Read The Mystery of the Solar Wind Page 11


  ~

  Federi looked up from the console. In the door to the bridge hung a worried little redhead.

  “You okay, Federi?”

  The gypsy laughed.

  “Fine, Paean. Except that Captain’s making us sail into a – oh, hell’s gadgets, it’s fine! We’ll be fine. Federi’s an old coward, that’s all! Anna bottle…”

  “Coffee for you?”

  Federi smiled broadly. “Now that’s going to make all the difference,” he stated. “Thanks, little carer!”

  “Any day,” said Paean and handed him his steaming mug. “Got any decks for me to scrub?”

  What? With death hanging over all their heads? He didn’t think so!

  “Funny thing that,” he said, then trailed off. He could see how she’d had a lot of friends in Milly-Molly-Mandy street. Anyone who cared for their friends like this, had friends. He frowned. It made no sense. This was her true nature, he sensed it. Whatever she had done that was weighing on her like that – it had been a fluke, a mistake. When Captain decided to drill down to the truth – he’d be there protecting her, he decided. And he glanced at her hands.

  The skin was abraded away right up to the elbows from scrubbing. He knew he’d been giving her a lot of decks to wash, and she’d taken on extra heads-scrubbing duty for reasons only she understood, but this... it was something else. He locked the steering and grabbed her hands to take a closer look. And observed how she shrank away, her breath hissing between her teeth as she inhaled sharply.

  All that blood...

  “Got to get that seen to, shey,” he said. “Put something on it. Captain will think Federi’s working you to death. Wait...” He dug in his pockets and unearthed a small flat tin, and slid its lid open. There was something grey and greasy-looking inside. He picked out a gob of the stuff and slapped it on the back of her left hand.

  “What’s that?” she asked doubtfully as she spread it over her abused skin.

  Federi hesitated. “Neomer polycarbon thixotropalene.”

  She gawped. “What?”

  “Motor grease,” he grinned and pressed the tin into her hands. “What! You expect me to carry medical supplies in my pockets?”

  She stared at her hands in horror.

  “It works.” provided the gypsy. “Keep it, I can get more from the machine room.”

  Paean pulled a face, but obediently spread the dreadful stuff over her hands and forearms. Federi was right; people would notice. Good that he only thought it was from washing the dishes. She glanced uncertainly at his face and caught him staring moodily into the dark beyond the bridge.

  “Doesn’t matter anyway,” he muttered.

  “What?” asked Paean.

  Federi scowled. He’d seen it before. But by now it really was irrelevant. They’d die in Hamilton, regardless what she was guilty of. Those stabs in the harbour...

  Did she sense about the horror he had found in the machine room of the Hun? How could she sense, he thought. And about the irony of Captain being prepared to rescue his arch-enemy… sail right into the death trap that was Hamilton! With all his crew.

  “Störtebeker,” he said.

  “Pardon?”

  “Pirate called Störtebeker. You should ask Sherman about him. Federi can’t tell a story quite the same.”

  “Tell me anyway,” pushed Paean, still rubbing at the synthetic compounding lubri-squatch he’d made her put on her hands.

  “Aw, alright. Störtebeker must have been a bit like Captain. This is long ago. In the days before mineral fuels. He and his whole crew got captured by the law, and of course piracy carried the death penalty even then. So Störtebeker negotiated with the government that all of his sailors could go free past whom he could walk after he was dead.”

  “That’s dumb,” commented Paean.

  “Wait for it,” said the Tzigan. “I said I can’t tell it like Sherman! So they line up his crew and chop off his head. Paean, atenţie! He walked past his entire crew with his head chopped off. All of them! Before his dead corpse fell to the ground.”

  “Whoa!” commented Paean disbelievingly.

  “Is true,” said Federi. “Was a historical figure. Go look it up in the Sher…” He sighed impatiently and stared out to sea. “Go to sleep!”

  Paean gaped at him in shock, then she shrugged and left the bridge. Federi glared at the sea some more. In his mind’s eye he saw Captain walking past the Solar Wind’s crew with his head chopped off. Aw hell… and now he’d snubbed the little mockingbird! For what?

 

  The next morning dawned bright and blue. Another borrowed day, thought Paean as she got out of her bunk, today amazingly without a headache. Maybe they’d make it through to Hawaii, if they could just keep it quiet, like now. Definitely if she was allowed to knock the Unicate one on the noggin, like yesterday! She peered through the porthole.

  Suddenly she felt observed. She turned and glared at the electronic eye in the top corner of her cabin. Federi was right: The darned ship was studded with them! There was no cabin without closed-circuit camera. Couldn’t even change a T-shirt!

  Paean padded the few paces to the Solar Wind’s infirmary in her pyjamas and raided the First Aid Box. She returned to her cabin and pasted a plaster over the electronic eye.

  “Nobody watches Paean Donegal change!” she muttered through clenched teeth.

  Shawn’s optimistic tunes carried down from the Crow’s Nest. Captain’s orders were that he stay up there a lot, and definitely with every landing or sighting of a ship; because of his acute gift for being observant. Federi stared glumly up at the boy. No amount of observance was going to change their fate today. He climbed into the rigging with another of Captain’s nonsensical orders. The warm breeze was blowing, it was promising to be a marvellous day. It was hard to be morose in such gorgeous weather; impossible to be upbeat in the face of what waited for them in Hamilton. They had been towing the Hun for ten hours now, and another four lay ahead. Four more hours of being alive. Federi had no illusions as to what the Unicate would do to them. And no matter how he turned it, there was no getting away out of that spider’s nest. What he needed most now, was a paranormal phenomenon rescuing them. His eyes had acquired an insane glitter.

  “Get down on the deck, Donegal,” the gypsy ordered with a mirthless grin. “Captain wants a Ceilidh. I’ll put Rhine Gold on the lookout. Anna potato.”

  “Sure,” smiled Shawn.

  Federi climbed down, black eyes darting across the deck. He still had to organize the pasting of the false name on the Solar Wind’s hull. Marsden had taken care of the programming of the false identity. The gypsy took in the blue sky, the turquoise sea. A beautiful day to die! Hells and jingles! He’d remember it all his – er… What had got into him to take the Captain up on this challenge? He had to be crazy. His business was to survive!

 

  Anya Miller had arrived at some sort of strategy. All was not lost. After all, she was bringing the pirate into port! It didn’t matter who towed whom, in the big picture. The Solar Wind had spotted the Stab craft in the harbour, the first time. She knew this from the reports of the ship turning away. Clearly though, Lascek wasn’t aware of the wider net of Pursuers stationed around the islands. Bit of a challenge that she could not contact her lieutenants yet and prepare them. She’d have to act fast, once in the harbour. Doubtlessly Lascek would put her ashore and turn tail right away.

  Contagious Irish reels and airs carried over to the Hun, where some of her marines uttered wistfully that they would like to have a party too.

  “Any of you who wishes to be on the pirate ship can go,” said Captain Miller.

  “Really, Captain?”

  “And when I turn them all in, in Hamilton, you can be judged as renegades and buccaneers too!”