn't make sense. Number five—if it wasn't an attack, why did the ship
stop signaling? What else could possibly destroy an armed and shielded starship in
deep space? Number six—”
“Enough,” Richey interrupted, scowling. “I see what you mean. A lot doesn't fit
together.”
Garris nodded. “Admiral Mandel has a theory,” he said, but his expression made it
perfectly clear what he thought of the admiral's theory. “He thinks the KwanDellan
hailed our ship openly, acted friendly, and then crept up into range and attacked. That
answers some questions—like why the crew didn't run or call. But it doesn't explain
the motivation for the attack. And theories that explain that don't explain the other
things.” He frowned.
After a pause, the captain leaned forward again, and flipped through the papers until
he found the crew roster. “Which one of these men was aboard?” he asked.
“Hollander,” Richey replied. “Craig Hollander, junior crewman.”
“Request a facsimile of the file on the man,” Garris ordered. “Maybe that will tell us
something. And have someone locate his next of kin and inform them that he's
missing.”
The first officer nodded, rose, and saluted briskly. After he had left, Garris continued
to turn the puzzle over in his mind.
The captain knew full well what Mandel expected him to find—evidence of a
KwanDellan attack. Nothing would please the admiral more. It was common
knowledge around the fleet that Mandel was an aging incompetent who had been sent
to the Periphery to keep him out of the way. But a war—with him in the front lines—
might wipe out some of the admiral's past mistakes and catapult him back into Earth's
good graces.
Garris, on the other hand, didn't need a war. He was already indecently young to be
wearing a captain's star clusters. And the Mjolnir , although a battle-scarred relic, was
still a dreadnought, with awesome firepower and a crew of more than a hundred.
Every captain in the fleet who didn't command a dreadnought wanted to—and Garris
already had one. The Periphery wasn't exile for him. It was another step on the way
up.
But there were still things in his way. Like Mandel, who despised him for his youth
and his success and was doing everything in his power to block Garris’ further
advancement.
If he could crack this thing—and crack it in a way that made the admiral look
foolish—it could only help, Garris figured. Mandel would probably be sent off to still
more distant exile. And he, Garris, would get a promotion. Perhaps a transfer to one
of the new dreadnoughts, engaging in real exploration.
The captain smiled faintly and began to pore over the papers that Richey had left.
This was too good an opportunity to pass up.
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APeripheralAffairGeorgeR.R.MartinCopyright©1973byGeorgeR.R.MartinFirstpublishedintheMagazineofFantas...
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