as a benevolent bunch. But man, these dolphins are ruthless⦠Letâs see, what else belongs in this geography lesson? Atlanta is a city of bandits, mostly copter-pirates, an organized hierarchy of thieves preying on trade routes between city-states...â
âNever mind. Christ, Iâve heard enough,â Fuller protested. âHow much farther to this palace?â
Ben turned to Fuller in alarm. âI thought you were flying this thing.â
Fuller laughed sourly. âDo you imagine he would leave anything like this up to chance? The navigator is pre-programmed. I activate the nulgrav lift, the navigator takes us there, and back when weâre done. No stops between.â
âWho is he? What does he actually intend to do with this exciter thing?â
âDonât try to pump me, Rackey. Just do your job. It doesnât matter what his plans are. You can go back to retirement after this job. âTil he needs you again.â He took a vial out of a jacket pocket, and sniffed something from it, then put it back, zipping the pocket shut. âWhy did you retire, anyway?â
âDonât try to pump me, Fuller,â Ben replied, grinning. But Fullerâs question triggered recollections. He had tried not to think about his reasons for retiring. But the reasons were there, as stark and as ugly as vultures on a telephone line: He was losing control of his talent. Heâd find himself practicing incitement, all the skills Old Thorn had taught him, even when he wasnât being paid. He found himself promoting needless fights, seeding contentionsâalways operating beneath a skillfully contrived camouflage of dissembling, always apparently innocent. He was doing it simply for enjoyment, to relieve his own boredom. And he lost his few friends and his lovers. It was when Ella left him-- he knew he had to quit. He made other excuses to himselfâthe mounting risk that he would be discoveredâbut part of him had known. He had turned his power against his own life.
Let this be the last time , he said to himself, and it was the closest heâd ever come to a prayer.
Something glistened among the stars, something growing and pulsing. âThe Chaldin Palace,â Ben announced. âDirectly ahead.â Like a coral tracery of crystalline arteries, blooming and enfolding itself, contracting, and blooming again, the forever-revel hung uneasily against the impartial backdrop of the blue-black desert sky. âThe palace itself,â Ben explained, âis the cylinder inside the tube ways.â
It was a thousand yards by three hundred of rotating linkage in plasteel, flexibly jointed at every level; it moved like a snake in its lair through intertwining arteries. The tubeways were transparent, luminous plasglass and the whole affair was supported by monopole gravitational modifiers. Commonly called nulgrav.
Fuller laughed. âThat thingâ¦thatâs a palace? Looks like a subway going full-speed through see-through tunnels--tied in a knot!â
The other three had come from aft and were watching over Benâs shoulder. âLooks like a roller coaster,â the skull-faced man said.
Roller-coastering through transparent passageways, the palace was driven by air pressure, following a course dictated by the ever-shifting sculpture of the tubeways. It was a flying flexible tower mingled with a dragon shape. The worm Oroboros, Ben thought. âThe passengers are protected from the inertia--gotta be, that thing is moving inside the tubes at three hundred miles an hour. Clusters of nulgrav nodes. Itâs a real art to place them. Some of the gravitational increase from acceleration is released to give the passengers a sense of up and down, relative to floors.â
âSatanâs fucktool,â Fuller swore. âI hope we get out of it as easily as we get in. He told me how weâll do it, more or less. But he didnât explain why it