But she could see the skyline of Vadam now, and there was smoke. The assault seemed to have started in earnest.
‘Telcam took a cal on the bridge and listened careful y. Raia caught snatches of the conversation and could only guess what might be happening at the other end.
“Can you understand me?” He paused and nodded. “Yes, I can hear you. He’s safe and I’ve secured him in the temple, under guard … I see, but why was that necessary?” He paused again, looking irritated. “Let us both hope the Arbiter knows nothing of our arrangement. Can I count on you?”
Whatever answer he received seemed to reassure him. “Very wel .” He looked irritated for a moment, then picked up another communications handset and barked at someone. “Olar? The scholar’s escorts have come for him. Let them take him so that we avoid inconvenient retaliation from Earth if anything goes wrong. Do you understand? Try to show restraint.”
That meant nothing to Raia. Earth? How could humans retaliate? What had this war to do with them anyway? She was trying to work that out when a bril iant flash of white light blinded her for a few moments. A huge roar of approval went up on the bridge. When her vision cleared, she could see what had raised everyone’s spirits. Two ships were flying slowly across the city, firing blue-white bolts on the buildings below. Whoever was down there returned fire, spitting burning arcs into the sky, but the ships continued their barrage.
A slim spire next to the river took a direct hit and crumbled in slow motion, col apsing a layer at a time into the water below. More smoke had appeared on the skyline, reaching up to the clouds as if someone had thrown down a coil of dirty rope from the heavens. The Arbiter was under attack.
This was what Jul had wanted. Raia hoped that wherever he was, he would think it was worth the price.
“Take us in closer, Buran, and target Vadam keep,” ‘Telcam said. “But nobody is to cause damage to Forerunner relics, even indirectly.”
Buran and a few of the other males turned to look at the monk in badly disguised disbelief.
“That might not be possible, brother,” Buran said. “And what if ‘Vadam’s forces shelter in them?”
“Then we must find another way,” ‘Telcam said. “Because the gods are our reason for fighting.”
CHAPTER FIVE
YOU CAN WIN WARS ANY NUMBER OF WAYS. YOU CAN CARPET BOMB, OR SEND IN GROUND TROOPS, OR SHELL A CITY, OR DETONATE A NUKE. YOU CAN LAY SIEGE, CUT OFF WATER AND POWER, OR BLOCKADE THEIR PORTS. BUT THERE’S ONE UNIVERSAL ACHILLES’ HEEL THAT EVERY ORGANISM HAS. IF THEY CAN’T GROW FOOD, OR CAN’T EAT WHAT THEY’VE GOT, THEY DIE. IT BEATS A SHOOTING WAR.
(DR. IRENA MAGNUSSON, ONI RESEARCH FACILITY TREVELYAN)
TEMPLE OF THE ABIDING TRUTH, ONTOM “I’l be gone for a few hours,” Phil ips said to Olar. He’d stuffed what he could into a bundle made from a knotted tunic and half-draped his jacket over it in case the Sangheili started asking awkward questions. “I’ve helped myself to some rations. I won’t get lost.”
Olar seemed more interested in what was happening outside. A couple of his comrades came running back shouting that more armed Brutes had landed and that there was a stand-off in the plaza.
“Those tunnels run for many, many spans, right across the island,” he said, not paying attention. “It’s a labyrinth. Don’t expect me to come and rescue you. And don’t go down the wal ed-off tunnels. It’s dangerous.”
Dangerous. Right. There was a firefight going on outside and the coup had started. Phil ips thought an unstable tunnel was probably the least of his problems. “I’l be careful,” he said. He headed into the network of passages again, confident that he knew the route to the farthest point he’d mapped and that he could find his way back here. “Don’t worry about me.”
So the passages run for kilometers, do they? Well, there’s definitely got to be a back door or two, then.
He ran his fingertips along the wal as he walked, feeling for the weird barrier that covered some of the cartouches. Perhaps they weren’t safety covers at al . Maybe this was a museum and always had been, and the barriers were there to stop sticky fingers from messing up the ancient exhibits. But that didn’t mean they were useless. There was information on them, and al information was valuable sooner or later.
He kept walking and sniffed the air from time to time. There was no mustiness, no dampness, nothing at al to indicate that he was a long way underground and getting farther from the entrance with every step. Now he’d been walking for about thirty minutes, and he couldn’t hear a damn thing other than his own breathing. He would have kept on walking but BB stopped him.
“This is an area we haven’t catalogued, Professor,” the not-quite-BB said. “I’l start recording.”
Phil ips cast around. It was al starting to look the same to him, a monotonous perfection of cream and taupe stonework, punctuated by crisply carved symbols every few meters and the string of scruffy lights. He looked at his datapad again: left, left, right, straight ahead, left. He made sure he was recording everything by hand, not just relying on BB, if this husk of the AI could be relied upon at al . He found himself starting to treat BB like a senile relative.
“Adj would probably be able to read al this,” Phil ips said, just by way of conversation.
“Who’s Adj?”
Oh, damn. He’s erased data that could compromise us. Yeah, we didn’t want the Sangheili to know we hijacked their Engineer. “Never mind.
Just someone I knew.”
“Dr. Halsey has made some errors in her translations, I believe, but I’m correcting them.”
“Can’t wait to see you tel her that.”
“I’l have difficulty doing that, Professor, because she died in the assault on Reach.”
Phil ips marveled at the programming that decided which parts of BB’s memory to wipe and which to keep. His selective amnesia was both impressive and confusing.
“Yeah, so she did,” Phil ips said. “You were saying something about errors.”
“The elements of the symbols that she interpreted as nouns. Some of them are actual y adjectives, and that changes the meaning somewhat.”
“Show me.”
“You’re a linguist, aren’t you, Professor?”
There was no sarcasm. BB didn’t remember anything that was classified. Maybe that meant he didn’t know they’d been buddies. So? I’m chummy with a computer. What’s wrong with that? He really does have a personality. He’s real. When BB got himself back together again and did that reintegration thing, perhaps they’d have something to laugh about. Phil ips hoped so.
“I’m a xenoanthropologist specializing in languages,” he said. “I hold the Arkel Chair at Wheatley University, Sydney.”
“Then you’l understand this. This language is a blend of phonetics and ideographs. It also appears to have pointing to indicate vowels, like Semitic languages. The trick is working out which elements are phonetic and which are ideographic. I’m using the pointing to differentiate, although that might be whol y misleading.”
This was Phil ips’s bread and butter, his life’s work. However fond as he was of the old BB, however sorry he felt for him right now, he was damned if he’d be beaten at his specialty by a glorified personal organizer. He rested his arm on the wal and held the datapad’s light at an angle to throw a stronger shadow, scrutinizing the symbols. There was no sign of a barrier. That didn’t mean it wasn’t there.
“So what do you think this one says?”