Starfishers Volume 3: Stars End
like it in the display tank.”
    “I’m sure. Let me know when I can stop realtiming. This is my second link in eight hours.”
    “Right. Will do.” The man on the far end seemed impressed.
    Clara’s voice broke in. “Are you all right, Moyshe? The strain getting heavy? We can bring you out.”
    “I’m okay. For a while. I remember what I am. Just be ready to hit me with that needle.”
    At Stars’ End Danion had lost half her native, trained mindtechs because they had stayed in link too long, or had been mindburned by sharks breaking through the defensive fire screen. The best guess was that the former had become lost in the special interior universe of the linker. Dozens occupied a special hospital ward where doctors and nurses had to handle them like newly born babies.
    Their bodies lived on. Their minds, it was hoped, might sometime be retrieved.
    In all the history of the High Seiners no lost linker ever had been recalled.
    The Starfishers were living on hopes these days. Stars’ End had been one, for weapons capable of shattering shark tides.
    BenRabi did not understand how the Seiners had hoped to accomplish what generations of madmen, fools, and geniuses had failed to do. Stars’ End was a fortress unvanquishable.
    It was a whole world, Earth-sized, that was a fortress. Or planetary battleship. Or whatever. It could be approached by nothing. The technologies of its defenses were beyond the imaginations of any of the races aware of its existence. Its builders had long since vanished into the abyss of time.
    Generations of men had lusted after the weapons of Stars’ End. Thousands had died trying to obtain them. And the fortress world remained inviolate.
    Why had the Seiners been convinced that they would have better luck?
    “You were right, Linker. Computer says they’re pulling out. Going to let you off realtime now. We can handle it from here without.”
    “Thank you, Gun Control.”
    The sense of drain stopped abruptly. BenRabi’s universe reeled. Chub reached in and steadied him. “Time to break, Moyshe man-friend. You losing sense of reality and orientation in space-time.”
    “I’m not lost yet, Chub.”
    “You all say so. No more you can do here, man-friend.”
    The crackle of reality beginning to fall into shards rose from benRabi’s hindbrain. It pushed a wave of terror before it. Chub did nothing to soothe him.
    “Clara! The needle. I’m coming out.”
    He slapped the switch beneath his left hand.
    They were waiting for him. The agony persisted for only a few seconds.
    That was bad enough. He screamed and screamed. It got worse every time.
     
----

Four: 3049 AD
The Main Sequence
    They put him into Hospital Block this time. He was under sedation for three days.
    Two people were at his bedside when the doctor came to bring him out. The thin, pale, blue-eyed woman with the nervous hands was Amy. The little oriental with the presence of an iceberg was benRabi’s friend Mouse.
    Amy would sit for a minute, picking at her jumpsuit, shifting this way and that. She would cross and uncross her legs, then would rise and pace around for a minute before sitting again. She did not speak to Mouse. Most of the time she deliberately tried to distance Storm from herself and Moyshe. It was almost as if she saw Mouse as a competitor for benRabi’s affection.
    The men had shared missions under fire. Sometimes they did not like one another much. Their backgrounds were day and night. Centuries of prejudice had erected walls between them. Yet an indestructible bond had been forged and hammered on the anvils of shared peril. They had guarded one another’s backs and saved one another’s lives too often to let go.
    Mouse waited without moving, with the patience of a samurai.
    He was a dedicated Archaicist. He had just encountered his own ancient heritage and, in imagination, was trying the samurai role for size. The code and conduct suited the warrior within him.
    But it did nothing for the libertine. And

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